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Tag: tim walz

  • Gov. Walz unveils anti-fraud bill after feds halt $259 million in Medicaid to Minnesota

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    Democratic Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz laid out his anti-fraud legislative package on Thursday, one day after the White House paused $259 million in federal Medicaid payments to the state until a comprehensive action plan is laid out to fight fraud.

    The package focuses on three main components:

    • Better detection and oversight
    • Strengthened investigative and enforcement authority
    • Increased criminal penalties

    “Any dollar of state money, especially those being used for programs to enhance people’s lives, if that goes to the wrong place, is misspent, or in the case of this, criminals are stealing it, we need to do everything possible to prosecute that,” Walz said.

    Vice President JD Vance and Dr. Mehmet Oz, who runs the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said on Wednesday the funding freeze is part of a broader national crackdown on misuse of public funds following several high-profile fraud cases in the state, including the Feeding our Future scandal. He said the state has 60 days to respond.

    “All we need the governor and administration of Minnesota to do is something quite simple, is to show when they’re giving Medicaid funds to somebody that you’re taking seriously the funds that you’re providing, and the fact that there are so many people handing out millions and billions of dollars without confirming that they are doing the thing that they are doing. It’s a disgrace and we are stopping it,” Vance said.

    Walz said Thursday the Trump administration’s move “is absolutely not serious,” and it’s “not meant to fight fraud.”

    “How does taking and punishing children and elderly have anything to do with fighting fraud when that’s not where this issue is taking place?” Walz said.

    The governor added the Medicaid pause is “totally illegal and unprecedented.”

    “We’re at a crossroads here in Minnesota. If you like talking about fraud and you think it’s an electoral issue for you, that’s gone. I’m not running. That’s gone,” Walz said. “If you’re serious about fighting fraud, you can help us work on this package, get this package passed.”

    Following Wednesday’s Medicaid announcement, Walz took to social media following the announcement, saying in part the move is another piece in a “campaign of retribution” against Minnesota.

    “Trump is weaponizing the entirety of the federal government to punish blue states like Minnesota,” Walz said. “These cuts will be devastating for veterans, families with young kids, folks with disabilities and working people across our state.”

    Shireen Gandhi, commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Human Services, echoed Walz’s sentiment, saying Vance’s announcement is “part of a broad and sustained attack.”

    “Deferring $259 million will significantly harm the state’s health care infrastructure and the 1.2 million Minnesotans who depend on Medicaid,” Gandhi said.

    This story will be updated.

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    Beret Leone

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  • Annunciation shooting survivor joins Gov. Tim Walz in push for new Minnesota gun laws

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    Lydia Kaiser, an eighth grader at Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis who was wounded during a mass shooting during school Mass last August, spoke out Tuesday at the Minnesota Capitol for the first time since the attack and pushed lawmakers to act on gun violence prevention.

    “Two students were shot and killed. Two students survived gunshot injuries to the head. I’m one of them,” Kaiser said of the Aug. 27 shooting. “Many more students were injured by bullets and flying glass. We all hid under the pews.”

    Ten-year-old Harper Moyski and 8-year-old Fletcher Merkel were killed that day. At the Capitol, there are two empty desks inside the building to honor their lives.

    Kaiser shared the extent of her injuries — that doctors had to remove half of her skull to remove bullet fragments from her brain over multiple surgeries.

    “All children have the right to live free from gun violence in schools, churches and in our communities. Elected officials have a duty to protect us from guns. No one should have to go through what we went through at Annunciation,” she said.

    Her comments came at a Tuesday morning news conference alongside Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, who announced his gun violence prevention package that includes an assault weapons ban, school safety grants, restricting untraceable “ghost guns” and much more.

    Lydia Kaiser speaks at a news conference alongside Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, who unveiled his plans for new gun restrictions in the state on Feb. 24, 2026.

    WCCO


    “We owe it to the Annunciation families not to have that just be another statistic in the book,” Walz said. “In Minnesota, that was the final straw.”

    Walz vowed to push for legislation on guns despite the uphill battle in the divided Minnesota Legislature where Republicans and Democrats share power in a tied House. The future of such bills is also uncertain in the Senate with a one-seat DFL majority; a few Democrats, in addition to Republicans, have in the past expressed concern about some of the measures and their impact on law-abiding gun owners.

    On Tuesday afternoon, House Democrats will introduce some of their bills to the judiciary committee, including the assault weapons ban and restrictions on high-capacity magazines. Moyski’s parents are expected to testify.

    “What we’re talking about is are we going to be with the people, or are we going to be with the gun lobbyists and the gun industry? And I think we here know who we’re with, and Minnesotans know who they’re with, and I certainly hope my colleagues do, too,” said Rep. Emma Greenman, DFL-Minneapolis, who is authoring the semi-automatic, assault-style weapons ban.

    Two months before the Annunciation shooting, Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark were shot and killed in their home in a targeted attack that also wounded Sen John Hoffman and his wife Yvette that night.

