26 arrested at Maple Grove ICE hotel protest; 13 charged with riot
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Twenty-six people were arrested outside the SpringHill Suites in Maple Grove during a protest targeting a hotel where ICE agents were believed to be staying. Maple Grove police said they allowed the demonstration to proceed until property damage and violence prompted an unlawful-assembly declaration; 13 are being referred for gross-misdemeanor riot charges and 13 for misdemeanor unlawful assembly, with two of those also facing obstruction charges.
Public Safety
Legal
Immigration
Judge orders 2‑year‑old released from ICE custody
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A federal judge ordered the release of a 2‑year‑old girl from ICE custody. In a separate case, another Minnesota judge temporarily barred removal of a 5‑year‑old boy and his father, underscoring a pattern of federal courts in Minnesota intervening to limit ICE’s ability to remove children and whole family units and reflecting multiple successful emergency habeas actions.
Legal
Public Safety
Immigration
Judge blocks deportation of 5‑year‑old and father seized in Minnesota
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A federal judge has issued a temporary order barring the U.S. government from removing a 5‑year‑old boy and his father who were detained in Minnesota during the Trump administration’s Operation Metro Surge, freezing their deportation while their case is litigated. The pair were among the wave of local arrests that have swept up schoolchildren and parents across the Twin Cities, prompting emergency habeas petitions and sharp criticism from state officials over due‑process violations. The order requires ICE and DHS to keep both child and parent in place and to notify the court before any transfer or change in status, effectively preventing the kind of rapid out‑of‑state flights that have blindsided other Minnesota families. Immigration attorneys say the ruling adds to a string of recent Minnesota decisions finding ICE’s conduct constitutionally suspect and are sharing it widely as a roadmap for other families now hiding or considering legal action. The case lands as school districts from Columbia Heights to Minneapolis and St. Paul scramble to expand online options and reassure parents that sending children to class won’t make them targets.
Legal
Public Safety
Immigration
State–DOJ evidence war escalates in Alex Pretti, Renee Good ICE shootings
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The killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti — the latter shot and killed by a U.S. Border Patrol agent in south Minneapolis, with bystander and surveillance videos that some say contradict federal accounts — have spurred protests and intensified scrutiny of the Trump administration’s Operation Metro Surge after multiple federal‑agent shootings in the city. In response, Hennepin County and state investigators have sued to force DHS, ICE and CBP (naming U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi) to preserve and not alter evidence in the Pretti and Good cases, while the Justice Department counters that those preservation and access demands are unprecedented, implicate federal supremacy and investigative privilege, and could impede ongoing criminal probes — a judicial clash that could set a template for future federal–state disputes over federal use‑of‑force cases.
Public Safety
Legal
Immigration
Columbia Heights 5‑year‑old held in Texas as immigrant families protest outside ICE facility
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Immigrant families and supporters traveled to a Texas family detention facility where 5‑year‑old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father are being held after a Minnesota immigration enforcement operation, protesting outside the center and coordinating with Minnesota‑based advocates and legal teams to demand their immediate release back to Minnesota. Organizers say Liam’s case — tied by protesters to Minnesota’s Operation Metro Surge — highlights the cruelty of detaining children with pending asylum claims, while the family says they entered the U.S. the “right” way.
Public Safety
Legal
Education
Judge blocks ICE from moving detained Hopkins family
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A Hopkins family from Ecuador — parents with pending asylum applications and their two children — was detained Thursday after ICE agents first pulled over mother Maria Hurtado on her way to work, then went to the family’s home and used her detention to coax her husband, Luis Chiluisa, and the children outside, where they were also taken into custody, according to their attorney. Minneapolis lawyer Brian Clark says he has been unable to learn where they are being held and feared they could be transferred to Texas, prompting an emergency filing in which he argued the family is here legally, has no known criminal history beyond Chiluisa’s 2024 misdemeanor DWI, and is well‑known in Hopkins. A federal judge has now ordered the government not to move the family out of Minnesota and to return them if ICE has already relocated them, effectively freezing any out‑of‑state transfer while the court reviews the case. Hopkins Mayor Patrick Hanlon publicly vouched for Chiluisa as a "model citizen" who works in snow removal and said the city wants its community member back and a "normal working relationship" with federal partners, while Hopkins Public Schools’ superintendent told parents the detention was a "horrific experience" and warned the district may never learn the outcome unless the family later shares it. The case adds to a growing pattern of Metro‑area families with pending asylum or legal status being swept up in Operation Metro Surge, heightening fear in schools and neighborhoods that even long‑settled, working residents are now at risk in routine traffic stops and at their own front doors.
