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Tag: Department of Homeland Security

  • DHS Agents Detain Student in Residence Building, Columbia Says

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    “Alma Mater” sculpture designed by Daniel Chester French in front of the library building on New York City’s Columbia University campus grounds. A symbol of academic pride since 1903.
    Photo: Getty Images

    Federal agents detained a Columbia University student in her university residence on Thursday morning, according to a statement from school leadership.

    In a letter to the school community, Columbia University acting president Claire Shipman said government agents provided false details in order to gain access to a university residential building where the student was detained. She did not identify the student in question or the reason given for their detention, but the Columbia Spectator reports that Ellie Aghayeva, a neuroscience student at the university, shared the message, “Dhs illegally arrested me. Please help,” on an Instagram Story. Aghayeva’s profile on the platform, which has 104,000 followers, largely features lifestyle content centered around her life as a Columbia student.

    “This morning at approximately 6:30 a.m., federal agents from the Department of Homeland Security entered a Columbia Residential building and detained a student,” Shipman said in a statement. “We are working to gather more information, working to reach the family, and providing legal support.”

    Continued Shipman, “Our understanding at this time is that the federal agents made misrepresentations to gain entry to the building to search for a ‘missing person.’ We are working to gather more details.”

    Shipman reemphasized that law-enforcement agents are required to have either a judicial warrant or subpoena to access nonpublic spaces on Columbia’s campus including classrooms, housing, and areas that require ID-swipe access. “An administrative warrant is not sufficient,” she said.

    In response to a request for comment, the Department of Homeland Security issued a statement confirming Aghayeva’s arrest. “ICE arrested Elmina Aghayeva, an illegal alien from Azerbaijan, whose student visa was terminated in 2016 under the Obama administration for failing to attend classes. The building manager and her roommate let officers into the apartment. She has no pending appeals or applications with DHS,” the agency said.

    City Council Speaker Julie Menin and Councilmember Shaun Abreu, whose district encompasses Columbia, issued a joint statement confirming that they were briefed on the incident. “ICE has no place in our schools and universities. These activities do not make our city or country safer, but rather drive mistrust and danger. As Columbia College alumni, our hearts are with the community there, and we have been in contact with the University to offer our assistance,” they said.

    Governor Kathy Hochul also weighed in, reemphasizing her push for legislation that would bar ICE from sensitive locations like dorms and schools. “Let’s be clear about what happened: ICE agents didn’t have the proper warrant, so they lied to gain access to a student’s private residence,” she said.

    Senator Chuck Schumer called the ICE agents’s actions “outrageous” in a statement. “This is unacceptable. We need immediate answers from ICE on the student’s whereabouts,” he said.

    The Columbia Spectator reports that dozens have gathered on Columbia’s campus for an emergency rally protesting the government’s actions, organized by the university’s chapter of the Sunrise Movement. The Intercept captured photos of the growing crowd:

    Last year, Immigrations and Customs Enforcement agents arrested Columbia graduate and activist Mahmoud Khalil at his university-owned apartment on allegations that he provided misleading information on his green-card application. Khalil was later held for months at an ICE detention center in Louisiana and missed the birth of his firstborn son as the Trump administration sought his deportation. A federal judge approved Khalil’s release, but the federal government continues to press for his deportation.


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    Nia Prater

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  • Deputies: Wanted El Salvadorian gang member arrested in Lee County

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    Lee County deputies arrested a man accused of crimes associated with the criminal gang MS-13 on Wednesday. 

    According to the Lee County Sheriff’s Office, deputies and the State Highway Patrol were called to a crash with injuries in the southern portion of Lee County on U.S. Highway 1. 

    When law enforcement arrived, they tried to talk with one of the drivers involved in the crash.

    He allegedly gave five different variations of his name to authorities. After they were unable to track down any of the provided names, matching the date of birth provided, deputies arrested the man for further investigation. 

    Initially unable to verify his identity, deputies charged him under the alias “Juan Doe” with resisting, delaying and obstructing an officer and identity theft. 

    A fingerprint scan identified the man as 30-year-old Jonathon Josue Ayala Melendez of El Salvador. 

    LCSO contacted U.S. Homeland Security Investigations agents, who then contacted FBI agents, who confirmed that Ayala Melendez is wanted for kidnapping, drug trafficking, homicide and attempted homicide charges in El Salvador. 

    FBI agents said Ayala Melendez is a transnational member of MS-13 (Mara Salvatrucha 13).

    U.S. authorities had been searching for Ayala Melendez for some time, according to LCSO’s press release. 

    Ayala Melendez remains in the custody of the Lee County Sheriff’s Office without bond and has an immigration detainer, issued by the Department of Homeland Security. 

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  • Homeland Security reportedly sent hundreds of subpoenas seeking to unmask anti-ICE accounts | TechCrunch

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    The Department of Homeland Security has been increasing pressure on tech companies to identify the owners of social media accounts that criticize Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), according to The New York Times.

    This echoes other recent reporting, with Bloomberg pointing to five cases in which Homeland Security sought to identify the owners of anonymous Instagram accounts, with the department withdrawing its subpoenas after the owners sued. And a Washington Post story described Homeland Security’s growing use of administrative subpoenas — which do not require the approval of a judge — to target Americans.

    Now the NYT says a practice that was previously used sparingly has become increasingly common in recent months, with the department sending hundreds of these subpoenas to Google, Reddit, Discord, and Meta. The subpoenas reportedly focused on accounts that did not have a real name attached and either criticized ICE or described the location of ICE agents.

    Google, Meta, and Reddit have reportedly complied in at least some cases. Echoing past comments, Google said that it informs users of these subpoenas when it can, and that it pushes back when the subpoenas are “overbroad.”

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    Anthony Ha

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  • US spent $40M to deport roughly 300 migrants to nations other than their own: Democratic report

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    WASHINGTON — The Trump administration spent at least $40 million to deport roughly 300 migrants to countries other than their own as immigration officials expanded the practice over the last year to carry out President Donald Trump’s goals of quickly removing immigrants from the U.S., according to a report compiled by the Democratic staff of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

    The Democrats on the Foreign Relations panel, led by Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, criticize the practice of third country deportations as “costly, wasteful and poorly monitored” in the report and call for “serious scrutiny of a policy that now operates largely in the dark.”

    The State Department, which oversees the negotiations to implement the programs, has stood behind the practice of third country deportations and defended it as a part of Trump’s campaign to end illegal immigration.

    “We’ve arrested people that are members of gangs and we’ve deported them. We don’t want gang members in our country,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio responded when asked about some of the third country deportations at a Senate hearing last month.

    The report, which is the first congressional review of the agreements, found lump sum payments ranging between $4.7 million and $7.5 million to five countries – Equatorial Guinea, Rwanda, El Salvador, Eswatini and Palau – to deport migrants to those nations. El Salvador has received about 250 Venezuelan nationals in March last year, while the other nations received far fewer deportees, ranging from 29 sent to Equatorial Guinea to none sent to Palau so far, according to the report.

    The nations examined in the report are just a fraction of the Trump administration’s overall work to deport migrants to third countries. According to internal administration documents reviewed by The Associated Press, there are 47 third-country agreements at various stages of negotiation. Of those, 15 have been concluded and 10 are at or near conclusion.

    The administration is also negotiating agreements with countries that will accept U.S. asylum seekers while their asylum claims are processed, according to the internal documents. There are 17 that are at various stages of negotiation, including 9 that have formally taken effect, although the administration claims that the agreements do not necessarily need to be concluded for people to be sent there.

    Immigration advocacy groups have criticized the “third country” policy as a reckless tactic that violates due process rights and can strand deportees in countries with long histories of human rights violations and corruption.

    During a visit to South Sudan, Democratic committee staff found a gated house with armed guards where deportees were held, including migrants from Vietnam and Mexico.

    The Democrats also largely take aim at how wasteful and ineffective the policy may be. It details several instances of migrants being deported to a third country, only for the U.S. to later pay for another flight to return the migrant to their home country.

    “In many cases, migrants could have been returned directly to their countries of origin, avoiding unnecessary flights and additional costs,” said Shaheen in a statement also signed by Democratic Sens. Chris Coons, Tammy Duckworth, Tim Kaine, Jack Rosen and Chris Van Hollen.

    It also remains unclear what benefits the countries may receive – or expect – in return for accepting third-country nationals.

    After an agreement was in place last year, South Sudan sent a list of requests to Washington that included American support for the prosecution of an opposition leader and sanctions relief for a senior official accused of diverting over a billion dollars in public funds, according to diplomatic communications made public by the State Department in January.