    Also in that Tuesday afternoon hearing, lawmakers will discuss strengthening penalties for individuals who impersonate a police officer, which is what authorities say accused assassin Vance Boelter did when he showed up at the Hortman and Hoffman homes in the middle of the night on June 14, 2025.

    This story will be updated.

    Lydia Kaiser’s full statement

    My name is Lydia Kaiser. I’m in eighth grade at Annunciation Catholic School.

    On Aug. 27, I was in church attending the first school mass of the year when a gunman fired 116 rounds of bullets through the stained glass windows. 

    Two students were shot and killed. Two students survived gunshot injuries to the head. I’m one of them.

    Many more students were injured by bullets and flying glass. We all hid under the pews. The older students covered the younger students to protect them.

    I was taken to the hospital and rushed into surgery. The doctor moved a large piece, almost half of my skull, to let my brain swell and to remove bone and bullet fragments from my head.

    I had a second surgery three weeks later to put the piece of my skull back in my head.

    All children have the right to live free from gun violence in schools, churches and in our communities.

    Elected officials have a duty to protect us from guns.

    No one should have to go through what we went through at Annunciation.

    Thank you.

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    Caroline Cummings

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  • Shireen Gandhi appointed as Minnesota DHS commissioner after serving in temporary role

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    Gov. Tim Walz has appointed Shireen Gandhi as the commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Human Services, just over a year after appointing her to the role in a temporary capacity.

    State officials said in a news release that the appointment went into effect on Monday.

    Gandhi was appointed as temporary commissioner in February 2025 after Jodi Harpstead stepped down as head of the agency. Harpstead served as commissioner for six years.

    “Commissioner Gandhi understands that protecting public programs and delivering high-quality care go hand in hand,” Walz said in the release. “Over the past year, she has demonstrated steady, decisive leadership at the Minnesota Department of Human Services, strengthening program integrity, rooting out fraud, and ensuring taxpayer dollars reach the Minnesotans who rely on these services.”

    The agency made several changes over the past year as federal and state officials aimed to crack down on fraud in Minnesota. Officials ended the Housing Stabilization Services Program on Oct. 31, three months after federal agents said they were investigating a “massive scheme to defraud” it

    DHS officials said earlier this month that they developed a pre-payment system to flag potentially fraudulent Medicaid claims and rolled out a web page dedicated to fact-checking claims about Medicaid fraud in the state.

    Gandhi joined the agency in 2017 and has served in several roles within it, including deputy commissioner, assistant commissioner and chief compliance officer.

    “We must protect the human services programs we provide to improve the lives of Minnesotans that have helped our state to be ranked among the best in the country for children and families, older adults, and people with disabilities,” Gandhi said in a written statement. “As commissioner, I look forward to working with all partners across the human services system to make our state a national model for program integrity.”

    Gandhi graduated from the University of Minnesota with a bachelor’s degree in journalism and mass communications, has a law degree from Hamline University and is active in the Minnesota State Bar Association, according to the agency.

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    Nick Lentz

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  • Gov. Tim Walz

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    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said he was “cautiously optimistic” about Border czar Tom Homan’s announcement Thursday morning that the immigration enforcement operation in the state is concluding.

    Walz said Operation Metro Surge — which at its peak saw 3,000 federal agents across Minnesota and has led to over 4,000 arrests — was “an unprecedented federal invasion in all aspects of life” and “unlike anything we’ve witnessed.” 

    “And through that entire time, the dignity, the compassion, the love, the care and the absolute determination to do what is right never wavered amongst Minnesotans,” Walz said. “I think it’s probably safe to say the rest of the country will be forever grateful because we showed what it means to stand up for what’s right.”

    Walz said that the proposed drawdown still leaves many questions, including the status of the investigations into the fatal federal law enforcement shootings of Alex Pretti and Renee Good

    Talks between federal and local officials started to coalesce when Homan arrived in Minneapolis, Walz said. The Trump administration had sidelined Border Patrol Commander Greg Bovino, who Walz said he had never spoken to, but he was able to get a conversation moving with Homan soon after he arrived. 

    Walz said he expects to be back to the “pre-surge number” of federal agents, and there’s “no reason not to believe” Homan’s word. 

    What’s next, he added, is focusing on recovery, especially for small business owners.

    Walz announces funds for small business recovery

    Walz said his administration will reinstitute the small business emergency fund, which was implemented during the COVID-19 shutdown. He also announced $10 million in forgivable loans, acknowledging that the funds are a “very small piece” of the puzzle of economic recovery. Eligible businesses would be able to apply for forgivable loans ranging from $2,500 to $25,000, according to Walz.

    Last week, several Twin Cities small businesses said Operation Metro Surge has cost them millions of dollars in revenue. Minneapolis’ Lake Street corridor alone is down $46 million in revenue between December 2025 and January 2026, according to city officials. Business leaders have said that even after federal immigration officers leave, the recovery would take months. 

    “Recovery will not happen overnight. Families, workers, and business owners are feeling the effects and our responsibility is clear: we will help rebuild, stabilize these businesses, protect jobs, and ensure Minnesota’s economy can recover and thrive,” Walz said.  

