“I am illegal in this country.”
“I am illegal in this country. My parents are illegal here in this country,” Former Minnesota State Rep. Kaohly Her declared.Her ran in the 2025 St. Paul mayoral election on a promise to fight ICE and protect illegal aliens. While she lost the election, the usual ‘ranked choice’ shenanigans that elevated Mamdani in New York City, and other urban leftists, put her ahead of Melvin Carter III who was not an illegal.
In her inaugural address, Mayor Kaohly Her described federal immigration enforcement as an “unprecedented incursion that we must meet head on.” She spoke while surrounded by minority female politicians as well as Robert ‘Susan Kimblery’ Sylvester: a former deputy mayor who now claims to be a transgender woman.
This secessionist rhetoric was soon paired with a secessionist ordinance commanding federal law enforcement not to operate on ‘city-owned property’ as if St. Paul had somehow seceded from the United States.
“When ICE comes here again we are working together as a community. Lets not forget who is the aggressor here,” Her warned.
Shortly after taking office, ICE carried out a raid at the home of a friend of the mayor, a fellow Hmong, who had been allegedly living with two sexual predators, one of whom was wanted for sexual assault against a minor, rape and kidnapping, while the other was wanted for sexual assault and gang activity.
Mayor Her described the raid as “heartbreaking” and claimed, “I don’t know how anybody looking at that could ever justify the treatment of another human being that way.”
Her’s administration is now reportedly teaching open borders activists how to confront and challenge federal immigration enforcement officers.
The former community organizer bizarrely claimed that “I have family members who haven’t opened their drapes in days because they’re afraid someone can see in and see that they are Asian.” This seems wildly implausible for anyone who is legally in the United States.
The question is whether Kaohly Her is one of those people.
Before her declaration that “I am illegal in this country” went viral, Her explained that she was a citizen by way of her family committing immigration fraud. “Because his mother had died, my father as the one processing the paperwork put my grandmother down as his mother, and so I am illegal in this country.”
A more detailed explanation was offered by Her in a clean up chat with the Minnesota Reformer offering an even more troubling and corrupt explanation. ‘Her’s father worked at the U.S. consulate, and he processed their family’s paperwork in a way to expedite their timeline to immigrate to the U.S. as refugees. People who were set to come to the U.S. as refugees could do so quicker if they had family connections to the military, CIA or USAID. Her said her family didn’t qualify for those pipelines, but an uncle — in the Hmong familial sense of the word, i.e., a family friend — worked for USAID. When Her’s father processed the refugee paperwork, he claimed familial connection to the friend that worked for USAID, which wasn’t accurate.”
By “wasn’t accurate”, Mayor Her appeared to mean fraudulent and completely false.
In either version of the explanation, Her’s family committed naturalization fraud and can potentially be denaturalized and deported. No wonder then that Her fears ICE so much.
The Her family fraud, claiming fictional family ties, is likely the same one practiced by the Omar family, and is a commonplace enough form of immigration fraud among Somalis and Hmong where large family groups make it difficult to determine relationships and where falsely claiming relationships for immigration benefits has become so routine as to be almost unremarkable. --->READ MORE HERE


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