    Shaheen has also questioned a $7.5 million payment sent to Equatorial Guinea that came at the same time the Trump administration was developing ties with the country’s vice president, Teodoro “Teddy” Nguema Obiang. He is notorious among world leaders accused of corruption for a lavish lifestyle that has attracted the attention of prosecutors in several countries.

    Copyright © 2026 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

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    AP

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  • How much is Kristi Noem’s alleged adultery airplane costing you?

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    Rumors of an affair between Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Trump administration political adviser Corey Lewandowski have been flying for months.

    And all that flying, it turns out, might come with a big price tag for taxpayers.

    The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday that Noem and Lewandowski have recently been traveling together aboard a luxury Boeing 737 MAX jet that includes a private cabin in the rear. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is “leasing the plane but is in the process of acquiring it for approximately $70 million,” the Journal reports, citing people familiar with the plane.

    That is just one small detail amid the explosive and deeply reported piece, which details a pattern of behavior that is both self-aggrandizing and petty. In one incident, Lewandowski reportedly fired a Coast Guard pilot for leaving Noem’s blanket on a plane (it is unclear whether that was the 737 MAX or a different plane), only to reinstate the pilot when a replacement could not be found. The report comes at a time when Noem is under intense scrutiny for her role in ordering the high-profile and aggressive immigration enforcement tactics in Minneapolis that led to the deaths of two American citizens at the hands of federal officers.

    The salacious rumors of an affair between Noem and Lewandowski—both of whom are married to other people—surface repeatedly in the Journal’s article but have been denied by the two officials.

    The deeper, indisputable truth is that taxpayers are being forced to support an aircraft-buying binge at the DHS that goes beyond the alleged adultery airplane used by Noem and Lewandowski.

    Last year, the department purchased a fleet of six commercial jets, ostensibly to carry out deportation flights, at a cost of $140 million. It is unclear whether Noem’s plane with the private cabin is one of those or an additional plane.

    The aircraft in question was apparently identified last year by The War Zone, a blog covering the national security state. The plane has a cabin configuration designed to accommodate 17 passengers and was being marketed at the time for its “extremely luxurious interior layout that includes two suites with full-size beds and a master bathroom with a shower stall, among many other amenities,” according to a brochure reviewed by The War Zone.

    Even if Noem and Lewandowski are not using the plane for, um, activities that go beyond their official duties, there ought to be hard questions asked about whether taxpayers are getting screwed.

    Indeed, there was a time—not even a year ago—when the Trump administration was promising to cut wasteful spending and hold government officials accountable to taxpayers. If the Journal‘s reporting turns out to be accurate, the mess at DHS looks a lot like the complete opposite of that.

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    Eric Boehm

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  • Federal judge maintains block on ending Haitian TPS, responds to death threats

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    Linda Joseph, a community activist, shields her eyes while in prayer during the candlelight vigil as public officials from Miami-Dade County, the City of Miami and North Miami, along with community members, gathered for a TPS candle light prayer vigil at the Little Haiti Cultural Complex on Feb. 3, 2026, in Miami. The event, held in support of the local TPS community, included prayer, reflection and calls for unity and hope.

    Linda Joseph, a community activist, shields her eyes while in prayer during a candlelight vigil in support of Haitians with Temporary Protected Status. The event was held at the Little Haiti Cultural Complex in Miami on Feb. 3, 2026.

    cjuste@miamiherald.com

    In a hearing that highlighted the increasing pressure the federal judiciary is facing in high-stakes immigration cases, a Washington, D.C. judge on Thursday declined to reverse her decision that blocked the Trump administration from ending immigration protections for more than 300,000 Haitians.

    “I am denying the government’s motion to stay,” U.S. District Court Judge Ana Reyes said.

    The judge said she would issue a written order in time for an appellate court to hear the government’s appeal. The government, in an unusual move last week, appealed both to the appellate court and to Reyes herself, asking her to reverse her decision. The federal appeals court has given lawyers representing the Department of Homeland Security until April 19 to provide briefs.

    After delivering her decision, Reyes said she wanted to address what had followed after her Feb. 2 ruling pausing the termination of Haiti’s Temporary Protected Status designation. The ruling gave a temporary reprieve to more than 300,000 Haitians, who would have faced the loss of their right to continuing living and working in the United States, leaving them vulnerable to deportation back to Haiti.

    “I do feel compelled to clarify a couple of misconceptions,” Reyes said as she went on to list some of the accusations some people have made about her, and the threats she has received.

    Yes, she is an immigrant herself, she said. No, she did not hide that fact from any of the agencies tasked with investigating her, including the White House, the FBI or the Senate Judiciary Committee when she was nominated to the federal bench by President Joe Biden.

    Reyes , who was born in Uruguay and came to the U.S. as a child, said she didn’t mind the messages that referred to her as “illiterate,” even as they failed to note she graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School and spent 22 years litigating high-profile federal issues. What she does object to, Reyes said, are the death threat against her that have been posted on social media and sent to her email.

    Death threats

    “I hope you die today,” she said, reading from a lengthy email. “Enjoy choking on your tongue.”

    On social media others called for the hanging of judges, while using other offensive adjectives to refer to her.

    It is common for judges these days to receive such threats, Reyes said, and some have received even worse. But she added that, like her colleagues on the bench, she will not stop from upholding the law, acting without fear and favor.

    “To those who disagree with me, I say ‘Thank you,’” Reyes said. “Judges should be questioned, the politicians should be questioned. I welcome the government’s appeal because appellate courts are a necessary part of the democratic system.”

    But for those who threaten judges, Reyes said, “We will not be intimidated.”

    Her remarks came after a contentious hearing in which she made clear she would not reverse her earlier order. Throughout the proceedings, she sharply questioned the government’s lawyer. In one exchange, lawyers for the five Haitian plaintiffs in the case told her that some TPS holders were having difficulties renewing their driver’s licenses, because federal systems showed that their protections had expired.

    When she questioned the government’t lawyer, Reyes issued a stern warning after he told her the administration was trying to “avoid mass confusion,” since the case is on appeal.

    She told government lawyers she is not “one of those judges who is going to sit around and wait for you all to violate court order after court order. There will be serious consequences.”

    Frustrated judges

    The Trump administration has increasingly encountered resistance in federal court as it seeks to advance its mass deportation agenda, with some judges expressing frustration both at what they view as disregard for their rulings and at how government lawyers have characterized those decisions.

    Thursday’s hearing was no exception. Reyes pressed the government on its claim that it would suffer “irreparable harm” if it were not allowed to end TPS for Haitians.

    She questioned the government’s interpretation of her initial order in their appeal, and she pushed back on an administration attempt to compare her to President Biden’s handing of immigration benefits to a broad group of immigrants.

    “That Biden decision is not in front of me,” Reyes said, adding that the comparison was “legally meaningless.”

    She also stressed that if she were to stay her decision and a higher court were to later rule in favor of the Haitian plaintiffs, those deported to Haiti would have no legal path to return to the U.S. She also criticized the administration for what she said was a misleading interpretation of her ruling, in which she said Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem had failed to follow the law and consult with other agencies before deciding to end TPS for Haitians.

    “My determination is Congress required her to consult with appropriate agencies, and she did not consult with any agency, including the Department of State,” she said.

    Jacqueline Charles

    Miami Herald

    Jacqueline Charles has reported on Haiti and the English-speaking Caribbean for the Miami Herald for over a decade. A Pulitzer Prize finalist for her coverage of the 2010 Haiti earthquake, she was awarded a 2018 Maria Moors Cabot Prize — the most prestigious award for coverage of the Americas.

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    Jacqueline Charles

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  • Howard Co. revokes building permit, introduces legislation to block proposed ICE detention center – WTOP News

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    After an inspection and the publication of leasing advertisements for the proposed detention center in Elkridge, Howard County determined that the building would be used by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and revoked the building permit.

    Howard County, Maryland, has revoked the building permit for a private detention center that County Executive Calvin Ball said was going to be used by U.S. Immigration and Customs. And the county council has introduced emergency legislation to stop the project.

    After a recent inspection and leasing advertisements for the proposed detention center, located at 6522 Meadowridge Road in Elkridge, the county determined “this privately owned building is intended for occupancy by ICE,” said Ball in a Monday news conference.

    “The retrofitting of a private office buildings for detention use without transparency, without input, without clear oversight, is deeply troubling,” Ball said. “In this case, the proposed detention center sits in an existing office park in close proximity to health care providers, schools, parks and neighborhoods.”

