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Tag: Minnesota

  • Keeler: How can Broncos’ Jarrett Stidham beat Patriots? Gary Kubiak, Bubby Brister see a path

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    Eight no mountain high enough.

    “Oh shoot, I mean, he knows what he’s doing,” Gary Kubiak said of quarterback Jarrett Stidham, who’s slated to start Sunday’s AFC championship against New England. “He’s been preparing with Sean (Payton), he’s been preparing with Bo (Nix), each and every day.

    “I just think, as a coach, and I’m sure Sean (and Bo) have done that, just remind the kid what kind of team he’s on.”

    Funny how history rhymes, isn’t it? Kubiak wore No. 8 as John Elway’s understudy for almost a decade. Stidham now sports that same 8, Kubiak’s old number, as Nix’s relief, one cruel ankle twist away from the throne, over the last two seasons.

    Speaking as one No. 8 to another, our man Kubes, who coached the Broncos to the franchise’s last Super Bowl win a decade ago, offered Stidham eight simple words of advice.

    “Just get in there,” the ex-Broncos backup QB told me by phone earlier this week, “and do your job.”

    Handed the keys to a stock car in the middle of the race? Thrust into the driver’s seat on short notice? Asked to drive your team to the Super Bowl? Kubes has been there.

    Kubiak was Elway’s stand-in from 1983-91, the Cal Naughton, Jr. to John’s Ricky Bobby, a couple of buds shaking and baking all over the AFC West. While Elway was forging one of the great QB careers in NFL history, years of preparing and processing alongside No. 7 molded Kubiak into a championship coach.

    “Sometimes, you’ve got stretches where you may go a year or two years (of not playing),” Kubiak said. “Or you may get out there in a crazy spot.”

    Kubes landed one of the absolute craziest, right at the very end. He was carrying the clipboard for Elway at the ’91-’92 AFC Championship Game in Buffalo when the Broncos icon had to leave the game with a deep bruise in his right thigh.

    Kubiak had already made up his mind before the playoffs that the 1991 season would be his last, that he would retire whenever the ride came to an end.

    “And all of a sudden, there I am in the game,” the former Broncos signal-caller recalled. “It was kind of ironic for me, (spending) all those years backing up John, here I am playing in the AFC Championship Game and had a really good chance to win.”

    Gary literally went into that contest cold. Although he does remember it being surprisingly warm for upstate New York in mid-January.

    “It was an unseasonable 32 degrees in Buffalo,”  he laughed. “I couldn’t have played if it was cold. My back was too bad. I’m glad the Good Lord gave me a game I could play in.”

    Kubes played admirably, too. No. 8 completed 11 of 12 throws for 136 yards. His touchdown run with 1:46 left got the Broncos to within 10-6 before the extra point.

    Denver recovered the ensuing onside kick, but, alas, on the next play, Steve Sewell fumbled the ball back to Buffalo. Three missed field goals at Rich Stadium proved fatal. The Broncos ultimately fell, 10-7.

    “Our defense was really good (in ’91) — a lot like this Broncos team,” Kubiak said. “We were in a lot of low-scoring games. We missed a few plays in the second half. We had ourselves in a position there at the end and unfortunately, the ballgame got away from us … we had our opportunity, but it just didn’t end the right way.”

    How can this one end better? Kubiak likes that Payton doubled down on Stidham publicly, and almost immediately, after getting the worst injury news imaginable.

    “I used to tell my teams, when you’re a coach, you’re going to go through some QB issues and lose a QB,” Kubiak explained. “And I used to always remind guys that when you start to worry about what’s going on at other spots on the team, then you don’t take care of your job. Just stay focused on your job, what you do. ‘We’ve got Stiddy here, he’s going to be ready to play.’ You have to stay focused and (then do) what you have to do to help him out.”

    Bubby Brister went 4-0 as Elway’s No. 2 in the fall of 1998, keeping things afloat as the Broncos eventually repeated as Super Bowl champions. Brister told me Tuesday that he thinks 90% of the battle for Stiddy, to paraphrase Yogi Berra, will be half mental.

    “I believe Jarrett knows he can do the job,” Brister said via text. “He also knows he has a great team and staff around him. Not to mention Sean Payton is in his ear, one of the best ever at calling plays.

    “To top it off, (there’s a) big advantage playing at home with our awesome fans and at Mile High. Just go play! Just go do your job.”

    Even if that means jumping on a moving train. Sportradar says Stidham is only the seventh NFL QB since 1950 to start a playoff game during a season in which he never started once.

    The last three guys who’ve been thrust into that position since 2000 — Joe Webb (Minnesota, 2012), Connor Cook (Oakland, 2016) and Taylor Heinicke (Washington, 2020) — went 0-3. Their average stat line? 216 passing yards, one passing TD, two picks.

    Their teams scored 10 points, 14 points and 23 points, respectively. That’s about 16 per game. Which is asking an awful, awful lot of your defense. Even one as good as Vance Joseph’s.

    “He’ll be all right,” Kubiak said of Stidham. “The thing I always go back to is, it’s all about the team.

    “Denver’s got a great football team. Stidham, that’s Sean’s hand-picked guy. He trusts him. And he’s on a great football team. It’ll be fun to watch the young man. He’ll do a great job.”

    Eight no valley low enough. And just because Frank Reich was a leprechaun doesn’t mean you can’t get lucky all over again.

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Former sports reporter Michele Tafoya files to run for U.S. Senate in Minnesota

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    Former television sports reporter Michele Tafoya has filed to run for the U.S. Senate in Minnesota as a Republican, according to federal filings submitted Tuesday afternoon.

    Tafoya is seeking the open seat being vacated by retiring Democratic Sen. Tina Smith, as Republicans target a pickup opportunity in a state the GOP has not won statewide since 2006, when then-Gov. Tim Pawlenty was reelected.

    A Republican has not been elected to the U.S. Senate from Minnesota since Norm Coleman in 2002.

    “NBC Sunday Night Football” reporter Michele Tafoya on the sidelines during a game between the Dallas Cowboys and the Washington Football Team at AT&T Stadium on Dec. 26, 2021, in Arlington, Texas. 

    Wesley Hitt / Getty Images


    CBS News can confirm Tafoya met last week with the National Republican Senatorial Committee, according to Republican sources familiar with the meeting. The Senate GOP’s campaign arm has been recruiting Tafoya since Smith announced she would not seek reelection, as Republicans look to defend their current 53–47 majority in the upper chamber during this year’s midterm elections. Tafoya’s meeting with the NRSC was first reported by Fox News.

    Tafoya is entering a packed Republican primary that features former NBA player Royce White, the party’s unsuccessful Senate nominee in 2024, along with former Minnesota GOP chair David Hann, U.S. Navy veteran Tom Weiler, and former Navy SEAL Adam Schwarze.

    On the Democratic side, a competitive primary is also taking shape between progressive Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan and centrist Democratic Rep. Angie Craig. In a recent interview with Newsweek, Craig that she believes Congress should impeach Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem following the shooting death of 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good in south Minneapolis by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer earlier this month.

    Tafoya spent about a decade as a sideline reporter for NBC Sports’ “NBC Sunday Night Football” before ending her tenure in 2021. She also had stints during her long sports broadcasting career with ABC Sports, ESPN and CBS Sports. In 2022, she served as co-chair for Kendall Qualls, a Republican gubernatorial candidate who is running again in this year’s governor’s race.

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  • DOJ subpoenas Walz, Ellison, Frey, Minnesota officials in probe alleging immigration obstruction, sources say

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    The Justice Department on Tuesday served subpoenas to the offices of multiple Democratic officials in Minnesota, including Gov. Tim Walz, Attorney General Keith Ellison and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, in connection with a probe into an alleged conspiracy to impede federal immigration officers, three sources familiar with the matter told CBS News. 

    The subpoenas represent a significant escalation between the Justice Department and Minnesota officials, who have clashed over the Trump administration’s intense crackdown against immigrants living in the state illegally. They were served on the same day that Attorney General Pam Bondi arrived for a visit in Minnesota, multiple sources told CBS.

    The subpoenas were sent in connection with a Justice Department investigation into state and local officials to see if they may have conspired to impede federal officers from discharging their duties, sources said. 

    The Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    A copy of a subpoena seen by CBS does not specify which criminal violations the department is probing. However, multiple sources previously told CBS the primary statute being used as the basis for the probe is 18 USC 372 — the same one that was used against some of the rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, including members of the far-right Oath Keepers and the Proud Boys.