    Workers and customers have said they don’t feel comfortable showing up to small businesses for fear of being detained. 

    Henry Garnica, the owner of the grocery store Centromex in St. Paul, said “everything has changed” since the start of Operation Metro Surge. His own store was a target, and though none of his employees were detained, Garnica said that sales are down between 30% and 40%. 

    “These businesses are part of the fabric of our neighborhood and our vibrant economy in Minnesota,” said Garnica, who said he came from Columbia 23 years ago “looking for the American dream.”

    While officials say they’re still assessing the damage done to the state economy, the same energy of resistance that Minnesotans have shown over the past few weeks must be directed towards recovery, Walz said. With an eye on the legislative session that starts next week, he said one of the goals is to protect Minnesota businesses. 

    Small businesses say more help is needed

    Soleil Ramirez, head chef and owner of the Venezuelan restaurant Crasqui in St. Paul, told WCCO earlier this week that Walz wasn’t doing enough to help those in his own state. Ramirez said that the loan package proposal is a welcome idea, but said she needs to learn more; she’s also concerned about how much faith she can put in Homan’s words spelling out the end of Operation Metro Surge.

    “It’s going to take weeks for us to really believe,” Ramirez said, “The fear in people, it’s completely embedded. This is something that’s not going to change.”

    That kind of widespread fear – as ICE agents detained American citizens and those seeking asylum throughout the surge – is the root of the economic problem, according to Ramirez. She said that she and similar businesses need $14,000 to $25,000 per week to operate, and through January, she said her restaurant experienced a major drop in revenue. It’s the first time, she said, that she’s ever been behind on rent and other payments.

    It’s why Ramirez is lobbying for other forms of relief, including temporary suspension of payments on licensing fees or sales tax. Alma Flores, executive director of the Latino Economic Development Center (LEDC), said she’s continued to effort those kinds of solutions in talks with St. Paul city government leaders.

    “We want to make sure that we are able to provide the needed resources for them to recover once ICE agents leave,” Flores said.

    The LEDC conducted a survey of 92 businesses, finding that around 30 of them are temporarily closed due to Operation Metro Surge. More than 40 are operating with adjusted hours or staff sizes. Four are closed permanently.

    When it comes to recovery needs, Flores said that they are overwhelmed. After announcing that her organization would make funds available for grants, the LEDC got about 364 applicants with needs that collectively totaled $4.48 million. That’s why she said that Walz’s loan proposal will likely only serve as a first step, believing the total figure needed in the private sector will dwarf $10 million.

    Yusra Mohamud, business advisor with the Lake Street Council, said that businesses along that critical corridor in south Minneapolis are in similar positions. That organization estimates losses of about $46 million through the month of January.

    “[ICE] enforcement activity was disrupting commerce daily. Impossible choices were made by business owners,” Mohamud said.

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    Aki Nace

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  • Hard hats and dummy plates: Reports of ICE ruses add to fears in Minnesota

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    For days, Luis Ramirez had an uneasy feeling about the men dressed as utility workers he’d seen outside his family’s Mexican restaurant in suburban Minneapolis.

    They wore high-visibility vests and spotless white hard hats, he noticed, even while parked in their vehicle. His search for the Wisconsin-based electrician advertised on the car’s doors returned no results.

    On Tuesday, when their Nissan returned to the lot outside his restaurant, Ramirez, 31, filmed his confrontation with the two men, who hid their faces as he approached and appeared to be wearing heavy tactical gear beneath their yellow vests.

    “This is what our taxpayer money goes to: renting these vehicles with fake tags to come sit here and watch my business,” Ramirez shouts in the video.

    A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement did not respond to inquiries about whether the men were federal immigration officers. But encounters like Ramirez’s have become increasingly common.

    As the sweeping immigration crackdown in Minnesota continues, legal observers and officials say they have received a growing number of reports of federal agents impersonating construction workers, delivery drivers and in some cases anti-ICE activists.

    Not all of those incidents have been verified, but they have heightened fears in a state already on edge, adding to legal groups’ concerns about the Trump administration’s dramatic reshaping of immigration enforcement tactics nationwide.

    “If you have people afraid that the electrical worker outside their house might be ICE, you’re inviting public distrust and confusion on a much more dangerous level,” said Naureen Shah, the director of immigration advocacy at the American Civil Liberties Union. “This is what you do if you’re trying to control a populace, not trying to do routine, professional law enforcement.”

    In the past, immigration authorities have sometimes used disguises and other deceptions, which they call ruses, to gain entry into homes without a warrant.

    The tactics became more common during President Donald Trump’s first term, attorneys said, prompting an ACLU lawsuit accusing immigration agents of violating the U.S. Constitution by posing as local law enforcement during home raids. A recent settlement restricted the practice in Los Angeles. But ICE deceptions remain legal elsewhere in the country.