    According to Ball, the county wasn’t aware of specific lease agreements or contracts between the building owner and any federal agency.

    The county’s director of inspections, licenses and permits and permits revoked the building permit, Ball said.

    Later, Monday, the Howard County Council introduced two pieces of emergency legislation aimed at preventing private entities, rather than government agencies, from operating detention centers in the county.

    The council voted to hold an emergency public hearing Wednesday, which could stretch into Thursday, followed by a vote on the bills by the five-person council.

    “Since there are four cosponsors on the bill, it is about 99.99% likely to pass,” Council Chair Opel Jones told the audience, which responded with a standing ovation.

    Jones asked audience members to “pack the house” for the public hearing, before encouraging participants to be concise in their statements, “so we can get right to the point, and vote this bill in.”

    Howard County’s actions comes several days after the U.S. Department of Homeland Security purchased a warehouse near Hagerstown, Maryland, raising concerns that it would be retrofitted as an ICE detention center.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2026 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Neal Augenstein

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  • ‘We’re going to get this job done’: GOP Leaders see narrow path to end partial shutdown Tuesday

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    The House is expected to vote today on a funding bill aimed at ending the partial government shutdown, with President Donald Trump urging lawmakers to act swiftly despite Democratic calls for changes to immigration operations.The deal that passed the Senate last week funds the government through the rest of the fiscal year, except for the Department of Homeland Security. Lawmakers would have until Feb. 13 to negotiate Homeland Security funding and immigration enforcement provisions. On Monday, Trump told both sides in the House to send the bill to his desk without any delays, expressing his desire to see the government reopen as soon as possible. “We need to get the Government open, and I hope all Republicans and Democrats will join me in supporting this Bill, and send it to my desk WITHOUT DELAY,” the president wrote on social media.However, many Democrats want to see changes to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol operations before anything is signed.”The American people want to see the masks come off. The American people want to see body cameras turned on, and mandated. The American people want to see judicial warrants,” said House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.House Speaker Mike Johnson argues that requiring immigration officers to remove masks would not have support from Republicans, as it could lead to problems if their personal images and private information are posted online by protesters. Passing this legislation could be a challenge because Johnson is working with a razor-thin majority and can only afford to lose one Republican defection, but he is confident he will pull it off.”We’re going to get this job done, get the government reopened. Democrats are going to play games and the American people can see who really cares,” Johnson said.Lawmakers from both parties are concerned the shutdown will disrupt the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which they rely on to help people after deadly snowstorms and other disasters.Keep watching for the latest from the Washington News Bureau:

    The House is expected to vote today on a funding bill aimed at ending the partial government shutdown, with President Donald Trump urging lawmakers to act swiftly despite Democratic calls for changes to immigration operations.

    The deal that passed the Senate last week funds the government through the rest of the fiscal year, except for the Department of Homeland Security. Lawmakers would have until Feb. 13 to negotiate Homeland Security funding and immigration enforcement provisions.

    On Monday, Trump told both sides in the House to send the bill to his desk without any delays, expressing his desire to see the government reopen as soon as possible.

    “We need to get the Government open, and I hope all Republicans and Democrats will join me in supporting this Bill, and send it to my desk WITHOUT DELAY,” the president wrote on social media.

    However, many Democrats want to see changes to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol operations before anything is signed.

    “The American people want to see the masks come off. The American people want to see body cameras turned on, and mandated. The American people want to see judicial warrants,” said House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.

    House Speaker Mike Johnson argues that requiring immigration officers to remove masks would not have support from Republicans, as it could lead to problems if their personal images and private information are posted online by protesters.

    Passing this legislation could be a challenge because Johnson is working with a razor-thin majority and can only afford to lose one Republican defection, but he is confident he will pull it off.

    “We’re going to get this job done, get the government reopened. Democrats are going to play games and the American people can see who really cares,” Johnson said.

    Lawmakers from both parties are concerned the shutdown will disrupt the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which they rely on to help people after deadly snowstorms and other disasters.

    Keep watching for the latest from the Washington News Bureau:


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  • Palantir Touts $2 Billion in Revenue from Aiding Trump Administration’s ‘Unusual’ Operations

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    Palantir earned a record $1.855 billion in revenue from the American government in 2025, the company said in an earnings report that exceeded market expectations.

    “We also did this while supporting, in critical manner, some of the most interesting, intricate, unusual operations that the U.S. government has been involved in, many of which we can’t comment on, but were the highlight of last year and were highly motivating to all of us at Palantir,” CEO Alex Karp said on the investor call.

    Palantir’s “motivating” business with the U.S. government grew 55% year-over-year in 2025. In just the last three months of the year, Palantir made $570 million in revenue, with 66% growth year-over-year.

    Most of that revenue was driven by the company’s work for the Department of Defense, “as well as accelerating momentum in civil agencies,” Palantir’s chief revenue officer Ryan Taylor said.

    Palantir’s close relationship with at least one of these civil agencies has been at the heart of growing public scrutiny, and that’s the Department of Homeland Security.

    The DHS has been relying on Palantir software in its effort to turbocharge the Trump administration’s violent crackdown on immigrants. Last year, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency paid Palantir $60 million to build a surveillance platform called ImmigrationOS to track self-deportations. Just a few months later, an Amnesty International report claimed that Palantir’s AI software was used to target non-citizens who speak out in favor of Palestine.

    ICE also uses Palantir tech to decide which neighborhoods to target for deportation raids. The program is called ELITE (short for Enhanced Lead Identification and Targeting), and it was first unveiled in a 404 Media report last month and later corroborated in a DHS report on AI use cases in the Department.

    The same report also says that ICE uses Palantir AI to review, summarize, and categorize tips sent to the agency.

    Karp himself has been outspoken in favor of Trump’s immigration policy, going so far as to say that he will use his “whole influence to make sure this country stays skeptical on migration.

    But Palantir’s partnership with Washington goes far beyond just immigration. Many parts of the government rely on Palantir software, most notably the Pentagon and particularly through a $480 million deal for an AI-powered target identification system called Maven.

    “Our weapons software is in every combat situation [that] I’m aware of,” Karp said. In fact, the CEO claims it’s been so effective that his chief technology officer Shyam Sankar’s “phone rings off the hook all day, and what they want from him is ‘how do I do this same thing across government?’”

    Karp’s usual retort to accusations that Palantir is aiding the administration in immoral (and some argue illegal) actions is that the company’s software is the only way the public can ensure the government’s actions remain constitutional. He has used this reasoning when defending the use of Palantir software in Caribbean boat strikes that many experts believe to be war crimes, and he used it again in the investor call to ward off fears of Palantir-driven mass surveillance.

    Karp argues that Palantir is building technology that will hold the government accountable to the legal limits of its surveillance, and ensure that “every institution that uses our product is doing it within conformity of the law and the ethics of America.”

    But what happens when those “laws and ethics” themselves become questionable? Well, Palantir continues to get paid.

    Take Palantir’s work for the Department of Health and Human Services. For roughly the past year, Palantir has supplied AI tools to attack government programs, contracts, and grants that don’t fit with the Trump administration’s views on gender, environment, and race, according to a recently published report on AI use cases at HHS.

    The Department has been using Palantir AI to make sure that all grants and jobs comply with Trump’s executive orders targeting DEI and “gender ideology.

    Since they were signed a year ago, both executive orders have led to many federal layoffs, including some targeting non-DEI-related positions, and major cuts to funding for crucial research. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention even had to scrub any mentions of words like “gender,” “LGBT,” or “environmental justice,” retracting and even pausing some research submissions, while Trump cut more than 1,600 research grants at the National Science Foundation.

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    Ece Yildirim

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  • Federal officers involved in Alex Pretti shooting placed on leave, DHS says

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    Two federal officers fired their guns during Alex Pretti’s fatal shooting, according to an initial review by the Department of Homeland Security obtained by NBC News.

    Both agents were placed on administrative leave, according to DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin. MS Now was first to report that detail.

    The preliminary report, from a Customs and Border Protection internal investigation led by the agency’s Office of Professional Responsibility, was sent to congressional committees Tuesday, including the House Homeland Security and Judiciary committees, according to three sources.

    The DHS report said that during the encounter Jan. 24, an officer yelled “He’s got a gun!” multiple times and then “approximately five seconds later a BPA [Border Patrol agent] discharged his CBP-issued Glock 19 and a CBPO [Customs and Border Protection officer] also discharged his CBP-issued Glock 47 at Pretti.”

    It’s unclear from the report whether the bullets from both officers’ guns hit Pretti.