    Mr. Trump granted clemency to the more than 1,500 people who were convicted of crimes in connection with the Capitol riot during his first day in office one year ago.

    Earlier this month, the Department of Homeland Security staged a massive deployment of federal immigration agents to the Minneapolis region, saying they would be tasked with arresting people suspected of being in the U.S. illegally and probing allegations of fraud.

    In total, roughly 3,000 Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and Border Patrol agents have been dispatched to the Twin Cities, a force that is nearly five times the size of the Minneapolis police department, which employs about 600 officers.

    The high-profile federal deployment has been strongly opposed by state and local leaders, including Walz, Ellison and Frey, and angered many local residents, who have denounced actions and operations by federal agents as heavy-handed and indiscriminate.

    Protests and confrontations between residents and federal agents have become a near-daily occurrence, especially after the killing of Minneapolis mother Renee Good by an ICE officer on Jan. 7.

    Walz’s office confirmed to CBS News that it received a subpoena. In a statement, Walz said Minnesota would “not be drawn into political theater,” and alleged that the Justice Department’s investigation “does not seek justice,” but is a “partisan distraction.”

    “Minnesotans are more concerned with safety and peace than baseless legal tactics aimed at intimidating public servants standing shoulder to shoulder with their community,” Walz said. 

    Frey, in a statement to CBS News, confirmed receiving the subpoena and said the Justice Department is pursuing him for merely disagreeing with the administration. 

    “When the federal government weaponizes its power to try to intimidate local leaders for doing their jobs, every American should be concerned,” he said. “We shouldn’t have to live in a country where people fear that federal law enforcement will be used to play politics or crack down on local voices they disagree with. In Minneapolis, we won’t be afraid. We know the difference between right and wrong, and, as Mayor, I’ll continue doing the job I was elected to do: keeping our community safe and standing up for our values.”

    Ellison, in a statement to CBS, also confirmed that his office has received a grand jury subpoena seeking records, and noted that the subpoena is not directed to him personally.

    “Less than two weeks ago, federal agents shot and killed a Minnesotan in broad daylight. Now, instead of seriously investigating the killing of Renee Good, Trump is weaponizing the justice system against any leader who dares stand up to him,” he said. “Everything about this is highly irregular, especially the fact that this comes shortly after my office sued the Trump Administration to challenge their illegal actions within Minnesota.”

    Casper Hill, a spokesperson for Ramsey County — which includes St. Paul, Minnesota’s capital city — told CBS News in a statement that Ramsey County was also served with a subpoena.  

    Hennepin County spokesperson Daniel Borgertpoepping told CBS News that “[n]either Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty nor the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office was served with a subpoena,” but that Hennepin County, whose county seat is in Minneapolis, was served with a subpoena. “The Civil Division of the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office represents Hennepin County in legal matters and will be advising the County on the subpoena,” Borgertpoepping said. 

    The subpoena sent to Frey’s office orders the office’s custodian of records to appear for testimony on Feb. 3.

    It also asks for eight categories of documents, including all records and communications issued by the office since Jan. 1, related to federal immigration enforcement in Minnesota, any communications related to the lack of cooperation with federal immigration enforcement and any directives issued to Minnesota residents concerning their interactions with immigration officers.

    Legal experts remain skeptical that the Justice Department has enough evidence to secure any indictments in the case.

    “A grand jury subpoena should not be issued to an individual who is merely exercising their First Amendment rights,” said Gene Rossi, a former federal prosecutor who is now an attorney with Carlton Fields.

    “Impeding an investigation is not done by words. It is done by actions. And all they are doing is criminalizing the policy of a president. If that is the basis for a grand jury investigation, the entire country could be subject to a grand jury investigation.”

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  • DOJ subpoenas Walz, Frey, Her and others in probe alleging immigration obstruction

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    U.S. Border Patrol Cmdr. Greg Bovino held a new conference Tuesday afternoon in Minneapolis where he defended the work and actions of federal agents in Minnesota in Operation Metro Surge.

    Bovino also accused Gov. Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, both Democrats, of “collusion and corruption” with what he calls “anarchist protestors.” 

    “Let me be clear from the start that public safety in Minneapolis is not negotiable,” Bovino said. “Our operations are lawful, they’re targeted and they’re focused on individuals who pose a serious threat to this community. They’re not random, and they are not political. They are about removing criminals who are actively harming Minneapolis neighborhoods.”

    Bovino shared photos of three men he said were arrested in the past day — respectively from Honduras, Guatemala and Laos — whom he called “repeat offenders with serious criminal histories.” All three men, he said, have been charged or arrested sexual abuse-related crimes. The commander also accused the news media of underreporting on “the worst of the worst.”

    “It’s very interesting that I haven’t seen this individual or many others like him reported on very much by the local news media or the state news media. That’s, that’s, that’s interesting,” he said.

    Bovino said recent actions by the Trump administration, including Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, have led to the arrests of 10,000 people in Minneapolis and Minnesota, and have halted illegal border crossings. (WCCO is working to verify the number of arrests.) 

    “Illegal crossings have dropped to record lows. Catch and release has ended. Consequences have been restored,” Bovino said. “Because the border is now secure, law enforcement can do its job more effectively. Agents are no longer tied up processing and releasing, releasing individuals into the interior, individuals that we just talked about. They can focus on who is coming into this country and just as importantly identifying and removing those who should not be here — and that shift matters.”

    Also on hand for Tuesday’s conference was Marcos Charles, executive associate director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, who said federal officers have arrested “113 illegal aliens” in the state over the past holiday weekend. Charles also claimed Minnesota has “released nearly 500 criminal aliens” instead of “turning them over to ICE” since Mr. Trump took office exactly one year ago Tuesday.  

    Cmdr. Greg Bovino

    WCCO


    “ICE currently has more than 1,360 immigration detainers on illegal aliens in Minnesota jails and prisons, and we’re calling on Gov. [Tim] Walz and Mayor [Jacob] Frey to turn these criminal illegal aliens directly over to ICE to keep Minnesota residents in our community safe,” Charles said. “If local officials, including those in the Twin Cities, don’t want to arrest, don’t want ICE to arrest criminal aliens that are at large in their communities, the best solution is to turn them over to us in a safe, controlled setting like a jail or prison instead of releasing them back onto the street to victimize our neighborhoods.”  

    Bovino compared the current operation and Operation Catahoula Crunch, recently carried out in Louisiana, by the number of federal law enforcement members who said have been victims of violence by protesters. He said one attack occurred in Louisiana, while he’s “lost count” of the attacks in Minnesota.

    “These anarchists that are intent on creating violence for law enforcement, you know, I see a lot of this, that mirrors what happened in 2020 here, right here in this city, when they decided to try to burn the city down,” Bovino said, referencing the unrest in the Twin Cities following the murder of George Floyd. “It’s that same type of rhetoric, that same type of support by these elected officials, so that’s very different than what I just witnessed in Louisiana.”

    Bovino said that “everything” federal officers do in Minnesota “every day is legal, ethical, moral, well-grounded in law.”

    “I would impugn upon these police chiefs and anyone else elected representatives, and you have to remember many of these police chiefs do work for the Mayor Freys of the world that, turn over those illegal aliens, those criminal illegal aliens,” Bovino said.

    When pressed by a journalist about “ordinary citizens … getting swept up” in Operation Metro Surge, as opposed to criminals, Bovino described those arrestees as “agitators,” “rioters” and “anarchists.”

    “There’s no need for that violence that we see against law enforcement, and again it seems that the only end of it, the only people that are really dialing down that rhetoric is the federal law enforcement entities that just want to conduct legal, ethical and lawful law enforcement missions in this city to take out those violent criminals, bad people and bad things,” he said.

    When asked if ICE officer Jonathan Ross — who fatally shot Renee Good earlier this month in south Minneapolis — is on administrative leave, Bovino would only say the agent is at home recovering.

    Both Bovino and Charles indicated there is no end date for this operation.

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    WCCO Staff

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  • U.S. citizen detained by ICE at gunpoint in underwear in frigid conditions later asks,

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    St. Paul, Minn. — Federal immigration agents forced open a door and detained a U.S. citizen in his Minnesota home at gunpoint without a warrant, then led him out onto the streets in his underwear in subfreezing conditions, according to his family and videos reviewed by The Associated Press.