    Still, the undercover operations reported in Minnesota would appear to be a “more extreme degree than we’ve seen in the past,” said Shah, in part because they seem to be happening in plain sight.

    Where past ruses were aimed at deceiving immigration targets, the current tactics may also be a response to Minnesota’s sprawling networks of citizen observers that have sought to call attention to federal agents before they make arrests.

    At the Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis, the city’s central hub of ICE activity, activists told the Associated Press they had seen agents leaving in vehicles with stuffed animals on their dashboards or Mexican flag decals on their bumpers. Pickups with lumber or tools in their beds were also frequently spotted.

    In recent weeks, federal agents have repeatedly shown up to construction sites dressed as workers, according to Jose Alvillar, a lead organizer for the local immigrant rights group, Unidos MN.

    “We’ve seen an increase in the cowboy tactics,” he said, though he noted the raids had not resulted in arrests. “Construction workers are good at identifying who is a real construction worker and who is dressing up as one.”

    Since the start of the operation in Minnesota, local officials, including Democratic Gov. Tim Walz, have said ICE agents had been seen swapping license plates or using bogus ones, a violation of state law.

    Candice Metrailer, an antiques dealer in south Minneapolis, believes she witnessed such an attempt firsthand.

    On Jan. 13, she received a call from a man who identified himself as a collector, asking if her store sold license plates. She said it did. A few minutes later, two men in street clothes entered the shop and began looking through her collection of vintage plates.

    “One of them says, ‘Hey, do you have any recent ones?’” Metrailer recalled. “Immediately, an alarm bell went off in my head.”

    Metrailer stepped outside while the men continued browsing. A few doors down from the shop, she saw an idling Ford Explorer with blacked-out windows. She memorized its license plate, then quickly plugged it into a crowdsourced database used by local activists to track vehicles linked to immigration enforcement.

    The database shows an identical Ford with the same plates had been photographed leaving the Whipple building seven times and reported at the scene of an immigration arrest weeks earlier.

    When one of the men approached the register holding a white Minnesota plate, Metrailer said she told him that the store had a new policy against selling the items.

    Metrailer said she had reported the incident to Minnesota’s attorney general. A spokesperson for DHS did not respond to a request for comment.

    Supporters of the immigration crackdown say the volunteer army of ICE-tracking activists in Minneapolis has forced federal agents to adopt new methods of avoiding detection.

    “Of course agents are adapting their tactics so that they’re a step ahead,” said Scott Mechkowski, former deputy director of ICE enforcement and operations in New York City. “We’ve never seen this level of obstruction and interference.”

    In nearly three decades in immigration enforcement, Mechkowski said he also hadn’t seen ICE agents disguising themselves as uniformed workers in the course of making arrests.

    Earlier this summer, a spokesperson for DHS confirmed a man wearing a high-visibility construction vest was an ICE agent conducting surveillance. In Oregon, a natural gas company published guidance last month on how customers could identify their employees after reports of federal impersonators.

    In the days since his encounter, Ramirez, the restaurant worker, said he has been on high alert for undercover agents. He recently stopped a locksmith whom he feared might be a federal agent, before quickly realizing he was a local resident.

    “Everybody is on edge about these guys, man,” Ramirez said. “It feels like they’re everywhere.”

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    CBS Minnesota

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  • Immigrant whose skull was broken in eight places during ICE arrest says beating was unprovoked

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    Alberto Castañeda Mondragón says his memory was so jumbled after a beating by immigration officers that he initially could not remember he had a daughter and still struggles to recall treasured moments like the night he taught her to dance.

    But the violence he endured last month in Minnesota while being detained is seared into his battered brain.

    He remembers Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents pulling him from a friend’s car on Jan. 8 outside a St. Paul shopping center and throwing him to the ground, handcuffing him, then punching him and striking his head with a steel baton. He remembers being dragged into an SUV and taken to a detention facility, where he said he was beaten again.

    He also remembers the emergency room and the intense pain from eight skull fractures and five life-threatening brain hemorrhages.

    “They started beating me right away when they arrested me,” the Mexican immigrant recounted this week to The Associated Press, which recently reported on how his case contributed to mounting friction between federal immigration agents and a Minneapolis hospital.

    Castañeda Mondragón, 31, is one of an unknown number of immigration detainees who, despite avoiding deportation during the Trump administration’s enforcement crackdown, have been left with lasting injuries following violent encounters with ICE officers. His case is one of the excessive-force claims the federal government has thus far declined to investigate.

    He was hurt so badly he was disoriented for days at Hennepin County Medical Center, where ICE officers constantly watched over him.

    The officers told nurses Castañeda Mondragón “purposefully ran headfirst into a brick wall,” an account his caregivers immediately doubted. A CT scan showed fractures to the front, back and both sides of his skull — injuries a doctor told AP were inconsistent with a fall.

    “There was never a wall,” Castañeda Mondragón said in Spanish, recalling ICE officers striking him with the same metal rod used to break the windows of the vehicle he was in. He later identified it as an ASP, a telescoping baton routinely carried by law enforcement.

