A financial surge has quietly unfolded within companies linked to the husband of a prominent congresswoman, raising questions about the speed and nature of their growth. Records reveal a dramatic increase in valuation for these businesses, occurring against a backdrop of significant fraud investigations within their state.
The companies, Rose Lake Capital LLC and ESTCRU LLC, have experienced valuations that defy typical business trajectories. Rose Lake Capital, co-founded by Tim Mynett, the husband of Representative Ilhan Omar, jumped from a reported value of $1,000 to $1,000,000 in a single year – a potential increase of thousands of times its previous worth.
Rose Lake Capital presents itself as a facilitator of high-stakes deals, navigating the worlds of mergers, acquisitions, banking, politics, and international diplomacy. Its initial team boasted a roster of influential figures, including a former U.S. Ambassador and seasoned political operatives.
Among those previously associated with the firm were Adam Ereli, a lobbyist and former ambassador to Bahrain, and former Senator Max Baucus. The company also included William Derrough, a former treasurer for the Democratic National Committee, and Alex Hoffman, a former chief of staff to the national finance chair.
However, as scrutiny intensified surrounding multi-billion dollar fraud schemes within Minnesota, and questions arose regarding potential connections, Rose Lake Capital quietly removed all team member profiles and biographies from its website. Their current affiliation with the company remains unknown.
ESTCRU LLC, a California-based winery first disclosed in 2020, mirrored this rapid ascent. Its valuation soared from a reported $15,000 to $50,000 to a range of $1 million to $5 million within the same timeframe.
Despite the substantial increase in its reported value, ESTCRU LLC’s online store appears non-functional, and its social media presence has gone dormant since early 2023. Attempts to contact the company via the listed phone number have been unsuccessful.
The timing of these financial developments coincides with investigations into widespread fraud within Minnesota, where losses from abuse of government programs could exceed $9 billion. The stark contrast between these investigations and the rising fortunes of the congresswoman’s husband’s companies has fueled public interest.
Requests for comment regarding the companies’ growth and the removal of employee information have gone unanswered. The full extent of these financial shifts, and the factors driving them, remain largely obscured by the broad valuation ranges reported in congressional disclosures.