    The report also did not make any mention of Pretti attacking officers or brandishing a gun, as Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem claimed in the aftermath of the shooting.

    Multiple videos recorded by eyewitnesses that were verified and analyzed by NBC News show Pretti did not hold a weapon during the struggle as he was surrounded by agents. One video shows that a federal agent removed a gun from Pretti’s waist area just before he was shot.

    The report said that after the shooting, a Border Patrol agent said he had possession of Pretti’s gun, which was then secured in his vehicle.

    A federal judge ordered the Trump administration to refrain from “destroying or altering evidence” Sunday, after state investigators were denied access to the crime scene.

    The report said its findings were based on CBP documents and body-camera from officers on the scene.

    It said that officers were “conducting enforcement actions” in Minneapolis on Saturday morning as part of Operation Metro Surge, near the intersection of Nicollet Avenue and 25th Street.

    The operation has seen some 3,000 federal officers and agents deployed to Minnesota — Minneapolis Police Department has just 600 officers — as part of President Donald Trump‘s crackdown on migrant communities and what federal officials say is an attempt to stamp out local corruption and fraud.

    The surge has been met with strong local opposition and protests, particularly after a local woman, Renee Good, was shot dead by an immigration officer while at the wheel of her car Jan. 7.

    “Several civilians were in the area yelling and blowing whistles. BPAs and CBPOs made several verbal requests for the civilians to stay on the sidewalks and out of the roadway,” the report into Pretti’s death said.

    An officer was then “confronted” by two women blowing whistles who failed to comply with an order to move out of the road, according to the report. After the officer pushed them both away, it said, one of them ran to a man the report identified as Pretti.

    The officer continued to attempt to move the woman and Pretti out of the road before using his pepper spray on them both, the report said.

    “CBP personnel attempted to take Pretti into custody. Pretti resisted CBP personnel’s efforts and a struggle ensued. During the struggle, a BPA yelled, ‘He’s got a gun!’ multiple times,” the report said.

    Approximately five seconds later, a Border Patrol agent and a CBP officer both fired shots at Pretti, according to the report.

    At 9:02 a.m., CBP staff cut Pretti’s clothes and provided first aid including placing chest seals on his wounds, before fire department medics arrived two minutes later, the report said.

    He was pronounced dead at Hennepin County Medical Center at approximately 9:32 a.m.

    Homeland Security adviser Stephen Miller said Tuesday that the initial statement from DHS — which in the hours after the shooting said Pretti “wanted to do maximum damage and massacre law enforcement” — was based on reports from CBP staff on the ground.

    He said that the White House had provided “clear guidance to DHS that the extra personnel that had been sent to Minnesota for force protection should be used for conducting fugitive operations to create a physical barrier between the arrest teams and the disruptors.”

    “We are evaluating why the CBP team may not have been following that protocol,” he said.

    A DHS spokesperson said: “The initial statement was based on reports from CBP from a very chaotic scene on the ground. That’s precisely why an investigation is underway and DHS will let the facts lead the investigation.”

    Miller’s initial comments prompted a significant backlash, including from many in the Republican Party. The operation in Minnesota has no fixed end date and was already facing criticism following the shooting of Good.

    Speaking to reporters Tuesday, Trump was asked about his staff’s assessment that Pretti was a “domestic terrorist.”

    “I haven’t heard that, but certainly he shouldn’t have been carrying a gun,” the president said.

    President Donald Trump talked about the killing of Alex Pretti while visting a restaurant in Iowa.

    Both DHS and CBP are conducting investigations into the shooting and the results of an autopsy are still to be released by Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office.

    A CBP spokesperson said the report was released as per standard procedures and provided only an outline of what took place.

    “They provide an initial outline of an event that took place and do not convey any definitive conclusion or investigative findings. They are factual reports – not analytical judgments – and are provided to inform Congress and to promote transparency,” the spokesperson said.

    The CBP’s Office of Professional Responsibility says it investigates “criminal and serious misconduct or mismanagement allegations.”


    Melanie Zanona and Kyle Stewart contributed.

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    Frank Thorp V, Patrick Smith and Laura Strickler | NBC News

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  • Lawmakers call for change in federal response in Minneapolis

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    Changes are coming to federal immigration enforcement in Minnesota.

    Days after the shooting death of Alex Pretti by federal agents, the Trump administration pulled back Border Patrol commander Greg Bovino from the state and brought in border czar Tom Homan instead.

    Some have suggested the move sidelines Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, but President Donald Trump has said he still supports her in that role.

    “She absolutely should be fired by the president,” said Rep. Seth Moulton, D-Massachusetts.

    President Donald Trump talked about the killing of Alex Pretti while visting a restaurant in Iowa.

    Democrats believe this is a critical moment. Moulton traveled to Minneapolis on Tuesday and spoke with NBC10 Boston shortly after landing, applauding the president’s most recent steps, but couching that praise with a stark reminder.

    “I guess there’s a little bit of hope in some of the actions that the administration is taking, but let’s be clear, they’re only taking these actions because two American patriots are dead on the streets of Minneapolis,” he said.

    The congressman is in Minnesota in an official capacity carrying out Congressional oversight duties.

    “This could be coming to Massachusetts next, so we need to be prepared, and there’s no better way to prepare for Massachusetts than to understand what’s going on in Minneapolis,” Moulton said.

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said President Trump has not labeled Alex Pretti a domestic terrorist and will let the investigation determine the facts.

    Others, like fellow Democratic Rep. Jake Auchincloss of Massachusetts, are calling on Congress to act.

    “The president is starting to buckle,” said Auchincloss. “Which means that those of us who support the Constitution and civil rights and due process need to press even harder.”

    The White House has faced similar criticism from Republicans in the wake of this weekend’s shooting. Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina and Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, both Republicans, joined a chorus of Democratic lawmakers calling for Noem’s resignation, NBC News reported Tuesday.

    Local GOP strategists say the recent pivot in Minnesota is warranted.

    “I think the president, taking the initiative to understand that tensions are probably higher than anybody anticipated it becoming, I think he did the right thing,” said Republican strategist Ozzie Palomo.

    Even so, Trump maintains immigration enforcement is needed in Minnesota and beyond. “We can’t lose sight of the fact,” he told reporters before departing the White House.

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    Matt Prichard

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  • US late night TV addresses Alex Pretti shooting: “Guns are the problem?”

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    A number of hosts of late-night TV shows have been reacting to the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti by a federal agent in Minneapolis, tearing into the administration for its response to the incident.

    On Monday, The Daily Show‘s Jon Stewart questioned the assertions made by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and other officials that the fact that Pretti, a lawful gun owner, had a 9 mm semiautomatic handgun on his person at a protest was an indication that he was not there peacefully.

    “Are you saying that the problem is the guy had a gun?” Stewart said. “Are you saying that the guns are the problem? Is everyone on the right coming together to say carrying a legal firearm was the problem?”

    Newsweek reached out to DHS via email for comment.

    Why It Matters

    Pretti, 37, was an intensive care nurse who worked at a Department of Veterans Affairs hospital in Minneapolis and was shot by a U.S. Border Patrol agent on Saturday.

    DHS has said the Border Patrol agent fired in self-defense, saying that Pretti had a handgun and resisted law enforcement; however, other accounts say that the released video footage instead shows Pretti having his gun taken from him before he was shot and that all he had in his hands was his cellphone.

    Some reports have said that Border Patrol commander-at-large Greg Bovino was expected to be removed from his role in Minneapolis following the incident, but DHS has said the claims are not true and that Bovino “has not been relieved of his duties.”

    What To Know

    On his show on Monday evening, during a segment on the shooting of Pretti, Stewart also showed a clip of Bovino at a press conference that was reportedly cut short after only two questions.

    Stewart said that he had a lot of questions, like “who’s going to investigate this horrific killing by the Department of Homeland Security that the Department of Homeland Security has clearly misrepresented?”

    In a reference to O.J. Simpson, the former NFL star who was accused of killing his ex-wife, Stewart added: “Oh, good luck finding the real killer, O.J. We’re rooting for ya.” Simpson’s case is often described as the “Trial of the Century,” and while he was found not guilty of murdering his ex-wife and her friend, he was later found liable for the deaths in a lawsuit.

    “And pardon me for not trusting that the administration is going to do a fair and free investigation, when they are already going out on TV, moving the goalposts on why the shooting was justified, whether he was brandishing the weapon or not,” Stewart said.

    Stewart said Bovino was the “Border Patrol commander-in-short,” while Jimmy Kimmel said on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on Monday that Bovino was Trump’s “number one icehole.”

