On November 15, 2025, Cedar Avenue in Minneapolis was quiet under a pale winter sky. The modest building with a hand-painted sign reading “Somali Cultural Liaison Office – Honorary Consulate” had long been viewed as a lifeline for East African families navigating visas, paperwork, and reunification. For nearly a decade, it operated openly, hosting community events and advising local officials on refugee matters.
At 5:18 a.m., that image shattered.
FBI and ICE tactical teams breached the building’s front and rear entrances in a coordinated pre-dawn operation. Agents moved quickly through offices filled with immigration forms and framed pH๏τos of community gatherings. On the second floor, they detained the man who had styled himself as Honorary Consul, Ahmed Khalif Hᴀssan.

According to federal authorities, Hᴀssan was not listed in State Department records as an accredited diplomat. Court documents later alleged that the consular designation had no official standing. Prosecutors claim that behind the façade of cultural outreach, Hᴀssan operated a trafficking pipeline that moved vulnerable children from East Africa through Minnesota and beyond.
Agents descending into the building’s basement discovered a locked steel door. Inside, investigators reported finding dozens of minors in cramped, unsanitary conditions. Federal officials later confirmed that 238 children were taken into protective custody that morning. Medical teams documented malnutrition and signs of prolonged confinement.
The allegations did not stop there.

Prosecutors contend that Hᴀssan maintained encrypted communications with members of the Los Zetas cartel in Mexico. Digital evidence allegedly referenced “shipments” and payment structures tied to the transfer of minors across borders. Authorities further claim that a message intercept connected Hᴀssan to a plot involving a Mexican municipal official who had been investigating trafficking routes.
Six days before the Minneapolis raid, Mayor Roberto Delgado of a Mexican border municipality was ᴀssᴀssinated outside his home. Mexican federal investigators had reportedly been sharing intelligence with U.S. counterparts regarding suspicious cargo movements. While the homicide investigation remains under Mexican jurisdiction, U.S. prosecutors have introduced digital correspondence they say links Hᴀssan’s network to the broader conspiracy.

The case might have remained hidden if not for a single phone call.
In July 2025, Minneapolis social worker Lisa Chen received an unexpected international call. The caller identified himself as Omar, a 12-year-old Somali boy claiming to have escaped a factory in Beijing. He told Chen he had first been brought to Minneapolis under promises of schooling before being transported overseas.
Chen contacted federal authorities. Initial skepticism gave way to concern when investigators found no official record of a Somali consulate in Minnesota and no diplomatic credentials for Hᴀssan. A deeper audit of immigration filings revealed that between 2015 and 2025, nearly 2,800 individuals processed through Hᴀssan’s nonprofit lacked traceable follow-up records in federal databases.

Authorities now describe the Minneapolis office as the recruitment and staging hub of a broader supply chain. Families in Somalia and Ethiopia were allegedly promised education opportunities for their children. After arrival in Minnesota on valid visas, prosecutors claim the children were diverted from enrollment processes and transferred south to cartel intermediaries.
The trail extended to California.
Intelligence extracted from seized devices pointed to a 380-foot vessel named Hope’s Promise, registered as a mobile medical ship operated by the New Dawn Foundation, a humanitarian nonprofit led by Dr. Hᴀssan Osman and his wife, Amina. The foundation had raised hundreds of millions in international donations over nearly two decades, earning accolades for disaster relief missions.

On December 14, 2025, U.S. Coast Guard cutters and federal agents boarded the yacht two miles off the coast of San Diego under a federal warrant. In a secured lower cargo hold, authorities reported discovering 450 minors confined in converted storage compartments. Medical supplies were scattered nearby, and investigators alleged the children had been sedated during transport.
Dr. Osman and his wife were arrested on charges including trafficking, conspiracy, and financial fraud. Prosecutors allege that of the $840 million raised by the foundation over 18 years, more than $500 million was diverted for personal enrichment, including luxury real estate, aircraft, and the yacht itself.

When combined with evidence from Minneapolis and Mexico, investigators described an industrialized trafficking network spanning three continents. Hᴀssan’s office allegedly recruited. Cartel operatives transported. The yacht concealed and transferred victims internationally.
In December 2025, federal courts in Minnesota and California began proceedings. Hᴀssan was convicted on multiple counts of trafficking, conspiracy, and fraud, receiving a life sentence without parole plus additional consecutive terms. The Osmans were also convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment.
During testimony, one rescued child addressed the courtroom directly: “You didn’t save me. You stole me.” The statement echoed across national headlines.

Federal authorities have seized more than $1.1 billion in ᴀssets tied to the defendants. Those funds are being allocated toward victim rehabilitation, counseling, and international search efforts. Yet investigators acknowledge a haunting figure: records suggest more than 11,000 minors may have pᴀssed through the network over 18 years. Fewer than 1,000 have been located.
The broader political context has intensified scrutiny. The Trump administration’s expanded immigration enforcement in Minnesota, particularly within Somali communities, has sparked fierce debate. Some leaders argue the crackdown unfairly stigmatizes an entire diaspora. Others contend that gaps in oversight allowed criminal actors to exploit trust within refugee systems.
Community advocates emphasize that the vast majority of Somali Americans are law-abiding residents who were themselves victims of deception. Local leaders have called for transparency without scapegoating, urging authorities to distinguish between criminal enterprises and the broader immigrant population.

The case has prompted federal reviews of nonprofit grant oversight, diplomatic credential verification, and international child visa processing. Lawmakers are considering new legislation to mandate cross-agency verification of honorary consular claims and stricter auditing of humanitarian organizations receiving federal funds.
For families still searching for missing children, the legal victories offer limited comfort. Recovery and identification efforts continue across Asia, Latin America, and East Africa. International task forces are now coordinating to trace factory labor sites and maritime shipping routes tied to the alleged network.

The events in Minneapolis and San Diego have forced a difficult reckoning: trafficking can hide behind respected тιтles, charitable branding, and bureaucratic language. It can operate in daylight, wrapped in paperwork and pH๏τo opportunities.
What began with one frightened child’s call has become one of the most expansive trafficking prosecutions in recent history. The investigations continue, and thousands of families wait for answers.