Public Safety
Legal
Immigration
Judge orders release of ICE detainee once held in Minnesota jail
Jan 22
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A judge ordered the release of an ICE detainee in Iowa who had previously been held in a Minnesota jail. The case comes after a St. Paul raid in which authorities found a warrant left outside the targeted residence, raising questions about how the operation was carried out.
Legal
Public Safety
Immigration
Renee Good family hires Floyd firm, moves to preserve evidence in ICE killing
Jan 22
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Renee Good’s family has retained Romanucci & Blandin—the civil‑rights firm that represented George Floyd’s family—to conduct an independent investigation, pursue civil litigation if warranted, and has sent a formal Preservation of Evidence Letter demanding that federal authorities preserve all physical and electronic evidence while urging the public to share video and information. The family also commissioned an independent autopsy that found Good was shot in the left temple, a result they say is inconsistent with DHS/ICE’s claim that her vehicle was “weaponized” and has bolstered the firm’s pledge of transparency and accountability.
Public Safety
Local Government
Legal
Judge lifts key protest limits on ICE tactics in Minnesota surge case
Jan 21
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A federal judge has lifted or significantly narrowed a prior order that had barred ICE, CBP and other DHS officers from retaliating against, arresting, detaining or using force or chemical agents on people peacefully protesting, recording, observing or safely following Operation Metro Surge—restoring broader authority for immigration agents to use certain crowd‑control tactics and arrests while the litigation continues. The suit, brought by Minnesota AG Keith Ellison, the mayors of Minneapolis and St. Paul (and joined by Illinois), alleges the surge unlawfully targets Minnesota for its diversity and politics, violates the 10th Amendment and involves excessive, sometimes deadly, force in incidents that have sparked protests, school walkouts and business closures.
Legal
Local Government
Public Safety
ICE storms East Side St. Paul home, detains six including 12‑year‑old; warrant’s validity questioned
Jan 17
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Surveillance footage from a home on Nevada Avenue East in St. Paul shows heavily armed federal agents battering down a door and sweeping room to room Thursday, detaining six occupants—including a 12‑year‑old boy later reported by a family friend to have been transferred to an immigration facility in San Antonio. Neighbors who spoke with someone inside say agents claimed to have a search warrant but refused to show it during the raid; a day later, a purported warrant from a Ramsey County judge appeared on the doorstep, lacking a case number, file stamp and standard formatting that a state court spokesperson provided for comparison, and with no record yet of filing. Residents, a Venezuelan family who arrived in 2023, reportedly all had state IDs and work permits, and neighbors say agents told them the operation was part of a narcotics investigation, though outdoor video captured a package delivery minutes before the raid and agents allegedly threatened to arrest everyone if no one claimed the package. DHS did not respond to FOX 9’s questions, leaving basic issues unanswered: whether this was an immigration or drug case, why a child with no apparent charges is now in Texas, and why the paperwork doesn’t look like a standard state warrant. The raid adds another layer to growing fear on the East Side as Operation Metro Surge floods the metro with federal agents, and raises serious questions about warrant practices and whether federal officers are using state‑court processes—or something made to look like them—to punch into Twin Cities homes.
Public Safety
Legal
Immigration
Attorney: Minneapolis Liberian man hit in ICE battering‑ram raid had checked in for 15 years
Jan 15
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A Liberian national in Minneapolis who had been regularly checking in with immigration authorities for 15 years was arrested during an ICE raid in which federal agents used a battering ram to force entry, and family members — including a child — witnessed the forced entry. His lawyer says there was no indication of non‑compliance that would justify such a violent home entry, and the family is demanding to see a judicial warrant.