    ChongLy “Scott” Thao told the AP that his daughter-in-law woke him up from a nap Sunday afternoon and said U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were banging at the door of his residence in St. Paul. He told her not to open it. Masked agents then forced their way in and pointed guns at the family, yelling at them, Thao recalled.

    “I was shaking,” he said. “They didn’t show any warrant; they just broke down the door.”

    ChongLy “Scott” Thao, a U.S. citizen, sits for a photo at his St. Paul, Minn. home on Jan. 19, 2026, the day after federal agents broke open his door and detained him without a warrant.

    Jack Brook / AP


    Amid a massive surge of federal agents into the Twin Cities, immigration authorities are facing backlash from residents and local leaders for warrantless arrests, aggressive clashes with protestors and the fatal shooting of mother of three Renee Good.

    “ICE is not doing what they say they’re doing,” St. Paul Mayor Kaohly Her, a Hmong American, said in a statement about Thao’s arrest. “They’re not going after hardened criminals. They’re going after anyone and everyone in their path. It is unacceptable and un-American.”

    Thao, who has been a U.S. citizen for decades, said that as he was being detained, he asked his daughter-in-law to find his identification but the agents told him they didn’t want to see it.

    Instead, as his 4-year-old grandson watched and cried, Thao was led out in handcuffs wearing only sandals and underwear with just a blanket wrapped around his shoulders.

    Videos captured the scene, which included people blowing whistles and horns and neighbors screaming at the more than a dozen gun-toting agents to leave Thao’s family alone.

    “It is heartbreaking. It is infuriating to see U.S. citizens, and this gentleman was a U.S. citizen, ripped out of his house without a shirt on, without a coat, without pants, wearing his boxers and Crocs. I don’t know how anyone could watch that happen to anyone,” Mark Goldberg told CBS News Minnesota.

    Goldberg was alerted about the Immigration and Customs Enforcement operation through a community network.

    “Less than five minutes. It all happens very, very quickly, and almost looked like military precision,” Goldberg said. 

    Thao said agents drove him “to the middle of nowhere” and made him get out of the car in the frigid weather so they could photograph him. He said he feared they would beat him. He was asked for his ID, which agents earlier prevented him from retrieving.

    Agents eventually realized that he was a U.S. citizen with no criminal record, Thao said, and an hour or two later, they brought him back to his house. There they made him show his ID and then left without apologizing for detaining him or breaking his door, Thao said.

    The U.S. Department of Homeland Security described the ICE operation at Thao’s home as a “targeted operation” seeking two convicted sex offenders.

    ICE offers reason for raid, which is then challenged

    “The US citizen lives with these two convicted sex offenders at the site of the operation,” DHS said. “The individual refused to be fingerprinted or facially ID’d. He matched the description of the targets.”

    Thao’s family said in a statement that it “categorically disputes” the DHS account and “strongly objects to DHS’s attempt to publicly justify this conduct with false and misleading claims.”

    Thao told the AP that only he, his son and daughter-in-law and his grandson live at the rental home. Neither they nor the property’s owner are listed in the Minnesota sex offender registry. The nearest sex offender listed as living in the zip code is more than two blocks away.

    DHS did not respond to a request from The Associated Press seeking the identities of the “two convicted sex offenders” or why the agency believed they were present in Thao’s home.

    Thao’s son, Chris Thao, said ICE agents stopped him while he was driving to work before they went to detain his father. He said he was driving a car he borrowed from his cousin’s boyfriend. Court records show that the boyfriend shares the first name of another Asian man who has been convicted of a sex offense. Chris Thao said the two people are not the same.

    The family said they are particularly upset by ChongLy Thao’s treatment at the hands of the U.S. government because his mother had to flee to the U.S. from Laos when communists took over in the 1970s since she had supported American covert operations in the country and her life was in danger.

    Thao’s adopted mother, Choua Thao, was a nurse who treated CIA-backed Hmong soldiers in the U.S. government’s “Secret War” from 1961 to 1975 against the communists, according to the Hmong Nurses Association website.

    Choua Thao, who passed away in late December, “treated countless civilians and American soldiers, working closely with U.S. personnel,” her daughter-in-law Louansee Moua wrote on an online fundraising page for the family.

    ChongLy Thao says he’s planning to file a civil rights lawsuit against DHS and no longer feels secure to sleep in his home.

    “I don’t feel safe at all,” Thao said. “What did I do wrong? I didn’t do anything.”

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  • Aimee Bock, “mastermind” of Minnesota’s biggest fraud scheme, says “I wish I could go back and do things differently”

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    The Trump administration has justified its ongoing immigration crackdown in Minnesota by citing a need to curb fraud and pointing to a widening scandal involving members of the Somali American community. Yet prosecutors say the mastermind of the state’s biggest fraud scheme to date was not Somali but a White woman — 45-year-old Aimee Bock. 

    In an exclusive interview from her jail cell, Bock defended her conduct, admitted regrets and argued that state officials who she worked with should bear some of the blame. It was the first time Bock spoke publicly since she was arrested for her role in what prosecutors say was a $250 million COVID-era effort to defraud a federal program to feed hungry children. 

    “I wish I could go back and do things differently, stop things, catch things,” said Bock, who was the head of Feeding Our Future, the now-infamous nonprofit that signed up restaurants and caterers to receive taxpayer money for providing meals to kids. “I believed we were doing everything in our power to protect the program.”

    So far, prosecutors have charged 78 defendants connected to Feeding Our Future, with more than 60 pleading guilty or convicted at trial. All are Somali American, except for Aimee Bock. 

    Aimee Bock in jail in Minnesota.

    CBS News


    During a five-week trial last year, prosecutors alleged Bock signed off reimbursement claims for millions of meals that were never served. She was also charged with collecting bribes. Together, she and the meal site operators were accused of stealing tens of millions of federal dollars and spending it on luxury cars, real estate ventures and vacations. 

    “That money did not go to feed kids,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Lisa D. Kirkpatrick at the time. “It was used to fund their lavish lifestyle.” 

    A jury convicted her on all counts. She’s now awaiting sentencing and faces up to 33 years in prison. Evidence submitted at trial included text messages where Bock compared Feeding Our Future to the mob. 

    “The jury saw overwhelming evidence of what Bock knew,” said lead prosecutor Joe Thompson following the verdict. “She was at the head of the scheme from Day One. She signed every single fraudulent claim that was submitted to the state of Minnesota.”  

    Bock told CBS News she was neither mastermind nor mob boss.

    “It was heartbreaking,” Bock said, describing the moment she heard the verdict. “I believe in accountability. If I had done this, I would’ve pled guilty. I wouldn’t have gone to trial. I wouldn’t have put my children and my family through what we’ve been through. I’ve lost everything.”

    Last month, a judge ordered her to forfeit more than $5 million in proceeds from the scheme. 

    “We relied on the state”

    Most of the millions federal officials seized from her were sitting in a bank account for the nonprofit, and Bock denied she personally lived a lavish lifestyle. She downplayed the items FBI agents found at her home when they raided it in 2022 — a home she had lived in for more than a decade. 

    “They found minimal jewelry,” Bock said. “I believe it was like two pairs of earrings, a bracelet, a watch. There was some cash there.” 

    Bock’s attorney, Kenneth Udoibok, shared video showing stacks of food at meal sites operated by Feeding Our Future contractors. Bock said she was doing everything in her power to root out fraud and terminated agreements with dozens of entities she believed were cheating the system.

    “I was the only one that stopped a claim and said, this is fraudulent,” Bock said. “There are tens of millions of dollars in claims that we did not pay, that we refused.”

    The sudden growth of Bock’s organization was staggering. In 2019, Feeding Our Future submitted $3.4 million worth of meal claims. In 2021, it submitted nearly $200 million. Bock attributed the increase to the looser guidelines during the pandemic that allowed parents to pick up meals and bring them home. Asked whether the spike in volume raised red flags at the time, Bock claimed she had sign-off from Minnesota officials. 

    “We relied on the state,” she said, adding that local officials, including Rep. Ilhan Omar, would often visit the meal sites. “We told the state, this site is going to operate at this address, this time, and this number of children. The state would then tell us that’s approved.” 

