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JUST IN: FBI Asks For Public Help In Finding (Alleged) Fraudster Who Jumped Out A 4-Story Window To Evade Authorities
When federal agents came knocking, one alleged fraudster in Minnesota decided the stairs weren’t an option.
The FBI is now publicly asking Americans for help finding a suspect who allegedly jumped out of a fourth-story window to evade authorities during a fraud arrest operation.
The dramatic escape was captured on video and shared widely online, showing federal officials describing the suspect’s leap and asking citizens to call in tips.
Video from the Minnesota fraud announcement.
— MJTruthUltra (@MJTruthUltra) May 21, 2026
The post identified the fugitive as Mohammad Omar, while the official in the video focused on getting the public’s help locating the man shown running from the scene.
If you have any information, the FBI wants to hear from you: call 1-800-CALL-FBI or submit tips online at tips.fbi.gov.
The video clip itself is below:
The window jump is one piece of a much larger story unfolding in Minnesota right now.
According to MPR News, the President Trump administration has brought a sweeping federal fraud action in the state, charging 15 defendants in connection with an alleged $90 million scheme.
Federal authorities said the new Minnesota cases cover 15 people and more than $90 million in alleged theft from taxpayer-funded Medicaid programs. The programs named in the local reporting include services meant for children with autism, housing stabilization, child-care support, integrated community supports, and other state-managed benefit lanes.
The announcement landed on the same day Feeding Our Future founder Aimee Bock received a nearly 42-year sentence in the pandemic food-aid fraud case. Officials described the new charges as the beginning of a larger push in Minnesota, not the end of the investigation, and CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz said federal Medicaid money for Minnesota remains deferred while officials demand proof that disputed spending was legitimate.
One autism-program indictment involved Smart Therapy Center in Minneapolis and Star Autism Center in St. Cloud. Prosecutors allege those businesses submitted $46.6 million in fraudulent claims and received $21.1 million in reimbursements tied to services for children with autism.
Every defendant in the new cases is still entitled to the presumption of innocence unless and until guilt is proven in court.
This latest action comes on top of the massive Feeding Our Future fraud case, which exposed one of the largest pandemic-era theft schemes in the country.
Multiple defendants in that earlier case have already been convicted and sentenced.
For years, Minnesota Democrats and state officials treated questions about fraud in their social programs as politically motivated noise.
That narrative is getting harder and harder to maintain when suspects are literally throwing themselves out of buildings to avoid federal agents.
President Trump’s DOJ is clearly not letting up, and the fact that the FBI is asking regular Americans to help track down a fugitive tells you all you need to know about how seriously this administration is taking taxpayer fraud.
The old approach of looking the other way is over.
Minnesota’s fraud problem didn’t happen overnight, and it didn’t happen by accident. It happened because state oversight was either incompetent or complicit, and for far too long nobody in power cared enough to do anything about it.
Now the feds are kicking in doors, and alleged fraudsters are jumping out of windows.
If you have information on this suspect or any related fraud activity, contact the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI or visit tips.fbi.gov.