    In Monday’s show, Stewart played a clip of Bovino saying that politicians, community leaders and some journalists had been calling law enforcement “names like Gestapo.” The Gestapo was the official secret police of Nazi Germany, who were known to wear long trench coats.

    Stewart then showed a photo of Bovino wearing a dark trench coat. Stewart said, “It is slightly terrifying to Americans that you seem to be dressing for the job you want.”

    Kimmel also said during his show on Monday, while discussing Pretti’s death, that the Trump administration “won’t even admit that it was a mistake.”

    “They say the Honda SUV that Renee Good was driving was weaponized, they say the gun Alex Pretti had a license to carry in an open carry state…a gun that Alex Pretti did not even draw, did not touch, a gun that was taken from him by one of the agents before he was shot dead by the other ones,” Kimmel said. “They fired 10 times on an ICU nurse. They’re telling us, well, it was justified.”

    “Is that the law and order you voted for, if you voted for this?” Kimmel asked.

    What People Are Saying

    Jimmy Kimmel said on Monday’s show: “Can we agree that peaceful protesters, including moms driving SUVs on their way back after dropping their 6-year-old off at school, and a nurse who stepped in to protect a woman from harm, don’t deserve to be shot dead in the street by the people we are paying to protect us?”

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Monday: “Mr. Bovino is a wonderful man and he’s a great professional. He is very much going to continue CBP throughout and across the country. Mr. Homan will be the main point of contact on the ground in Minneapolis.”

    DNC Communications Director Rosemary Boeglin said on Monday: “Greg Bovino’s firing should be the first, not the last. An American citizen was murdered this weekend at the hands of federal agents. Donald Trump can hide away at movie screenings of ‘Melania,’ but the American people know he’s behind this campaign of terror and violence. And they won’t forget that in the immediate wake of a tragic murder, Trump, JD Vance and DHS Secretary Kristi Noem took to the airwaves to slander the victim and spread lies. Trump and Vance should immediately fire Noem, Stephen Miller, and Corey Lewandowski — or else they are sending a clear message to voters that getting murdered for exercising your constitutional rights is acceptable in Trump’s America.”

    In a polarized era, the center is dismissed as bland. At Newsweek, ours is different: The Courageous Center—it’s not “both sides,” it’s sharp, challenging and alive with ideas. We follow facts, not factions. If that sounds like the kind of journalism you want to see thrive, we need you.

    When you become a Newsweek Member, you support a mission to keep the center strong and vibrant. Members enjoy: Ad-free browsing, exclusive content and editor conversations. Help keep the center courageous. Join today.

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  • Judge set to hear arguments on Minnesota’s immigration crackdown after fatal shootings

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    A federal judge will hear arguments Monday on whether she should at least temporarily halt the immigration crackdown in Minnesota that has led to the fatal shootings of two people by government officers.The state of Minnesota and the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul sued the Department of Homeland Security earlier this month, five days after Renee Good was shot by an Immigration and Customs officer. Saturday’s shooting by a Border Patrol officer of Alex Pretti has only added urgency to the case.Since the original filing, the state and cities have substantially added to their original request. They’re trying to restore the state of affairs that existed before the Trump administration launched Operation Metro Surge on Dec. 1.The hearing is set for Monday morning in federal court in Minneapolis. Democratic Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said he plans to personally attend.They’re asking that U.S. District Judge Kathleen Menendez order federal law enforcement agencies to reduce the numbers of officers and agents in Minnesota to levels before the surge, while allowing them to continue to enforce immigration laws within a long list of proposed limits.Justice Department attorneys have called the lawsuit “legally frivolous” and said “Minnesota wants a veto over federal law enforcement.” They asked the judge to reject the request or at least stay her order pending an anticipated appeal.Ellison said at a news conference Sunday that he and the cities filed their lawsuit because of “the unprecedented nature of this surge. It is a novel abuse of the Constitution that we’re looking at right now. No one can remember a time when we’ve seen something like this.”It wasn’t clear ahead of the hearing when the judge might rule.The case also has implications for other states that have been or could be targets of intensive federal immigration enforcement operations. Attorneys general from 19 states plus the District of Columbia, led by California, filed a friend-of-the-court brief supporting Minnesota.”If left unchecked, the federal government will no doubt be emboldened to continue its unlawful conduct in Minnesota and to repeat it elsewhere,” the attorneys general wrote.Menendez is the same judge who ruled in a separate case on Jan. 16 that federal officers in Minnesota can’t detain or tear gas peaceful protesters who aren’t obstructing authorities, including people who are following and observing agents.An appeals court temporarily suspended that ruling three days before Saturday’s shooting. But the plaintiffs in that case, represented by the American Civil Liberties Union of Minnesota, asked the appeals court late Saturday for an emergency order lifting the stay in light of Pretti’s killing. The Justice Department argued in a reply filed Sunday that the stay should remain in place, calling the injunction unworkable and overly broad.In yet another case, a different federal judge, Eric Tostrud, late Saturday issued an order blocking the Trump administration from “destroying or altering evidence” related to Saturday’s shooting. Ellison and Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty asked for the order to try to preserve evidence collected by federal officials that state authorities have not yet been able to inspect. A hearing in that case is scheduled for Monday afternoon in federal court in St. Paul.“The fact that anyone would ever think that an agent of the federal government might even think about doing such a thing was completely unforeseeable only a few weeks ago,” Ellison told reporters. “But now, this is what we have to do.”

    A federal judge will hear arguments Monday on whether she should at least temporarily halt the immigration crackdown in Minnesota that has led to the fatal shootings of two people by government officers.

    The state of Minnesota and the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul sued the Department of Homeland Security earlier this month, five days after Renee Good was shot by an Immigration and Customs officer. Saturday’s shooting by a Border Patrol officer of Alex Pretti has only added urgency to the case.

    Since the original filing, the state and cities have substantially added to their original request. They’re trying to restore the state of affairs that existed before the Trump administration launched Operation Metro Surge on Dec. 1.

    The hearing is set for Monday morning in federal court in Minneapolis. Democratic Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said he plans to personally attend.

    They’re asking that U.S. District Judge Kathleen Menendez order federal law enforcement agencies to reduce the numbers of officers and agents in Minnesota to levels before the surge, while allowing them to continue to enforce immigration laws within a long list of proposed limits.

    Justice Department attorneys have called the lawsuit “legally frivolous” and said “Minnesota wants a veto over federal law enforcement.” They asked the judge to reject the request or at least stay her order pending an anticipated appeal.

    Ellison said at a news conference Sunday that he and the cities filed their lawsuit because of “the unprecedented nature of this surge. It is a novel abuse of the Constitution that we’re looking at right now. No one can remember a time when we’ve seen something like this.”

    It wasn’t clear ahead of the hearing when the judge might rule.

    The case also has implications for other states that have been or could be targets of intensive federal immigration enforcement operations. Attorneys general from 19 states plus the District of Columbia, led by California, filed a friend-of-the-court brief supporting Minnesota.

    “If left unchecked, the federal government will no doubt be emboldened to continue its unlawful conduct in Minnesota and to repeat it elsewhere,” the attorneys general wrote.

    Menendez is the same judge who ruled in a separate case on Jan. 16 that federal officers in Minnesota can’t detain or tear gas peaceful protesters who aren’t obstructing authorities, including people who are following and observing agents.

    An appeals court temporarily suspended that ruling three days before Saturday’s shooting. But the plaintiffs in that case, represented by the American Civil Liberties Union of Minnesota, asked the appeals court late Saturday for an emergency order lifting the stay in light of Pretti’s killing. The Justice Department argued in a reply filed Sunday that the stay should remain in place, calling the injunction unworkable and overly broad.

    In yet another case, a different federal judge, Eric Tostrud, late Saturday issued an order blocking the Trump administration from “destroying or altering evidence” related to Saturday’s shooting. Ellison and Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty asked for the order to try to preserve evidence collected by federal officials that state authorities have not yet been able to inspect. A hearing in that case is scheduled for Monday afternoon in federal court in St. Paul.

    “The fact that anyone would ever think that an agent of the federal government might even think about doing such a thing was completely unforeseeable only a few weeks ago,” Ellison told reporters. “But now, this is what we have to do.”

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  • Prayers Up! Federal Agents Kill Another Minneapolis Resident Weeks After Renee Good Shooting (VIDEO)

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    Some things hit differently when the violence comes to your own streets—and Minneapolis is feeling it again. On Saturday, federal officers, including ICE, were back in the spotlight after a man was shot and killed. Now, outrage is sparking as the city still reels from another deadly federal shooting just weeks earlier. The air is seemingly thick with tension, anger, and questions that still haven’t been fully answered.