    Omar has denied she was aware of individuals defrauding the food program, and previously has condemned the misuse of funds. Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz has drawn widespread scrutiny for his handling of fraud in the state. But Walz has defended his administration’s response, saying “we’ve spent years cracking down on fraudsters” and accusing the Trump administration of “politicizing the issue to defund programs that help Minnesotans.” 

    Udoibok, Bock’s attorney, said state officials at the time weren’t particularly interested in stopping the fraud, because the nonprofit was providing at least some food to an important constituency during a time of significant instability. 

    “What is a lie is that they were policing this fraudulent activity at any time,” Udoibok said. “They wanted a scapegoat. She ran the only food program in the state, so they pinned it on her.”

    A spokesperson for Walz did not respond to a request for comment. 

    “Nobody wants to be labeled a racist”

    Bock spoke to CBS News in the aftermath of the killing of Renee Good, as Minneapolis became a flashpoint in the administration’s push to crackdown on illegal immigration. According to Bock, some of the individuals picked up in ICE sweeps are now being held at the jail where she is being held until she is sentenced.

    In some ways, it’s possible to trace origins of the current tensions in Minnesota to Bock and her nonprofit. Good was killed by an ICE agent after the Department of Homeland Security surged thousands of personnel into the state with a twin mandate to enforce immigration laws and help investigate fraud. 

    Yet long before the issue of fraud became a galvanizing issue for the right — and fodder for conservative influencers — federal prosecutors in Minnesota had zeroed in on Bock. A lifelong Minnesotan, Bock earned a degree in elementary education and held roles at day cares and early childhood centers before starting Feeding Our Future in 2016. 

    “Our goal as an organization was to reach the kids that were not being fed,” said Bock, who has two sons of her own. “There is kind of this quiet need in Minnesota, these food deserts, where there’s just not access to healthy nutritionist food for children.”

    The nonprofit became a so-called “sponsor” for two federal nutrition programs funded by the Department of Agriculture and overseen by Minnesota’s Education Department that paid for kids’ meals during the school year and over the summer. When COVID hit, the USDA issued waivers that gave sponsors like Feeding Our Future more flexibility in how they distributed the food. 

    “During COVID, for obvious reasons, parents were allowed to come and pick up meals,” Bock explained. “So we suddenly were able to reach more children. We were also able to deliver meals to homes.”

    Restaurants and caterers, particularly from Minnesota’s large Somali immigrant community, were eager to sign up. Bock said her organization was well-positioned to fill the need, but state education officials were wary about letting in some of the business that applied. 

    “The Department of Education was sitting on the applications,” Bock said. “They were just not processing them.”

    As racial justice protests swept the country in the wake of the killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer, Bock filed a lawsuit, alleging the state’s scrutiny of Somali applicants was discriminatory and deprived low-income and minority children access to “desperately needed federal food programs.”

    Asked how she believed state officials received the lawsuit, Bock acknowledged “nobody wants to be labeled as racist.” 

    That aggressive advocacy won her praise from the tight-knit Somali community. One community leader told a local reporter Bock was “a modern-day Robin Hood.”

    Bock denied the lawsuit was a scare tactic. The parties reached a settlement where Minnesota’s Education Department agreed to process applications to the meal program “reasonably promptly.” 

    “The notion that a state government is paralyzed and has to allow this level of fraud because they were afraid of what I might do in a lawsuit is preposterous,” Bock said. 

    Years later, education officials told a state watchdog “the threat of legal consequences and negative media attention” intimidated them into easing off. Still, officials with Minnesota’s Department of Education (MDE) insist they did act, noting they were the ones who referred Bock to the FBI in 2021. 

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  • After assassination attempt, Minnesota Sen. John Hoffman remains committed to public service

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    The bullet holes that pierced the front door to State Sen. John Hoffman’s Champlin, Minnesota, home served as a stark reminder of the unthinkable act of political violence he and his family endured in the early morning hours of June 14 last year.

    Seven months later, that door has since been replaced. They haven’t moved away, which Hoffman said comes as a surprise to many. 

    And he isn’t leaving political life, either. 

    In his first interview with WCCO News since that attack by an accused assassin left him and his wife with a combined 17 bullet wounds, Hoffman is undeterred and determined to continue serving in the Minnesota Legislature, returning to the State Capitol for the legislative session next month and announcing his bid for reelection. 

    “It’s the crossroads of life, and it’s either withdraw or get engaged — and everything that was just happening to people outside that I could have an influence on, I needed to stay engaged,” Hoffman said Monday. “Talking with my family, my friends, other colleagues, I had people say to me, you know, ‘Your voice is missing. We need your voice again.’”

    His sense of safety has undeniably changed since that night, and he now describes being in recovery — a process that he said is neither linear nor complete.

    Vance Boelter, 58, faces federal murder, stalking and firearms charges for shooting the Hoffmans and killing former DFL House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark, who were shot dead at their Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, home 90 minutes later. His arrest nearly two days after the attacks was the culmination of what authorities said was the largest state manhunt in history. 

    “What I’m learning in this justice thing is that feds have their slow way of doing their business, and the state has issued their stuff,” Hoffman said. “My justice and my family’s justice is going to be the best we can be, to be re-engaged, to create good policy, to be involved, and to be alive.”

    The DFL state senator also addressed for the first time misinformation spreading on social media in recent months since the shootings. Among the conspiracy theories circulating online are Boelter’s claims, according to writings authorities obtained from his vehicle, that Gov. Tim Walz ordered the attacks, which the former top federal prosecutor called a  “delusion” designed to conceal the crimes.

    President Trump recently shared on his own social media platform a video reviving that falsehood, as well as another debunked claim that Hortman was murdered for one of the final votes she took in the Legislature before her death. Authorities say Boelter targeted other lawmakers that night and had a hit list with several Democratic elected officials on it. 

    Hoffman said those posts traumatize him and his family all over again. 

    “It re-triggers the obsession this individual had toward Melissa Hortman. It re-triggers the fact that I survived, my wife survived and my daughter survived. It re-triggers that moment and it re-triggers those feelings,” he explained. “When people are that selfish that they do their keyboard courage — not okay. It’s hurtful. It’s dehumanizing beyond. We got to get back to treating people like people.”

    Remembering Melissa Hortman, rebuilding relationships in politics

    Hortman’s state House district is one of two in Hoffman’s state Senate district, so they served the same constituents. He affectionately called her his “political kid sister,” whom he said was destined for great things. 

    “Fierce advocate for people in our district — absolutely a fierce advocate. Hardest working person I’ve ever met. She wanted to go, let’s go. She was taking you with her,” Hoffman said.

    In his office hangs a photo of her and the late Senate Majority Leader Kari Dziedzic. The pair led the Democrats’ majorities in 2023 and 2024, during which the Legislature passed sweeping progressive policies.

    “I could disagree with [Hortman] — and I disagreed with her a lot. She was the B-side of the senate district. But it wasn’t personal. Man, I loved her deeply. I can’t believe she’s gone,” he added. 

    In those disagreements is a lesson that Hoffman thinks is lost in politics today. At a meeting of the Democratic National Committee in Minneapolis last August, he notably declared, “We must recommit ourselves to governance over grievance.”

    He reflected again on those thoughts. 

    “Do we treat people like people? No, we’re not. We’re dehumanizing an individual. Once you start to dehumanize somebody, then all of a sudden, it’s us versus them, and that person isn’t now a person, right? And you talk about the anger — governance over grievance. Once they start having grievance, all of a sudden, there’s a gap that exists. And that gap then is distrust,” Hoffman said.

    WCCO asked him if people with diametrically opposing views can rebuild that trust. 

    Hoffman thinks so if they start focusing on policy instead of making politics personal.  

    “[The late Sen.] David Tomassoni also taught me that same thing: be who you are, an authentic self, and get away from personalizing stuff,” he said. “And so I think that’s what’s missing when you really look at it, and we can get back to that.”

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  • ICE Says an Immigrant Who Died in a Sprawling Texas Detention Facility Killed Himself

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    Victor Manuel Diaz appears to have killed himself Wednesday at the sprawling tent complex at the U.S. Army’s Fort Bill base in El Paso, Immigration and Customs Enforcement said in a statement. The federal investigation into his death continues.

    It’s the same facility where ICE said another detainee died earlier this month as staff members tried to keep him from killing himself. But a fellow detainee said at least five officers were restraining the handcuffed inmate and at least one had an arm around his neck.