    Training materials and police use-of-force policies across the U.S. say such a baton can be used to hit the arms, legs and body. But striking the head, neck or spine is considered potentially deadly force.

    “The only time a person can be struck in the head with any baton is when the person presents the same threat that would permit the use of a firearm — a lethal threat to the officer or others,” said Joe Key, a former Baltimore police lieutenant and use-of-force expert who testifies in defense of police.

    Once he was taken to an ICE holding facility at Ft. Snelling in suburban Minneapolis, Castañeda Mondragón said officers resumed beating him. Recognizing that he was seriously hurt, he said, he pleaded with them to stop but they just “laughed at me and hit me again.”

    “They were very racist people,” he said. “No one insulted them, neither me nor the other person they detained me with. It was their character, their racism toward us, for being immigrants.”

    The Department of Homeland Security, which includes ICE, did not respond to repeated requests for comment over the last two weeks on Castañeda Mondragón’s injuries.

    It is unclear whether his arrest was captured on body-camera footage or if there might be additional recordings from security cameras at the detention center.

    In a recent bid to boost transparency, DHS announced a broad rollout of body cameras for immigration officers in Minneapolis as the government also draws down ICE’s presence there.

    ICE deportation officer William J. Robinson did not say how Castañeda Mondragón’s skull was smashed in a Jan. 20 declaration filed in federal court. During the intake process, it was determined he “had a head injury that required emergency medical treatment,” he wrote in the filing.

    The declaration also stated that Castañeda Mondragón entered the U.S. legally in March 2022, and that the agency determined only after his arrest that he had overstayed his visa. A federal judge later ruled his arrest had been unlawful and ordered him released from ICE custody.

    A video posted to social media captured the moments immediately after Castañeda Mondragón’s arrest as four masked men walk him handcuffed through a parking lot. The video shows him unsteady and stumbling, held up by ICE officers.

    “Don’t resist,” shouts the woman who is recording. “Cause they ain’t gonna do nothing but bang you up some more.”

    “Hope they don’t kill you,” she adds.

    “And y’all gave the man a concussion,” a male bystander shouts.

    The witness who posted the video declined to speak with AP or provide consent for the video’s publication, but Castañeda Mondragón confirmed he is the handcuffed man seen in the recording.

    At least one ICE officer later told staff at the medical center that Castañeda Mondragón “got his (expletive) rocked,” according to court documents filed by a lawyer seeking his release and nurses who spoke with AP.

    AP interviewed a doctor and five nurses about Castañeda Mondragón’s treatment at HCMC and the presence of ICE officers inside the hospital. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss patient care and feared retaliation. AP also consulted an outside physician, who affirmed the injuries were inconsistent with an accidental fall or running into a wall.

    Minnesota state law requires health professionals to report to law enforcement any wounds that could have been perpetrated as part of a crime.

    An HCMC spokeswoman declined to say this week whether anyone at the facility had done so. However, following the Jan. 31 publication of AP’s initial story about Castañeda Mondragón’s arrest, hospital administrators opened an internal inquiry seeking to determine which staff members have spoken to the media, according to internal communications viewed by AP.

    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz posted a link to AP’s prior story about Castañeda Mondragón, but his office has not said whether state authorities would pursue answers.

    “Law enforcement cannot be lawless,” Walz wrote in the post on X. “Thousands of aggressive, untrained agents of the federal government continue to injure and terrorize Minnesotans. This must end.”

    Castañeda Mondragón’s arrest came a day after  the first  of  two fatal shootings of U.S. citizens in Minneapolis by immigration officers, triggering widespread public protests.

    Minnesota congressional leaders and other elected officials, including St. Paul Mayor Kaohly Her, called this week for an investigation of Castañeda Mondragón’s injuries.

    The Ramsey County Attorney’s Office, which oversees St. Paul, urged Castañeda Mondragón to file a police report to prompt an investigation. He said he plans to file a complaint. A St. Paul police spokesperson said the department would investigate “all alleged crimes that are reported to us.”

    While the Trump administration insists ICE limits its operations to immigrants with violent rap sheets, Castañeda Mondragón has no criminal record.

    “We are seeing a repeated pattern of Trump Administration officials attempting to lie and gaslight the American people when it comes to the cruelty of this ICE operation in Minnesota,” Sen. Tina Smith, a Minnesota Democrat, said in a statement.

    Rep. Kelly Morrison, another Democrat and a doctor, recently toured the Whipple Building, the ICE facility at Ft. Snelling. She said she saw severe overcrowding, unsanitary conditions and an almost complete lack of medical care.

    “If any one of our police officers did this, you know what just happened in Minnesota with George Floyd, we hold them accountable,” said Democratic Rep. Betty McCollum, whose district includes St. Paul.

    A native of Veracruz, Mexico, Castañeda Mondragón came to Minnesota nearly four years ago on a temporary work visa and found jobs as a driver and roofer. He uses his earnings to support his elderly father, who is disabled and diabetic, and his 10-year-old daughter.