Public Safety
Legal
Immigration
ICE surge after Renee Good killing triggers Twin Cities walkouts, new warrantless raid lawsuits, and impeachment push against Noem
Jan 14
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After the fatal shooting of Renee Good, ICE intensified "Operation Metro Surge" across the Twin Cities—carrying out neighborhood raids and arrests that protesters say have disproportionately targeted Somali residents and that sparked large marches, school and business walkouts, reports of U.S. citizens detained, and pepper‑spray confrontations. Multiple immigrants have filed federal lawsuits challenging detentions and at least one habeas petition alleges a warrantless battering‑ram home entry, while Minnesota lawmakers and other members of Congress have backed an effort to impeach DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, accusing her of constitutional violations and misconduct tied to the surge.
Legal
Public Safety
Local Government
Trump administration ends Somali TPS, putting 500–600 Minnesotans at risk by March 17
Jan 13
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The Trump administration will not renew Temporary Protected Status for Somalia, formally set to expire March 17, putting roughly 500–600 Somali TPS holders in Minnesota — out of about 37,000 Somali‑born residents and roughly 700 Somalis nationwide covered by TPS — at risk of losing work authorization and facing detention or deportation. Local leaders and immigration attorneys say the move will strain social‑service and legal‑aid networks and threaten mixed‑status families, while DHS officials note any TPS decision must follow legal procedures and would apply nationwide rather than only to Minnesota.
Elections
Legal
Local Government
Trump suspends federal Diversity Visa lottery
Dec 19
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President Donald Trump ordered the suspension of the Diversity Visa (green card lottery) program, and DHS Secretary Kristi Noem directed USCIS to pause processing, after authorities said the suspected Brown University/MIT shooter entered the U.S. via the program in 2017. The move, announced Thursday, halts new DV processing nationwide and is likely to face legal challenges because the lottery was created by Congress, affecting prospective immigrants and families in the Twin Cities.
Legal
Public Safety
Immigration
Supreme Court takes Trump birthright case
Dec 05
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The U.S. Supreme Court agreed on Dec. 5, 2025, to hear a challenge to President Donald Trump’s order seeking to limit birthright citizenship, setting up a constitutional ruling this term. The outcome could directly affect families in the Twin Cities whose children were born in Minnesota to non‑citizen parents, as well as access to documents and services dependent on citizenship status.
Legal
Immigration
US cuts immigrant work permits to 18 months
Dec 05
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USCIS announced on Dec. 5, 2025, that Employment Authorization Documents for many legal immigrants will shift from up to five years of validity to 18 months, requiring more frequent renewals. The federal change applies nationwide, directly affecting Twin Cities immigrants who work under EADs and the employers who depend on them.
Legal
Immigration
US halts all asylum decisions nationwide
Nov 29
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USCIS Director Joseph Edlow said Friday, Nov. 28, 2025, that the Trump administration is pausing all asylum decisions “until we can ensure that every alien is vetted and screened to the maximum degree possible,” following a National Guard shooting in Washington, D.C. The nationwide pause applies to cases handled by USCIS offices serving Minnesota, likely delaying asylum adjudications for Twin Cities applicants and legal service providers.
Immigration
Local Government
DHS to end TPS for some Myanmar nationals
Nov 25
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The Department of Homeland Security announced it will end Temporary Protected Status for some Myanmar nationals, citing planned December “free and fair” elections and “successful ceasefire agreements”; rights groups and Myanmar’s shadow National Unity Government sharply criticized the move, saying Myanmar remains in a brutal civil war with forced conscription and daily attacks on civilians. Advocates warned of harms to Burmese communities in the Twin Cities, and observers note that ICC prosecutors previously sought an arrest warrant for junta leader Min Aung Hlaing over alleged crimes against humanity related to the Rohingya.
Legal
Immigration
Government