    EDITOR’S NOTE — This story includes discussion of suicide. If you or someone you know needs help, the national suicide and crisis lifeline in the U.S. is available by calling or texting 988.

    Diaz was swept up on Jan. 6 in the federal crackdown on immigration in Minnesota and sent to Texas, ICE said.

    Diaz entered the United States in March 2024 and Border Patrol officers took him into custody, He was released on parole pending a court date and a judge ordered him to leave the U.S. in an August hearing that Diaz did not attend, ICE said.

    Diaz was given a final order for removal on Jan. 12, two days before he was found unconscious in his room, authorities said.

    ICE did not release any other details on Diaz’s death. The agency notifies Congress and releases a statement on its website of all in-custody deaths.

    Diaz, 36, was being held at Camp Montana East where ICE said another detainee, Geraldo Lunas Campos, died as staff members tried to prevent him from killing himself.

    But a preliminary investigation by the El Paso County Medical Examiner’s Office found Lunas Campos, 55, died from asphyxia from chest and neck compression and said the death would likely be classified a homicide.

    A fellow detainee told the AP that Lunas Campos was handcuffed and refused to go back into his cell when at least five guards pinned him to the floor. The detainee said at least one of the guards squeezed an arm around Lunas Campos’ neck.

    ICE said it is still investigating that death.

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – January 2026

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  • Trump asserts Ilhan Omar should be jailed or booted to Somalia

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    President Donald Trump asserted in a Sunday night Truth Social post that Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota should either be locked up in jail or sent to Somalia.

    “There is 19 Billion Dollars in Minnesota Somalia Fraud. Fake ‘Congresswoman’ Illhan Omar, a constant complainer who hates the USA, knows everything there is to know. She should be in jail, or even a worse punishment, sent back to Somalia, considered one of the absolutely worst countries in the World. She could help to MAKE SOMALIA GREAT AGAIN!” Trump declared in the post.

    Omar, who has served in the U.S. House of Representatives since early 2019, was born in Somalia and became a U.S. citizen in 2000.

    “ICE is removing some of the most violent criminals in the World from our Country, and bring them back home, where they belong. Why is Minnesota fighting this? Do they really want murderers and drug dealers to be ensconced in their community? The thugs that are protesting include many highly paid professional agitators and anarchists. Is this really what Minnesota wants?” the president asked in a Sunday Truth Social post.

    TRUMP ACCUSES TIM WALZ AND ILHAN OMAR OF USING ICE PROTESTS TO DISTRACT FROM MASSIVE STATE FRAUD

    President Donald Trump and Rep. Ilhan Omar (Tom Brenner/Getty Images; Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    “The crooked Governor and ‘Congresswoman’ Omar, who married her brother, don’t mind because it keeps the focus of attention off the 18 Billion Dollar, Plus, FRAUD, that has taken place in the State! Don’t worry, we’re on it!” he added in the post.

    ILHAN OMAR LASHES OUT AT ‘SICK’ REPUBLICANS FOR INVESTIGATING HER ALLEGED MARRIAGE TO BROTHER

    President Donald Trump

    President Donald Trump speaks to the press before his departs the White House en route Palm Beach, Florida, on Jan. 16, 2026. (Celal Gunes/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    Omar recently drew criticism for referring to the nation as the “U.S. God—- States.”

    “No member of Congress should *ever* refer to our country as the ‘U.S. G—— States,’” GOP Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah wrote in a post on X, asking, “What should be the consequence of saying that?”

    ILHAN OMAR REFERS TO ‘US GOD—- STATES’ DURING IMPASSIONED REMARKS ABOUT ICE

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

    Business tycoon Elon Musk replied, “Whatever the penalty is for treason.” 

    Fox News Digital reached out to Omar’s office on Monday to request comment on the Truth Social post.

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  • DOJ probing protesters group that disrupted services at church with ICE pastor

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    Minneapolis — The Department of Justice said Sunday it is investigating a group of protesters in Minnesota who disrupted services at a church where a local official with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement apparently serves as a pastor.

    A livestreamed video posted on the Facebook page of Black Lives Matter Minnesota, one of the protest’s organizers, shows a group of people interrupting services at the Cities Church in St. Paul by chanting “ICE out” and “Justice for Renee Good.” The 37-year-old mother of three was fatally shot by an ICE agent in Minneapolis earlier this month amid a surge in federal immigration enforcement activities.

    The protesters allege that one of the church’s pastors, David Easterwood, also leads the local ICE field office overseeing the operations that have involved violent tactics and illegal arrests.

    Justice Department Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon said her agency is investigating federal civil rights violations “by these people desecrating a house of worship and interfering with Christian worshippers.”

    “A house of worship is not a public forum for your protest! It is a space protected from exactly such acts by federal criminal and civil laws!” she said on social media.

    Attorney General Pam Bondi also weighed in on social media, saying she’s “been in constant communication with (Dhillon) today over these events which @TheJusticeDept is investigating at my direction. Any violation of federal law will be prosecuted.”

    Bondi added that shejust spoke to the Pastor in Minnesota whose church was targeted. Attacks against law enforcement and the intimidation of Christians are being met with the full force of federal law. If state leaders refuse to act responsibly to prevent lawlessness, this Department of Justice will remain mobilized to prosecute federal crimes and ensure that the rule of law prevails.”

    Nekima Levy Armstrong, who participated in the protest and leads the local grassroots civil rights organization Racial Justice Network, dismissed the potential DOJ investigation as a sham and a distraction from federal agents’ actions in Minneapolis-St. Paul.

    “When you think about the federal government unleashing barbaric ICE agents upon our community and all the harm that they have caused, to have someone serving as a pastor who oversees these ICE agents, is almost unfathomable to me,” said Armstrong, who added she is an ordained reverend. “If people are more concerned about someone coming to a church on a Sunday and disrupting business as usual than they are about the atrocities that we are experiencing in our community, then they need to check their theology and the need to check their hearts.”

    The website of St. Paul-based Cities Church lists David Easterwood as a pastor, and his personal information appears to match that of the David Easterwood identified in court filings as the acting director of the ICE St. Paul field office. Easterwood appeared alongside DHS Secretary Kristi Noem at a Minneapolis press conference last October.

    Cities Church did not respond to a phone call or emailed request for comment Sunday evening, and Easterwood’s personal contact information could not immediately be located.

    Easterwood did not lead the part of the service that was livestreamed, and it was unclear if he was present at the church Sunday.

    In a Jan. 5 court filing, Easterwood defended ICE’s tactics in Minnesota such as swapping license plates and spraying protesters with chemical irritants. He wrote that federal agents were experiencing increased threats and aggression and crowd control devices like flash-bang grenades were important to protect against violent attacks. He testified that he was unaware of agents “knowingly targeting or retaliating against peaceful protesters or legal observers with less lethal munitions and/or crowd control devices.”

    “Agitators aren’t just targeting our officers. Now they’re targeting churches, too,” the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency stated. “They’re going from hotel to hotel, church to church, hunting for federal law enforcement who are risking their lives to protect Americans.”

    Black Lives Matter Minnesota co-founder Monique Cullars-Doty said that the DOJ’s prosecution was misguided.

    “If you got a head — a leader in a church — that is leading and orchestrating ICE raids, my God, what has the world come to?” Cullars-Doty said. “We can’t sit back idly and watch people go and be led astray.”

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  • Jimmy Kimmel Used His Awards For a Good Cause: To Bribe Donald Trump to Get ICE Out of Minnesota

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    With Donald Trump receiving María Corina Machado’s Nobel Peace Prize after that bizarre White House visit earlier this week, Jimmy Kimmel has found a creative way to put his trophy collection to use: bribing a sitting president.

    At this point, the POTUS can’t hide the fact that the easiest way to open the icy cold ventricles of his pitiless heart is to wave a trophy within arm’s reach. Just ask FIFA, which created a “Peace Prize” to curry favor with him after the Norwegian Nobel Committee denied him one.

    After capturing Venezuela’s president Nicolás Maduro and establishing a puppet state to serve the interests of the United States, the country’s opposition leader María Machado made good on her promise and gifted her Nobel Peace Prize to Trump.

    Now, I know these absurd developments – sounding more like skits SNL may come up with than actual things happening in real life – have turned into something of a norm in this administration. But no matter how cartoonish it gets, we need to acknowledge this reality as a farce, or otherwise we’d collectively lose our minds.