    On the day of his arrest, he was running errands with a friend when they suddenly found themselves surrounded by ICE agents. They began breaking the windows and opening the doors of the vehicle. He said the first person who hit him “got ugly with me for being Mexican” and not having documents showing his immigration status.

    About four hours after his arrest, court records show, Castañeda Mondragón was taken to an emergency room in the suburb of Edina with swelling and bruising around his right eye and bleeding. He was then transferred to the Minneapolis medical center, where he told staff he had been “dragged and mistreated by federal agents,” before his condition deteriorated, court records show.

    A week into his hospitalization, caregivers described him as minimally responsive. As his condition slowly improved, hospital staff handed him his cellphone, and he spoke with his child in Mexico, whom he could not remember.

    “I am your daughter,” she told him. “You left when I was 6 years old.”

    His head injuries erased past experiences that for his daughter are unforgettable, including birthday parties and the day he left for the U.S. She’s been trying to revive his memory in daily calls.

    “When I turned 5, you taught me how to dance for the first time,” she reminded him recently.

    “All these moments, really, for me, have been forgotten,” he said.

    He showed gradual improvement and, to the surprise of some who treated him, was released from the hospital on Jan. 27.

    He faces a long recovery and an uncertain future. Questions loom about whether he will be able to continue to support his family back in Mexico. “My family depends on me,” he said.

    Though his bruises have faded, the effects of his traumatic brain injuries linger. In addition to the problems with his memory, he also has issues with balance and coordination that could prove debilitating for a man whose work requires going up and down ladders. He said he is unable to bathe himself without help.

    “I can’t get on a roof now,” he said.

    Castañeda Mondragón, who does not have health insurance, said doctors have told him he needs ongoing care. Unable to earn a living, he is relying on support from co-workers and members of the Minneapolis-St. Paul community who are raising money to help provide food, housing and medical care. He has launched a GoFundMe.

    Still, he hopes to stay in the U.S. and to provide again someday for his loved ones. He differentiates between people in Minnesota, where he said he has felt welcome, and the federal officers who beat him.

    “It’s immense luck to have survived, to be able to be in this country again, to be able to heal, and to try to move forward,” he said. “For me, it’s the best luck in the world.”

    But when he closes his eyes at night, the fear that ICE officers will come for him dominates his dreams. He is now terrified to leave his apartment, he said.

    “You’re left with the nightmare of going to work and being stopped,” Castañeda Mondragón said, “or that you’re buying your food somewhere, your lunch, and they show up and stop you again. They hit you.”

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    CBS Minnesota

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  • Students, teachers calling on Walz to impose moratorium on evictions amid ICE surge

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    Outside the governor’s mansion in St. Paul, Minnesota, on Friday, demonstrators, including many students and teachers, pleaded for Gov. Tim Walz to enact an immediate eviction moratorium to help families impacted by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids.

    Students at the protest were standing up for their classmates.

    “I’m at the dual language program at the high school I go to, and all of my classmates are home. They’re hiding. They’re afraid. It’s a really noticeable difference to walk into an empty classroom every day,” Josie, a member of the Sunrise Movement, a political organization, said. 

    The educators pleaded for Walz to help families that are financially crushed by the ICE raids.

    “Rent is due on Sunday, Feb. 1, and a lot of our families have been denied the right to work because of ICE occupation and can’t pay their rent,” Kate Peruoco, an educator, said. “Educators are really concerned about our students and their families in this moment, and the governor is the only one who can call a moratorium on eviction, and so we’re here today to ask him to do that.”

    Protesters say many immigrant families are in fear for their lives and can’t go to work, while the breadwinners of some other families have been deported, leaving their loved ones financially strained. 

    “I had this really heartbreaking conversation. She said, ‘I lost my father, brother and husband overnight,’” Viviana Salazar said. “They all lived together and now she’s left with her three kids in an apartment that was a two-bedroom apartment, and she doesn’t know how she’s going to pay her rent.”

    Viviana Salazar is the founder of Nuestra Lucha MN, a nonprofit created to uplift and help those in the Hispanic community. WCCO met her at Colonial Market, a business she often partners with to help provide relief to impacted families.

    Through Nuestra Lucha, Salazar is fundraising to help these families. 

    “Rent is not inexpensive, especially in a city,” Salazar said.

    Since launching the fundraising program last week, Salazar says she’s raised more than $25,000 and has received at least 20 applications from those looking for assistance.

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    Anna McAllister

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  • Fact-check: Do Minneapolis and MN cooperate with ICE?

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    President Donald Trump and his top officials have repeatedly complained that Minnesota state and local leaders will not cooperate with his administration’s immigration enforcement.

    On Jan. 25, the day after federal immigration agents fatally shot Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, Trump called on Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey and other Democrats “to formally cooperate with the Trump Administration to enforce our Nation’s Laws, rather than resist and stoke the flames of Division, Chaos, and Violence.”

    Administration officials say that Minnesota won’t turn over immigrants in detention to federal law enforcement.

