MAGA lawmaker married by imam suspected of being key Hamas backer
A Florida congressman fired off a letter to the Justice Department this week accusing Vice President Kamala Harris of violating federal law — but a legal expert pointed out he apparently didn't understand a simple aspect of how that law works. (Photo courtesy of House of Representatives)

A conservative Christian MAGA lawmaker has revealed he was married by a radical Islamist investigated for fundraising ties to Hamas.

Rep. Cory Mills (R-FL) married his wife Rana Al Saadi, who is originally from Iraq, in 2014. Blaze News reported that the marriage was officiated by Mohammed Al-Hanooti.

Al-Hanooti had previously served as the imam of Dar Al-Hijirah Islamic Center in Virginia. During that time, he’d made sermons calling for holy war against non-Muslims.

Blaze News also reported that the FBI believed he was a major Hamas fundraiser, had ties to the Muslim Brotherhood and was suspected of having a part in the World Trade Center bombing in 1993 — though he was not indicted. He died a year after the wedding.

The Daily Beast, which reported on the Blaze’s story, wrote that this information was common knowledge at the time of Mills' wedding.

Mills is a staunch ally of President Donald Trump’s and a veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom, for which he was awarded the Bronze Star — though ex-colleagues have since questioned the ‘exceptional bravery” that earned him it.

ALSO READ: ‘Pain. Grief. Anger’: Families heartbroken as Trump backlash smashes adoption dreams

Blaze News reported that the Republican confirmed that Al-Hanooti married him and his wife. The couple are currently in the process of divorcing.

Mills told The Blaze, “I didn’t have a relationship with the guy, so I can’t tell you anything other than the fact that he was sick.

“I don’t know anything about his involvement in the co-conspirator thing.”

He said the marriage happened because his wife was returning to Iraq for a visit and worried that her first husband would claim they were still married if she didn’t have a marriage certificate from the U.S.

He told the outlet Al-Hanooti was willing to sign the marriage certificate.

“It didn‘t change my faith, it didn‘t change who I am, it didn‘t change the church that I went to,” he told Blaze.

“Enjoy your hit piece.”