    Enter Jimmy Kimmel. In a recent monologue on Jimmy Kimmel Live, the late-night host brought out an entire buffet worth of awards and trophies, offering them to Trump in exchange for the president promising to pull ICE out of Minneapolis and Minnesota and sending them back to do their actual job at the border, where they belong.

    You can watch the bit for yourself at around the 9:45 mark.

    “Trump loves awards,” Kimmel said. “Giving him an award is the only way to get him to do anything. And with that said, Mr. President, I have an offer I think you’re going to find difficult to refuse.”

    Guillermo then brought out the spoils of Kimmel’s showbiz career on a plush red pedestal. The ensemble included an Emmy, a Clio trophy, and a Webby. “I will personally deliver any or even all of these to the Oval Office in exchange for leaving the people of Minneapolis alone,” he joked.

    Trump has successfully compelled America to make the transition from late-stage capitalism to late-stage mercantilism, presiding over an oligarchic marketplace where kowtowing and sycophancy are the only reliable currency to get people of power and influence to do your bidding. And at some point, this stops being satire and starts being the kind of thing historians will struggle to explain to future generations.

    Why Minneapolis and what has been the administration’s response?

    After a tense week in the Twin Cities, Trump has threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act to quell protests against ICE operations in Minnesota. Minneapolis has become the epicenter of Trump’s immigration crackdown, with ICE agents drawing widespread criticism for their use of violence against both people suspected of immigration violations and protestors.

    The president has dubbed these “professional agitators and insurrectionists” while admiring the patriotism of ICE, who are simply doing their job. The fact that their job involves raiding communities and detaining people in what could only be called quasi-fascist Gestapo techniques doesn’t factor into this particular definition of patriotism.

    And of course, the administration that is known for clapping back at every perceived insult and treating cable news as oxygen couldn’t let Kimmel’s stunt go unanswered. White House Communications Director Steven Cheung took to X (formerly Twitter) to call Jimmy a “no-talent loser”” and suggest he hold onto those awards “so he has something to pawn after his a– gets fired.”

    No, I only wish I was making this up.

    This was always going to be the inevitable endpoint of an attention economy where engagement metrics matter more than governance, or, you know, basic human decency.

    That Trump would populate the White House with yes-men who cosplay as public servants and employ his tactics during this second administration shouldn’t come as a surprise. The real plot twist is that we’re sliding into autocracy one news cycle at a time, and no one can agree on whether we should be alarmed, do something about it, or just refresh X to see what happens next.

    (featured image: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

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    Jonathan Wright

    Jonathan is a writer at The Mary Sue who spends way too much time thinking about movies, video games, pop culture—and, get this, politics. His dream is to one day publish his novels, but for now, he’s channeling that energy into writing about the stories we all obsess over, both on the page and in the real world.

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  • Man arrested by ICE in Minneapolis dies while under federal agency’s custody in Texas

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    A 36-year-old man who was arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Minneapolis died while in federal custody in Texas on Wednesday, according to the agency. 

    Security personnel found Victor Manuel Diaz unconscious and unresponsive in his room at Camp East Montana in El Paso, according to ICE. 

    El Paso Emergency Medical Services were notified at 3:35 p.m. local time and were at the site attempting life-saving measures 10 minutes later, the federal agency said. Diaz died at 4:09 p.m.

    “He died of a presumed suicide,” ICE said in a statement. “However, the official cause of his death remains under investigation.” 

    Diaz was arrested by federal officers on Jan. 6. According to federal officials, he was a Nicaraguan citizen who entered the U.S. illegally from Mexico on March 26, 2024. He was encountered by U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents that same day. 

    “After processing, he was served a notice to appear before an immigration judge and released on parole pending his court date,” the federal agency said.

    According to federal officials, an immigration judge ordered Diaz be removed from the country last August. 

    The federal agency says it provides “comprehensive medical care” to people in custody at its detention facilities, including “medical, dental and mental health intake screenings within the first 12 hours” of their arrival. 

    The Department of Homeland Security on Friday also confirmed the death of a Mexican citizen in a detention facility in Georgia. Heber Sanchez Domínguez, 34, had been in ICE custody for six days and was awaiting a hearing when he was discovered “hanging by the neck and unresponsive in his sleeping quarters,” according to DHS.

    Herber was taken to a local hospital, where he later died. Federal officials said the cause of his death is under investigation.

    According to DHS data, at least 15 people died while in ICE custody last year.

    As of Thursday, ICE was holding about 73,000 individuals facing deportation in its custody across the U.S., the highest level recorded by the agency and an 84% increase from the same time in 2025, when its detention population was just below 40,000, according to internal Department of Homeland Security data obtained by CBS News.

    The Trump administration has said it’s working to be able to detain upwards of 100,000 immigration detainees at any given time, as part of its government-wide effort to carry out a deportation crackdown of unprecedented proportions.  

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    Nick Lentz

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  • Man arrested by ICE in Minneapolis dies while under federal agency’s custody in Texas

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    A 36-year-old man who was arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Minneapolis died while in federal custody in Texas on Wednesday, according to the agency. 

    Security personnel found Victor Manuel Diaz unconscious and unresponsive in his room at Camp East Montana in El Paso, according to ICE. 

    El Paso Emergency Medical Services were notified at 3:35 p.m. local time and were at the site attempting life-saving measures 10 minutes later, the federal agency said. Diaz died at 4:09 p.m.

    “He died of a presumed suicide,” ICE said in a statement. “However, the official cause of his death remains under investigation.” 

    Diaz was arrested by federal officers on Jan. 6. According to federal officials, he was a Nicaraguan citizen who entered the U.S. illegally from Mexico on March 26, 2024. He was encountered by U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents that same day. 

    “After processing, he was served a notice to appear before an immigration judge and released on parole pending his court date,” the federal agency said.

    According to federal officials, an immigration judge ordered Diaz be removed from the country last August. 

    The federal agency says it provides “comprehensive medical care” to people in custody at its detention facilities, including “medical, dental and mental health intake screenings within the first 12 hours” of their arrival. 

    The Department of Homeland Security on Friday also confirmed the death of a Mexican citizen in a detention facility in Georgia. Heber Sanchez Domínguez, 34, had been in ICE custody for six days and was awaiting a hearing when he was discovered “hanging by the neck and unresponsive in his sleeping quarters,” according to DHS.

    Herber was taken to a local hospital, where he later died. Federal officials said the cause of his death is under investigation.

    According to DHS data, at least 15 people died while in ICE custody last year.

    As of Thursday, ICE was holding about 73,000 individuals facing deportation in its custody across the U.S., the highest level recorded by the agency and an 84% increase from the same time in 2025, when its detention population was just below 40,000, according to internal Department of Homeland Security data obtained by CBS News.

    The Trump administration has said it’s working to be able to detain upwards of 100,000 immigration detainees at any given time, as part of its government-wide effort to carry out a deportation crackdown of unprecedented proportions.  

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  • Active-duty soldiers put on standby as Minneapolis ICE protests continue

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    Soldiers with the 11th airborne unit based in Fairbanks, Alaska, are on standby for possible deployment to Minneapolis as protests against ICE operations continue in the city, a U.S. defense official confirmed to CBS News. Ian Lee reports.

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  • Peaceful protests Sunday at Whipple building, Trump says soldiers on standby to Minnesota

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    Protests were peaceful outside the Whipple building midday Sunday, a week and a half since Renee Good was killed by an ICE agent in south Minneapolis.

    Now, 1,500 active-duty soldiers are on standby for possible deployment to the area — so too is the Minnesota National Guard — as President Trump has said he’s considering the insurrection act.
        
    Around midday Sunday, no federal officers were spotted standing guard outside Whipple, but Hennepin County sheriff’s deputies were on scene.

    A spokesperson with the sheriff’s office said more deputies will be deployed, if needed, to keep the peace and maintain public safety.

    On Friday, a federal judge ordered immigration agents stop using tear gas and detaining peaceful protestors.

    “That federal order was a little ridiculous,” DHS Secretary Kristi Noem told host Margaret Brennan Sunday.

    Chemical agents are only used when there’s violence being perpetrated, Noem said.

    “That judge’s order didn’t change anything for how we’re operating on the ground, because it’s basically telling us to do what we’ve already been doing,” said Noem.