    Pretti was one of two U.S. citizens killed by immigration officials in Minneapolis in the span of about two weeks. Renee Good was shot and killed by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer on Jan. 7.

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Walz “refuses” to allow law enforcement to cooperate. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said “we’ve never had a cooperative arrangement with law enforcement here.” And U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi told Walz, “The results of your state’s policies and politicians’ anti-law enforcement rhetoric are a national tragedy,” in a Jan. 24 letter describing Minneapolis and neighboring St. Paul as sanctuary cities.

    The facts are more complicated than these leaders allege. Although Minneapolis’ has a policy that city officials won’t cooperate with immigration enforcement, that policy does not apply to state prisons. State correctional system officials have repeatedly said they cooperate with ICE and Walz made that point in a recent Wall Street Journal op-ed.

    “Corrections honors all federal and local detainers by notifying Immigration and Customs Enforcement when a person committed to its custody isn’t a U.S. citizen,” Walz wrote. “There is not a single documented case of the department’s releasing someone from state prison without offering to ensure a smooth transfer of custody.”

    After Trump dispatched White House border czar Tom Homan to Minnesota following outcry over Pretti’s killing, Homan acknowledged that the Minnesota Department of Corrections has “been honoring ICE detainers.”

    Here, we fact-checked some of the federal officials’ statements.

    Trump: Frey’s statement that Minneapolis does not enforce federal immigration law “is a very serious violation of the law.” (Jan. 28 Truth Social post)

    Trump’s take conflicts with previous court rulings.

    During Trump’s first term, his administration sought to withhold federal funding for sanctuary cities with policies against cooperating with federal immigration enforcement. Courts nationwide blocked Trump.

    In 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court refused the Trump administration’s request to review a case challenging a California law that restricts police cooperation with federal immigration authorities. 

    In December, the city of Minneapolis passed an ordinance that says police will not arrest or detain people to enforce federal immigration laws and that the city will not enforce civil federal immigration laws. 

    Immigration law professors, citing previous rulings, said that such policies are settled constitutional law.

    The ordinance adopted by Minneapolis is typical among similar policies, said University of Minnesota law professor R. Linus Chan.

    The Constitution’s 10th Amendment that addresses the balance of power between states and the federal government “means that the federal government cannot coerce states to enforce immigration law which is exclusively a federal government concern,” Chan said.

    Syracuse University law professor Jenny Breen said sanctuary city laws, including in Minneapolis, recognize the right of states and cities to refuse to do the work of the federal government. 

    “States may not refuse to permit the federal government itself from doing that work, but they are not obligated to enforce federal laws themselves,” Breen said in an email to PolitiFact, using italics for emphasis.

    Trump has threatened to cut off federal funding to sanctuary cities and states starting Feb. 1.

    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, right, and Attorney General Keith Ellison discuss the shooting of Alex Pretti during a news conference in Blaine, Minn., Jan. 25, 2026.

    Leavitt: “Walz refuses to allow local and state law enforcement to cooperate with ICE in arresting and removing dangerous criminal illegal aliens from Minnesota communities.” (Jan. 25 X post)

    That’s inaccurate.

    Cities and counties set their own policies on whether to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement. And state officials said they cooperate with federal immigration enforcement.

    The Minnesota Department of Corrections, which oversees state prisons, launched a website, “Combatting DHS Misinformation,” and held a Jan. 22 press conference to explain the state policies. 

    State Corrections Commissioner Paul Schnell said his agency notifies ICE weeks before a person’s prison term ends. ICE has the discretion to place a detainer on the person, and corrections staff coordinate with ICE to facilitate custody transfer when requested. 

    Schnell said his office reviewed the cases of people who Homeland Security publicly named and found many were never in state custody. Others had short stays in county jails or were in custody in other states. Many had been released directly to ICE. 

    Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey is seen Jan. 16, 2026, in Minneapolis. (AP)

    Department of Homeland Security: “DHS has called on Governor Walz and Mayor Frey this week to put the safety of Minnesotans and the American public first and honor the ICE arrest detainers of the more than 1,360 aliens, including violent criminals, in the state’s custody.” (Jan. 15 press release)

    DHS’s number contradicts state data on how many noncitizens are held in state custody. It also mischaracterizes the role officials such as Walz and Frey have in setting detention policies.

    A state survey found Minnesota prisons hold 207 noncitizens out of 8,000 total prison detainees. There were another 94 noncitizens held in county jails with ICE detainers. That adds up to 301 people — about four and a half times less than DHS claimed.

    Schnell, the state prisons commissioner, said Jan. 22 that the state received no answer when it asked federal officials for their data about the 1,360 figure. Although DHS did not provide PolitiFact with evidence for its figure, additional public statements by Homeland Security officials showed that the administration referred to people held in county jails. We found no source for that data.

    Hundreds of people in Minnesota’s county jails have been transferred to federal immigration officers, which shows that some counties are cooperative. But The New York Times found those cases represented a lower share than arrests made in 39 other states. 