    RELATED: Unveiled ICE Memo Reportedly Reveals Agents Have Been Instructed That They Can Enter Homes Without Judicial Warrants

    Minneapolis In Uproar As Shooting Details Surface

    According to Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, the 51-year-old man who was shot died amid the Trump administration’s ongoing immigration crackdown. Details around the shooting are still emerging. Nonetheless, a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said the person had a firearm with two magazines. DHS also released a photo of the handgun they say was recovered from the scene, though protesters say that doesn’t justify what happened.

    Protesters Clash With ICE Near Renee Good Site

    The location couldn’t have been more charged: just over a mile from where Renee Good, 37, was killed by an ICE officer on January 7. After the shooting, hundreds of demonstrators poured into the streets, screaming at federal officers, calling them “cowards” and chanting “ICE out now.” One officer reportedly mocked the crowd, walking away with a dismissive “Boo hoo,” while others shoved protesters into vehicles. People even dragged dumpsters into streets to block traffic, showing the depth of the city’s frustration.

    They’re killing my neighbors!” shouted local resident Josh Koskie, capturing the anger felt by so many in the crowd. Federal agents responded with batons and flash bangs, escalating an already tense situation. Walz, a Democrat, called for an immediate halt to the operation. He also urged President Trump to withdraw what the Department of Homeland Security has described as its largest-ever immigration enforcement mission.

    City Tensions Rise After Back-To-Back ICE Tragedies

    The shooting came a day after thousands braved freezing temperatures to protest federal immigration enforcement, demanding that law enforcement leave the city. As Minneapolis continues to wrestle with back-to-back tragedies involving ICE, the tension is palpable. And, many are left asking what comes next for a city caught in the crosshairs of federal action and community outrage.

    RELATED: ICE Agents Reportedly Detain 5-Year-Old Boy In Minnesota And Use Him To “Bait” Father Into Capture

    What Do You Think Roomies?

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    Desjah

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  • Vancouver City Council Denounces Federal Immigration Enforcement Practices – KXL

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    VANCOUVER, WA – The Vancouver City Council on Tuesday issued a sweeping Public Declaration on Community Harm, Public Safety, and Human Dignity, formally denouncing the conduct of federal immigration enforcement agencies operating under the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, including U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

    The declaration outlines the City’s position that certain federal immigration enforcement practices have caused harm to community members, undermined public trust, and threatened the safety and dignity of residents. In adopting the statement, councilmembers affirmed their intention to respond to what they described as a crisis using the full force of the City’s legal authority.

    According to the declaration, the City views aggressive or opaque enforcement actions as creating fear among immigrant communities, discouraging residents from accessing essential services or cooperating with local authorities. The council emphasized that these outcomes run counter to local public safety goals and the City’s commitment to human rights and community well-being.

    The document also signals Vancouver’s intent to review and, where permissible, limit cooperation between city agencies and federal immigration enforcement bodies. City leaders indicated that any such actions would be guided by existing law, with an emphasis on protecting civil liberties while maintaining public safety.

    Councilmembers framed the declaration as both a policy statement and a call to action, underscoring the City’s responsibility to advocate for residents affected by federal enforcement practices. The declaration does not alter federal authority but asserts the City’s stance and its willingness to use legal tools available at the municipal level to mitigate local impacts.

    City officials said the declaration reflects ongoing concerns raised by residents and community organizations and reaffirmed Vancouver’s commitment to dignity, safety, and equal treatment for all who live and work in the city.

    More about:

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    Tim Lantz

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  • As ICE cracks down harder, support for abolishing ICE surges

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    Donald Trump was reelected to the presidency in 2024 after pledging to carry out the “largest deportation operation in American history.” In the first year of his second term, he followed through on his promise, weaponizing the agencies of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and deploying thousands of federal troops into major U.S. cities like an occupying army.

    Earlier this month, the death of Renee Good at the hands of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer Jonathan Ross brought overly aggressive federal law enforcement into public view. As a result, more Americans than ever now think we should get rid of it.

    “More Americans now support the abolishment of ICE, in a major change since July and in Donald Trump’s first presidency,” Forbes‘ Mike Stunson wrote last week, “as the fatal shooting of Renee Good by a federal officer has led to a wave of backlash against the agency.”

    Stunson cited a January 2026 poll conducted by The Economist and YouGov, which found that 46 percent of respondents support abolishing ICE, with 43 percent opposed. The same poll found 50 percent felt Good’s shooting was “not justified,” while only 30 percent said it was justified.

    A separate poll by Civiqs found 43 percent of respondents support ending ICE, with 49 percent opposed. Notably, though, this represents a dramatic shift since only a few months ago. In September 2024, only 19 percent supported, and 66 percent opposed, abolishing the agency.

    It was also the highest number in favor of abolition, and the lowest number against, since Civiqs began asking the question in July 2018, when the #AbolishICE movement began in earnest. (At that time, respondents favored keeping the agency intact by a 2–to–1 margin.)

    And an Associated Press/NORC poll shows 61 percent of Americans now oppose Trump’s handling of immigration; as recently as March 2025, respondents were evenly split.

    The reason for the shift is clear: Americans are suddenly confronted with the reality of what ICE is doing, and they don’t like what they see.

    “Trump has deployed 3,000 federal officers and agents to Minneapolis this month, the largest operation in DHS history,” Nick Miroff wrote last week in The Atlantic. “Many of the ICE officers and Border Patrol agents are outfitted in tactical gear and wear body armor and masks, and they’re using the technological tools that the department acquired to protect the country’s borders: surveillance drones, facial-recognition apps, phone-cracking software. Powered by billions of dollars in new funding, they are making immigration arrests and grabbing protesters who try to stop them.”

    In August 2025, ICE announced a major recruitment push, offering perks like a $90,000 salary and a signing bonus of as much as $50,000. DHS recently announced that in just four months, ICE more than doubled its ranks, from 10,000 to 22,000.

    Those numbers may not be accurate: NOTUS‘ Jackie Llanos writes that according to the government’s official employment statistics, since Trump took office in January 2025, ICE “has hired 7,114 employees” but 1,746 have left in the same period, “placing the net growth of employees at 5,368.”

    Still, a 50 percent increase in one year is substantial. And such a quick expansion doesn’t come without tradeoffs: “ICE reduced training requirements to meet hiring targets,” Military.com reports, “though the agency has not been transparent about the criteria used to determine which recruits qualified for abbreviated training pipelines or how those changes were evaluated internally.”

    For example, NBC News’ Julia Ainsley reports that due to a technical glitch, about 200 recruits with no law enforcement experience were placed in a fast-tracked training process for experienced officers.

    The results are plain to see: ICE officers assaulting U.S. citizens, smashing windows and dragging them from their cars, going door-to-door without a warrant or even reasonable suspicion. In October, ProPublica reported ICE had arrested at least 170 Americans—in many cases using considerable force—including some who were detained for multiple days without being allowed to contact their families or an attorney.

    Ross was apparently even recording Good with his cellphone when he pulled his weapon and shot her. Soon after her death, media outlets released the footage; the shooting is not depicted, but afterward, someone can be heard saying, “Fucking bitch.”

    Social media is full of videos of ICE raids gone wrong, but the government has also saturated the internet with footage of its own.

    “During President Donald Trump’s second term, ICE’s public affairs arm has rapidly transformed into an influencer-style media machine, churning out flashy videos of tactical operations and immigration raids,” The Washington Post reported last month. Citing internal chat logs, the Post added that this team “coordinate[s] with the White House” to generate “brash content showing immigrants being chased, grabbed and detained” with “video edits that might help legitimize the administration’s aggressive stance.”

    “In President Trump’s second term, content is governing and governing is content,” added NPR.

    This may explain why Ross was filming Good when he drew his gun and shot her: to create content for social media.

    And much of that content is distasteful: Last month, on its official X account, Trump’s DHS “publicly announce[d] its dream to somehow eliminate 100 million people, the majority of whom would need to be citizens to hit that number, whose ancestry is seen as ‘third world,’” writes Reason‘s Brian Doherty.

    And in recent months, the DHS and ICE have posted recruitment ads with white nationalist imagery—including an Instagram post two days after Good’s death that used a song popular with neo-Nazis.

    It’s clear the more that Americans are exposed to ICE and its methods and tactics, the less they think the agency should continue to exist. And this is not an extreme position: Both ICE and the DHS are quite new, established in the early 2000s.