    So far, about 3,000 federal agents have been deployed to Minnesota and more than 2,500 people have been arrested.

    On Sunday, Noem said 70% of those detained have charges against them, while Brennan said CBS reporting showed that number was only 47%, based on information provided by Noem’s own agency.

    As for protestors, like those out on Sunday, Noem suggested they be confined to a peaceful protest zone. Mayor Frey responded.

    “First amendment speech is not limited to one park or one section of the city,” said Frey. “You are allowed to protest, so long as you’re doing it peacefully.”

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  • FBI asks agents to travel to Minneapolis for temporary assignments amid protests, sources say

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    The FBI has asked agents from field offices across the United States to voluntarily travel to Minneapolis for temporary assignments as the city reels from anti-ICE protests and the fatal shooting of Renee Good, according to two sources.

    The request was first reported by Bloomberg and confirmed by a law enforcement official familiar with the messages and another source familiar with the requests who has seen the messages.

    It isn’t clear what the exact assignment would be for volunteers who do relocate, but the second source told NBC News that the agents will investigate AFO cases — an FBI designation to identify and charge suspects accused of assault on a federal officer. Agents are also needed to investigate vandalism and theft of property from FBI vehicles, the second source added.

    It comes as there’s been a surge of federal immigration personnel in Minnesota and protests have rocked the state in outrage over the Jan. 7 fatal shooting of Good in Minneapolis by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer.

    At the moment, the request call is voluntary, and there’s not a mass surge of FBI agents to Minneapolis, the sources said.

    A spokesperson for the FBI declined to comment.

    The scale of the immigration enforcement presence in Minneapolis — with roughly 3,000 federal immigration officers— appears to be greater than prior operations in blue cities such as Chicago and Los Angeles.

    Residents have described the swell of officers as “an invasion,” with agents seen in unmarked cars idling on neighborhood streets, at stores and parking lots, and going door to door.

    Local officials including Mayor Jacob Frey have called for Immigration and Customs Enforcement to leave the city. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump last week threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act in response to protesters, calling them “professional agitators and insurrectionists.”

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    Michael Kosnar, Tom Winter and Marlene Lenthang | NBC News

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  • 1,500 active-duty soldiers placed on standby for possible deployment to Minneapolis

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    Some 1,500 active-duty soldiers have been placed on standby for possible deployment to Minneapolis, a defense official confirmed to CBS News, as tensions in the city have mounted after a woman was fatally shot by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer.

    Deploying the soldiers, from the 11th Airborne Division at Fort Wainwright in Fairbanks, Alaska, is one option for which the military is planning in case President Trump decides to use active-duty military personnel to respond to the ongoing demonstrations, the official said. No decision has been made on whether to deploy the soldiers.

    Asked about the preparations, chief Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell said, “The Department of War is always prepared to execute the orders of the Commander-in-Chief if called upon.”

    ABC News was first to report that the soldiers were on standby.

    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz also mobilized the state’s National Guard on Saturday, although guard members had not yet been deployed to city streets, CBS News Minnesota reported. Walz had issued a warning order earlier this month to prepare guard members for mobilization, after an ICE officer shot and killed Renee Good on Jan. 7.

    “We are doing the work to keep people safe in our city, and, specifically, it is our local police officers, it is the state of Minnesota and our governor,” Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey said on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan” on Sunday. “We are doing everything possible to keep the peace, notwithstanding this occupying force that has quite literally invaded our city.” 

    In addition to the recent surge of immigration agents, Mr. Trump on Thursday threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act, a law dating back to the 1790s that would allow him to send federal troops into Minneapolis. The president said he would invoke the act if Minnesota politicians “don’t obey the law and stop the professional agitators and insurrectionists from attacking the Patriots of I.C.E., who are only trying to do their job.” 

    That move could catalyze a major escalation in the tensions between Minnesota officials and the federal government, which had already sent thousands of federal law enforcement agents to the state in recent weeks as part of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.

    Mr. Trump has threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act before, during his first term and previously during his current one, but he has never actually used it. 

    The Minneapolis Police Department said Saturday that demonstrators had remained peaceful and lawful in the presence of federal immigration agents, CBS Minnesota reported.

    “Today, when crowds blocked roadways, vehicles were used to block roadways, MPD deployed resources and made public announcements for people move to the sidewalk or out of the area. This occurred several times. In general, crowds were responsive to those directives,” the department said in a statement, urging community members involved in the protests to continue to demonstrate peacefully.

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  • As federal agents clash with Minneapolis residents, battle over ICE surge heats up in court filings

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    As residents in the Twin Cities protest in the streets against ICE and federal immigration enforcement actions, Minnesota’s battle against the federal surge is also playing out in the federal court system. 

    One lawsuit by the ACLU has already resulted in a federal judge, Kate Menendez, issuing an order restricting what ICE agents can do when confronting peaceful protestors.

    The judge’s order says there can be no ICE retaliation against protestors, no detaining people without probable cause unless they are obstructing agents or committing a crime, no using pepper spray on a peaceful protest, and allowing drivers to follow ICE agents’ vehicles at a safe distance. On “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan” this Sunday morning, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the order changes nothing about how federal agents are conducting their business in Minnesota.

    Another development is that the U.S. Justice Department has opened criminal investigations into Gov. Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey for allegedly obstructing the work of federal agents. 

    Appearing on WCCO Sunday Morning with Esme Murphy, Attorney General Keith Ellison called this latter investigation “from the playbook.”

    “This is the president who is persecuting Jerome Powell of the Fed, who tried to prosecute James Comey of the FBI, and the current attorney general of New York, Letitia James. He uses the criminal justice system to persecute the people he doesn’t like,” Ellison said.

    The second federal lawsuit against ICE was filed late last week by the state of Minnesota and the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul. It seeks to stop ICE activity throughout the state. The lawsuit argues the unprecedented surge of an estimated 3,000 federal agents is endangering citizens. It accuses ICE of violating the First and Tenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.

    That lawsuit argues that President Trump is retaliating against Gov. Tim Walz, who ran against Mr. Trump and Vice President JD Vance on Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris’ ticket, for his objections to ICE activity.

    “What the federal government needs to do is leave and stop the surge,” Ellison said.

    The Tenth Amendment protects states’ sovereignty and limits federal powers to those granted in the U.S. Constitution. It provides autonomy to the states in issues like education, elections and public safety. While Ellison is optimistic, some legal experts think the lawsuit is a long shot because it would be similar to telling the FBI it could not operate in the state.

    The state, in this second lawsuit, is seeking an immediate temporary restraining order limiting ICE activities. The judge in the case is Kate Menendez, the same judge who issued that first order favorable to peaceful protestors. The judge said last week she would not issue the temporary restraining order until she heard a response from the federal government. That response is due to be filed at 5 p.m. Monday, which is the federal Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.

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  • Trump administration social posts amid Minnesota immigration tensions seen as appealing to far right

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    As its immigration crackdown in Minneapolis intensifies, the Trump administration is leaning into messaging that borrows from phrases, images and music about national identity that have become popular among right-wing groups.

    On Jan. 9, two days after a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent’s shooting of Renee Good sent tensions in Minneapolis to a fever pitch, the Department of Homeland Security posted to social media an image of a man on a horse riding through a snowy, mountainous landscape with the words “We’ll have our home again.” That’s the chorus to a song about ousting a foreign presence by a self-described “folk-punk” band that the Proud Boys and other far-right and white supremacist groups have used.

    The next day, the Department of Labor posted on X: “One Homeland. One People. One Heritage. Remember who you are, American.” Several Trump critics on the social media site drew a parallel to a notorious Nazi slogan, “One People, One Realm, One Leader.”

    And this past week, as President Donald Trump stepped up his pressure campaign to claim Greenland, the White House posted an image on X that showed a dog sled facing a fork in the trail, one that leads to an American flag and the White House and another that leads to the Russian and Chinese flags. Above the image was the phrase, “Which way, Greenland Man?”

    The post refers to a meme that riffs off the title of a notorious white supremacist book titled “Which Way Western Man?” The administration had already used the framing in an Immigration and Customs Enforcement recruiting post last year, which asked, “Which way, American Man?”

    The flurry of posts has renewed criticism about a recurring pattern in Trump’s second term — the sometimes cryptic use of imagery popular with the far right and white supremacists in the administration’s campaign to rally the nation behind its immigration crackdown, which it frames as a battle to preserve Western civilization.