    And it’s not like either was without controversy, even in the aftermath of 9/11. “There were fears at the time of DHS’s founding, including on the political right, that the government was creating an authoritarian monster,” The Atlantic‘s Miroff added. “The United States had never had the kind of all-encompassing domestic-security apparatus common in autocracies, whose interior departments function as political police. DHS skeptics worried that civil liberties would be vulnerable to abuse if the government began assembling national databases and an expanded federal police force.”

    And yet, that’s exactly what happened. “ICE has routinely shown itself to be an overreaching and unaccountable agency,” Fiona Harrigan wrote in the December 2024 issue of Reason. “Georgetown University’s Center on Privacy and Technology found that ICE has scanned the driver’s license photos of one in three American adults and could access the driver’s license data of three in four American adults.”

    “ICE’s current powers and central deportation mission are neither appropriately sized nor easily reformed,” Harrigan added. “It would be much better for the government to extend an olive branch to nonviolent undocumented immigrants, reassign ICE’s useful functions elsewhere, and let the agency go once and for all.”

    “Leaving immigration restrictions more to the states would bring us closer to the Constitution’s original meaning,” agrees George Mason University law professor Ilya Somin. “We may not be able to fully restore the original meaning of the Constitution on this score. But abolishing ICE and shifting more law enforcement resources to state and local governments would bring us closer to it. It would also simultaneously curtail ICE abuses and reduce crime.”

    The U.S. went nearly its entire existence without ICE; it could do so again. And the more that Americans become familiar with the agency and see what it does, the more they seem to agree.

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    Joe Lancaster

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  • Exclusive: Dick Durbin blasts Kristi Noem on proof of citizenship threat

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    Illinois U.S. Senator Dick Durbin wrote to Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem on Friday, telling her he was outraged at “repeated targeting and racial profiling” of American citizens by her agents carrying out “citizen checks.”

    In a letter exclusively shared with Newsweek, the Democrat told Noem that statements she and U.S. Border Patrol chief Gregory Bovino had made that U.S. citizens needed to prove their identity were false.

    “To state the obvious, we are not a ‘papers, please’ country,” Durbin wrote. “American citizens generally do not have ‘immigration documents’, and to require them to carry such documents to avoid being violently stopped or interrogated by federal immigration agents is absurd and unconstitutional. There is no requirement in the law for U.S. citizens to carry identification to avoid arbitrary arrest and detention.”

    Why It Matters

    The letter came after Noem spoke to reporters on Thursday, saying that ICE agents may ask U.S. citizens for proof of citizenship during enforcement operations that have seen protesters clash with federal officers and citizens temporarily detained. Some video has shown citizens reacting angrily to such requests, saying they do not need to prove who they are, with concerns around Fourth Amendment protections.

    What To Know

    “If we are on a target, there may be individuals surrounding that criminal that we may be asking who they are and why they’re there and having them validate their identity,” Noem said Thursday, after questions over why some Americans were being asked for proof of citizenship.

    Bovino, who has been the face of DHS’ large-scale operations in Chicago, Charlotte and now Minnesota, has made comments on social media with a similar message, adding that a REAL ID is not proof of citizenship.

    Durbin, who has been outspoken over the Trump administration’s actions over the past year already, said he was deeply concerned at Bovino’s comments.

    “The founders included explicit protections from unreasonable searches and seizures in the U.S. Constitution to prevent the types of arbitrary and indiscriminate arrests of U.S. citizens that are currently occurring in American cities,” Durbin told Noem, adding that current Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh had affirmed these protections recently.

    “Unfortunately, these caveats have not prevented an escalating number of arbitrary stops, arrests, and detentions of U.S. citizens by federal immigration agents,” the senator added.

    He went on to outline multiple incidents in Minnesota alone in the past few weeks, which have seen U.S. citizens detained by federal agents, who at times have been seen using aggressive tactics to do so. Tensions have been especially high in the Twin Cities following the death of Renee Nicole Good, who was shot by an ICE agent on January 7.

    “The Department’s cavalier attitude towards the law continues to lead to frequent abuses against American citizens,” Durbin wrote.

    The senator also said that agents had approached multiple non-white people in Minneapolis, and elsewhere, and asked where they were born and for their identification, with at least one person told “we are doing a citizen check.”

    Under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), immigrants in the U.S. are required to carry proof of their status. The rule has not been strictly enforced through fines for several years, but under the Trump administration, there have been a few instances of people being fined for not carrying documentation.

    When the rules were tightened, some experts did warn that if one group had to carry documentation, then all people in the U.S. would be affected, even if not legally required to carry proof of nationality.

    The Trump administration, including Noem and Bovino, has insisted agents are working within the law to enforce immigration laws and deliver on the president’s promise of mass deportations of illegal immigrant criminals. DHS has also made it clear that it will seek to prosecute anyone who attacks or impedes federal agents in this work.

    What People Are Saying

    Durbin, in his letter to Noem: “Terrifying experiences like these undoubtedly will become more commonplace for American citizens unless the Department abides by the law and reins in its reckless immigration enforcement operations.

    “Please immediately issue a correction to the Department’s false statement that U.S. citizens must carry proof of citizenship and immediately instruct your employees that unconstitutional “citizen checks” are not permitted and must immediately cease.”

    Mubashir, a Minnesota community member, to members of Congress Friday: “At no time did any officer ask me whether I was a citizen or if I had any immigration status. They did not ask for any identifying information, nor did they ask about my ties to the community, how long I had lived in the Twin Cities, my family in Minnesota, or anything else about my circumstances.”

    Bovino, on X December 11: “One must carry immigration documents as per the INA. A Real ID is not an immigration document.”

    Michael McAuliffe, former federal prosecutor and ex-elected state attorney, to Newsweek Thursday: “Standing near someone who may be illegally in the country is not a crime, and is not––alone––grounds to require someone to identify themselves. If one adds to the scenario any facts that might support a suspicion that a person is helping the suspect, or obstructing the agent’s attempts to evaluate the suspect’s status, it could change what the officer can do in terms of seeking identification, requiring someone to move, or detaining the person.”

    What Happens Next

    As protests and enforcement efforts continue across the U.S., Durbin has called for Noem to respond with information on the questions DHS officials are legally allowed to ask people to determine citizenship, what documents were shared with agents giving the impression they were allowed to carry out “citizen checks,” and what criteria agents are using to determine if there is a reason to believe a person is not legally in the U.S.

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  • ICE error meant some recruits were sent into field offices without proper training, sources say

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    As Immigration and Customs Enforcement was racing to add 10,000 new officers to its force, an artificial intelligence error in how their applications were processed sent many new recruits into field offices without proper training, according to two law enforcement officials familiar with the error.

    The AI tool used by ICE was tasked with looking for potential applicants with law enforcement experience to be placed into the agency’s “LEO program” — short for law enforcement officer — for new recruits who are already law enforcement officers. It requires four weeks of online training.

    Applicants without law enforcement backgrounds are required to take an eight-week in-person course at ICE’s academy at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in Georgia, which includes courses in immigration law and handling a gun, as well as physical fitness tests.

    “They were using AI to scan résumés and found out a bunch of the people who were LEOs weren’t LEOs,” one of the officials said.

    The officials said the AI tool sent people with the word “officer” on their résumés to the shorter four-week online training — for example, a “compliance officer” or people who said they aspired to be ICE officers.

    The majority of the new applicants were flagged as law enforcement officers, the officials said, but many had no experience in any local police or federal law enforcement force.

    Both law enforcement officials noted that ICE’s field offices provide more training beyond what is provided at the academy or in the online course before officers are sent out onto the street and that the officers singled out by the AI tool most likely received that training. The officials weren’t authorized to speak publicly and spoke to NBC News on condition of anonymity.

    The Department of Homeland Security didn’t respond to a request for comment. The AI mistake was identified in mid-fall — over a month into the recruitment surge — and ICE immediately began taking steps to remedy the situation, including manual reviews of résumés of new hires, the officials said.

    “They now have to bring them back to FLETC,” said one of the officials, referring to the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center.

    The AI tool was initially the mechanism used to categorize résumés, the officials said. The officials weren’t sure how many officers were improperly trained. It’s also not clear how many may have been sent out to begin immigration arrests.

    As the immigration agency surges agents into American cities, their enforcement tactics are increasingly questioned by local law enforcement, community groups and lawmakers following the shooting death of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis by ICE officer Jonathan Ross.

    Ross had more than 10 years of experience with ICE and wouldn’t have been subject to the AI screening for new recruits.