    The administration says it’s tired of criticism that its messaging is framed around white supremacy or Nazi slogans.

    “It seems that the mainstream media has become a meme of their own: The deranged leftist who claims everything they dislike must be Nazi propaganda,” White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said. “This line of attack is boring and tired. Get a grip.”

    Referring to the “We’ll Have Our Home Again” post, DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said it “was a reference to 20-plus million illegal aliens invading the country.”

    “I don’t know where you guys are getting this stuff,” she added, “but it is absurd.”

    César Cuauhtémoc García Hernández, a law professor at Ohio State University, said the administration’s references are a choice.

    “You don’t have to dip into white supremacist sloganeering to promote immigration regulation,” he said, noting that former President Bill Clinton signed two bills toughening penalties on immigrants who were in the country illegally in the 1990s without doing so.

    He added that the administration seems to calibrate its references.

    “The imagery is not simply a reproduction of common white supremacist imagery or text, but a play on that imagery — and that gives them the breathing room they want,” Garcia Hernández said.

    Trump won his second term with robust support from Latino voters and increased his backing among both Black and Asian voters, all while running on pledges of tough border enforcement and mass deportations.

    Still, Trump for years has created enthusiasm among white supremacist groups, who see his nationalist and anti-immigrant stance as validating their own.

    The president has complained that immigrants are “poisoning the blood of our country” and spoken favorably about white immigrants compared to other immigrants. In his first term, he bemoaned the number of immigrants coming from what he called “shithole countries” such as Haiti or ones in Africa, while wondering why the U.S. doesn’t draw more people from Norway. Last month, he called Somali immigrants “garbage.”

    Trump changed immigration policy to favor whites in one area by shutting down the admission of refugees except for white South Africans, whom he contends, against evidence, are being discriminated against in their home country.

    Some of Trump’s most prominent supporters have openly embraced the cause of white nationalists.

    Elon Musk, who was Trump’s biggest donor during the 2024 presidential campaign and ran the president’s Department of Government Efficiency for the first part of last year, recirculated a user post on X, the social platform he owns, that called for “white solidarity” to prevent the mass murder of white men and added a “100” emoji indicating agreement.

    The administration’s history has led to claims that it’s using white supremacist language even when there is no evidence for it.

    In the aftermath of the Good shooting in Minnesota, a sign that appeared on Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem’s lectern during a news conference — reading “One Of Ours, All Of Yours” — drew widespread attention on social media, with many commentators suggesting it was a Nazi phrase. The Southern Poverty Law Center, however, could not trace the words to any Nazi slogan.

    McLaughlin, the DHS spokeswoman, said it was a reference to the subject of the press conference: “a CBP officer who was shot — he was one of our officers and all of the country’s federal law enforcement officer,” she wrote in an email.

    Hannah Gais, a senior researcher with the SPLC, has long tracked white supremacist groups and said she thinks the administration knows what it’s doing with its messaging slogans.

    “They know their base is this overly online right-winger who they know will go nuts if they say ‘Which Way, Western Man?’” Gais said. “I don’t think it’s a tenable strategy for the long term because the stuff is incomprehensible to most people. And if it is comprehensible, people don’t like it.”

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    CBS Minnesota

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  • Can Trump Really Use the Insurrection Act?

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    On Thursday, President Donald Trump threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act to send federal troops to Minneapolis to assist ICE agents who have been conducting extensive and violent operations in the city. Clashes between those agents and protesters have intensified over the past ten days, after an ICE agent shot and killed a Minneapolis resident named Renee Good. Trump has previously raised the prospect of using the Insurrection Act—which grants the President vast powers to deploy the military to enforce domestic law—if, he said, courts, governors, or mayors were “holding us up.”

    To talk about the history and text of the Insurrection Act, and exactly what it does and does not allow, I recently spoke by phone with Elizabeth Goitein, the senior director of the Brennan Center for Justice’s Liberty & National Security Program, and an expert on Presidential emergency powers. During our conversation, which has been edited for length and clarity, we also discussed the possible limits courts might place on the President, the arguments over Supreme Court precedents and how they might alternately impede or liberate Trump, and the dangers of the military working as a “force amplifier” for ICE.

    Before the President’s declaration on Thursday that he might invoke the Insurrection Act, for months he had been sending the National Guard to cities, although that seems to have come to an end after a recent Supreme Court ruling. Can you talk about what that ruling said and why it may have stymied the President, at least in terms of the National Guard?

    It actually didn’t stymie the President in terms of the National Guard. It stymied the President in terms of the law he was relying on, which is 10 U.S.C. § 12406. That law does authorize federalization and deployment of the National Guard, but so does the Insurrection Act, and the Supreme Court did not rule on the Insurrection Act. So insofar as the Insurrection Act is still on the table, federalization of the National Guard is still on the table.

    What the Supreme Court held was that Trump could not rely on 10 U.S.C. § 12406 except in situations where he also had legal authority to deploy active-duty armed forces, but where deploying those armed forces would not be sufficient to execute the laws of the United States. And that ruling was based on language in 10 U.S.C. § 12406 saying that the President can federalize the National Guard only if the President is unable with regular forces to execute the law.

    Right, so that was a 6–3 ruling, with Brett Kavanaugh, John Roberts, and Amy Coney Barrett joining the three more liberal justices. The ruling makes it seem that the law is written, or interpreted by the Supreme Court, in a way that suggests that deploying the National Guard is more serious than deploying regular armed forces because you have to exhaust your possibilities with the regular armed forces before mobilizing the National Guard. I think most people listening to this would think, Oh, the National Guard would be less serious than actually sending in a division of the Marines.

    Yes, it is certainly counterintuitive. It seems like pulling out a howitzer when a rifle would suffice, but it’s actually not. You have to look at what was going on in the early nineteen hundreds s when 10 U.S.C. § 12406 was passed. It’s not that the National Guard was considered to be more serious at the time; it’s that the National Guard was thought to be less competent. The National Guard was considered to be unruly, undisciplined, and disorganized, to the point that when they were deployed, it often resulted in bloodshed, or at least that was the perception back then. That’s why the legislative history is what it is.

    But 10 U.S.C. § 12406 is the only law that requires that active-duty armed forces be first, or at least that the President considers using them before going to the National Guard. The Insurrection Act does not have any such requirements. So, under the Insurrection Act, the President could deploy federalized National Guard forces if that’s what he wanted to do.

    Let’s then take a step back. Can you talk about what the Insurrection Act is?

    I think the best way to think about the Insurrection Act is that it’s the primary exception to the Posse Comitatus Act. That’s the law that normally prohibits federal armed forces from participating in civilian law enforcement. The Insurrection Act allows the President to deploy active-duty armed forces or to federalize and deploy National Guard forces to quell civil unrest or to execute the law in a crisis.

    Posse Comitatus was signed into law in 1878. The Insurrection Act is an amalgamation of laws passed between 1792 and 1874. So even the last meaningful update of the Insurrection Act happened before the passage of Posse Comitatus. At the time, it was an authorization, not an exception. The Posse Comitatus Act prohibited federal armed forces from participating in law enforcement unless there is an express statutory or constitutional exception. And the Insurrection Act, which already existed, constitutes such an exception.

    I recently read a piece by Jack Goldsmith basically saying that the Insurrection Act more or less gives the President power to do what he wants—incredibly broad power. Is that your analysis, too?

    Well, it gives the President remarkable power. I don’t think it gives the President the power to do anything he wants. There are criteria in the Insurrection Act for deployment. Those criteria are on their face broad, and the law gives the President significant discretion. However, the Department of Justice has long taken the position that the law is limited by the Constitution and tradition, and so the department has interpreted the Insurrection Act to apply in a much narrower set of circumstances than the actual text of the law would suggest. I think that’s an important gloss.

    Does it matter what the Department of Justice said in the past, given how we’ve seen the D.O.J. act in 2026?

    Well, the Department of Justice tends to argue that it matters what it has said in the past. Now, of course, this Department of Justice might not make that argument, but certainly anyone challenging the invocation of the Insurrection Act will. And they won’t just be saying that the Court should defer to the Department of Justice’s past interpretations. They will be pointing out that those interpretations are in fact grounded in the Constitution and tradition.

    What kind of limits has the department thought were reasonable in the past?

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    Isaac Chotiner

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