    The error highlights the challenge of training such a large number of new recruits as ICE continues to ramp up operations to boost deportation numbers amid pressure from the White House. ICE has also placed some new recruits into a training program before they completed the agency’s vetting process, NBC News has reported.

    In Minneapolis alone, more than 2,000 ICE officers have been sent to the area to boost arrests, and they have apprehended over 2,400 people since Nov. 29, DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said. Minnesota has sued to try to remove DHS.

    ICE had a mandate to hire 10,000 new officers by the end of 2025 and offered new recruits $50,000 signing bonuses using the money Congress allocated under the One Big Beautiful Bill. One of the officials said that although ICE met the goal on paper, bringing back people who were misidentified for more training means it didn’t successfully add 10,000 ICE officers on the street in 2025.

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    Julia Ainsley | NBC News

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  • Protests against ICE planned across the US after shootings in Minneapolis and Portland, Oregon

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    Protesters against immigration enforcement actions took to the streets in cities and towns across the country on Saturday after a federal officer shot and killed a woman in Minneapolis and another shot and wounded two people in Portland, Oregon.Video above: Protesters and counterprotesters clash in Minneapolis day after ICE shootingThe demonstrations come as the U.S. Department of Homeland Security pushes forward in the Twin Cities with what it calls its biggest-ever immigration enforcement operation. President Donald Trump’s administration has said both shootings were acts of self-defense against drivers who “weaponized” their vehicles to attack officers. Steven Eubanks, 51, said he felt compelled to get out of his comfort zone and attend a Saturday protest in Durham, North Carolina, because of what he called the “horrifying” killing in Minneapolis.”We can’t allow it,” Eubanks said. “We have to stand up.”Video below: Protests intensify after ICE shooting of Renee GoodIndivisible, a social movement organization that formed to resist the Trump administration, said hundreds of protests were scheduled in Texas, Kansas, New Mexico, Ohio, Florida and other states. Many were dubbed “ICE Out for Good” using the acronym for the federal agency Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Indivisible and its local chapters organized protests in all 50 states last year.In Minneapolis, a coalition of migrant rights groups called for a demonstration at Powderhorn Park, a large green space about half a mile from the residential neighborhood where 37-year-old Renee Good was shot on Wednesday. They said the rally and march would celebrate Good’s life and call for an “end to deadly terror on our streets.”Protests held in the neighborhood have so far been largely peaceful, in contrast to the violence that hit Minneapolis in the aftermath of the killing of George Floyd in 2020. Near the airport, some confrontations erupted on Thursday and Friday between smaller groups of protesters and officers guarding the federal building used as a base for the Twin Cities crackdown. On Friday night, a protest outside a Minneapolis hotel that attracted about 1,000 people turned violent as people threw ice, snow and rocks at officers, Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said during a news conference Saturday. One officer suffered minor injuries after being struck with a piece of ice, O’Hara said. Twenty-nine people were cited and released, he said.Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey stressed that while most protests have been peaceful, those who cause damage to property or put others in danger will be arrested.The Trump administration has been surging thousands of federal officers to Minnesota under a sweeping new crackdown tied in part to allegations of fraud involving Somali residents. More than 2,000 officers were taking part. Some officers moved in after abruptly pulling out of Louisiana, where they were part of another operation that started last month and was expected to last until February. Associated Press writer Allen Breed contributed to this report from Durham, North Carolina.

    Protesters against immigration enforcement actions took to the streets in cities and towns across the country on Saturday after a federal officer shot and killed a woman in Minneapolis and another shot and wounded two people in Portland, Oregon.

    Video above: Protesters and counterprotesters clash in Minneapolis day after ICE shooting

    The demonstrations come as the U.S. Department of Homeland Security pushes forward in the Twin Cities with what it calls its biggest-ever immigration enforcement operation. President Donald Trump’s administration has said both shootings were acts of self-defense against drivers who “weaponized” their vehicles to attack officers.

    Steven Eubanks, 51, said he felt compelled to get out of his comfort zone and attend a Saturday protest in Durham, North Carolina, because of what he called the “horrifying” killing in Minneapolis.

    “We can’t allow it,” Eubanks said. “We have to stand up.”

    Video below: Protests intensify after ICE shooting of Renee Good

    Indivisible, a social movement organization that formed to resist the Trump administration, said hundreds of protests were scheduled in Texas, Kansas, New Mexico, Ohio, Florida and other states. Many were dubbed “ICE Out for Good” using the acronym for the federal agency Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Indivisible and its local chapters organized protests in all 50 states last year.

    In Minneapolis, a coalition of migrant rights groups called for a demonstration at Powderhorn Park, a large green space about half a mile from the residential neighborhood where 37-year-old Renee Good was shot on Wednesday. They said the rally and march would celebrate Good’s life and call for an “end to deadly terror on our streets.”

    Protests held in the neighborhood have so far been largely peaceful, in contrast to the violence that hit Minneapolis in the aftermath of the killing of George Floyd in 2020. Near the airport, some confrontations erupted on Thursday and Friday between smaller groups of protesters and officers guarding the federal building used as a base for the Twin Cities crackdown.

    NurPhoto

    In St. Paul, Minnesota, Gov. Tim Walz and First Lady Gwen Walz join a moment of silence with clergy and demonstrators at the Minnesota State Capitol during a vigil urging accountability and compassion after an ICE agent shot and killed a woman this week.

    On Friday night, a protest outside a Minneapolis hotel that attracted about 1,000 people turned violent as people threw ice, snow and rocks at officers, Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said during a news conference Saturday. One officer suffered minor injuries after being struck with a piece of ice, O’Hara said. Twenty-nine people were cited and released, he said.

    Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey stressed that while most protests have been peaceful, those who cause damage to property or put others in danger will be arrested.

    The Trump administration has been surging thousands of federal officers to Minnesota under a sweeping new crackdown tied in part to allegations of fraud involving Somali residents. More than 2,000 officers were taking part.

    Some officers moved in after abruptly pulling out of Louisiana, where they were part of another operation that started last month and was expected to last until February.

    Associated Press writer Allen Breed contributed to this report from Durham, North Carolina.

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  • New details emerge in Christmas Eve shooting by ICE officers in Glen Burnie – WTOP News

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    Weeks after a Christmas Eve shooting involving ICE officers in Glen Burnie, Maryland, the Department of Homeland Security has released a revised account of the incident.

    Weeks after the shooting of a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainee in Glen Burnie, Maryland, on Christmas Eve, the Department of Homeland Security has issued a statement that differs from the account first provided to the media.

    Initially, in a social media post on Dec. 24, DHS stated the two men who were taken into custody by ICE in Glen Burnie were in a van they claimed had been driven “directly at ICE officers” and that the driver, Tiago Alexandre Sousa-Martins, was shot by officers “defensively.”

    The account described a second man, Solomon Antonio Serrano-Esquivel, as being in the passenger’s seat of the van driven by Sousa-Martins, and that he was injured when Sousa-Martins “wrecked his van.”

    But, on Friday, Anne Arundel County Police said in a news release that Serrano-Esquivel was not in the van driven by Sousa-Martins.

    In fact, he was “already in custody in an ICE vehicle.” It added that the other individual, Sousa-Martins, “was struck by gunfire while operating a separate vehicle.”

    What did DHS say?

    On Friday afternoon, DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement to WTOP that ICE officers were involved in a “targeted immigration enforcement operation” during the Glen Burnie incident, and that officers approached the van driven by Sousa-Martins and told him to turn off the engine.

    Sousa-Martins tried to drive off and “weaponized his vehicles and began ramming his van into several ICE vehicles,” according to the release.

    “He then drove his van directly at ICE officers, it appeared he was trying to run them over.

    It was that action, the release states, that then prompted agents to “defensively” fire their service weapons, hitting Sousa-Martins who then “wrecked his van between two buildings, injuring (Serrano-Esquivel).”

    Friday’s statement indicated officers “rendered immediate medical aid” to both men.

    According to DHS, both men are in the United States illegally. Sousa-Martins is originally from Portugal and Serrano-Esquivel is from El Salvador.

    Anne Arundel County police said the Christmas Eve shooting remains under investigation, and that anyone with information should contact them.

    In Wednesday’s fatal shooting in Minneapolis, DHS officials stated 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good tried to run over officers before she was shot and killed.

    A day after Good was killed, federal immigration agents shot and wounded two people in a vehicle outside a hospital in Portland. DHS claimed the driver attempted to “weaponize” his vehicle to strike the officers.

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    Kate Ryan

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