    Each sheriff’s office sets its own policy. The sheriff’s website for Hennepin County, which includes Minneapolis, said it complies with immigration warrants signed by a judge, but not civil immigration requests from ICE. 

    According to ICE, seven counties and one city in Minnesota have signed agreements to perform specified immigration duties under ICE’s oversight. None of those are in the Minneapolis area.

    County jails may be reluctant to hold immigrants for ICE because of a 2025 state attorney general advisory opinion that Minnesota officials can’t hold someone on an ICE detainer alone if that person would otherwise be released from custody.

    Courts have found in recent years that holding immigrants for ICE was unconstitutional. 

    RELATED: Fact-check: Trump officials’ statements about Alex Pretti’s fatal shooting by Border Patrol agents

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  • Minnesota Gov. Walz, AG Ellison to testify at House Oversight Committee hearing on fraud in March

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    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison will testify at a House Oversight Committee hearing on fraud and the “misuse” of federal funds in the state in March, Chairman James Comer, R-Kentucky, said on Friday.

    Republicans on the committee launched an investigation into Walz’s handling of a series of multimillion-dollar fraud schemes in Minnesota last December. Members, at the time, asked in letters the governor and Ellison for “documents and communications showing what your administration knew about this fraud and whether you took action to limit or halt the investigation into this widespread fraud.”

    “Americans deserve answers about the rampant misuse of taxpayer dollars in Minnesota’s social services programs that occurred on Governor Walz’s and Attorney General Ellison’s watch,” Comer said in a news release on Friday.

    The hearing is scheduled for March 4. WCCO has reached out to Walz and Ellison for comment.

    Republican Minnesota state Reps. Kristin Robbins, Walter Hudson and Marion Rarick, along with Brendan Ballou, a former prosecutor for the Justice Department who is appearing as the Democrats’ witness, testified in front of the committee earlier this month.

    Robbins said, as chair of a fraud prevention committee in the Minnesota House, she’s been “working to uncover the massive fraud under Tim Walz, propose solutions and hold state agencies accountable.”

    She also testified that her committee has evidence that, as far back as 2012, money has been sent back to al Shabaab, a U.S.-designated foreign terrorist organization and al Qaeda affiliate based in Somalia. The Treasury Department said last month that it would investigate whether tax dollars from Minnesota’s public assistance programs made their way to al Shabaab.

    Democrats on the committee acknowledged concerns about fraud during the Jan. 7 hearing, but said the response should not punish communities unjustly, while pointing to what they said was hypocrisy among their GOP colleagues in taking fraud allegations seriously.   

    Walz has defended his handling of the crisis, saying his administration has “spent years cracking down on fraudsters” and has accused President Trump of “politicizing the issue to defund programs that help Minnesotans.”

    On Dec. 31, A spokesperson for Walz said in response to the Jan. 7 hearing, without expanding, “We’re always happy to work with Congress, though this committee has a track record of holding circus hearings that have nothing to do with the issue at hand.”

    Ellison’s office said on Dec. 31, without evidence, that the attorney general and the state’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit have “prosecuted over 300 Medicaid fraud cases and won over $80 million in recoveries and restitution for the people of Minnesota.”

    Former U.S. Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson in December said the total amount of fraud in Minnesota’s Medicaid programs could be $9 billion or more. Walz called Thompson’s statement “sensationalism” and said that it doesn’t “help” the state tackle the problem that he vowed to fix.

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  • Gov. Walz says he

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    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, who unexpectedly pulled his reelection campaign earlier this month, said in an interview with MS NOW on Wednesday he “will never run for an elected office again.”

    “I have no political consideration,” Walz said. “… Never again. And I will just do the work.”

    “There’s other ways to serve,” Walz added. “And I’ll find them.”

    WCCO has reached out Walz’s office for comment.

    On Jan. 5, Walz, a Democrat, dropped out of the 2026 gubernatorial race, saying he could not “give a political campaign my all” while addressing accusations of fraud in state programs. He initially announced he would seek a third term in September, but said he reevaluated his decision over the holidays.

    “Every minute I spend defending my own political interests would be a minute I can’t spend defending the people of Minnesota against the criminals who prey on our generosity and the cynics who prey on our differences,” he said. “So I’ve decided to step out of the race and let others worry about the election while I focus on the work.”  

    On Thursday, Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar launched her campaign to be Minnesota’s next governor, vowing to “fix what’s wrong” with fraud and root out the problems by “changing how state government works.” 

    Republican candidates who have entered the race include House Speaker Lisa Demuth, businessman and veteran Kendall Qualls, MyPillow CEO Mike LindellRep. Kristin Robbins and 2022 GOP nominee Dr. Scott Jensen. A Republican hasn’t won Minnesota’s gubernatorial office since 2006.

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    Anthony Bettin

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  • US Sen. Amy Klobuchar announces run for Minnesota governor

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    U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar said Thursday she is running for governor of Minnesota, promising to take on President Donald Trump while unifying a state that has endured a series of challenges even before the federal government’s immigration crackdown.Klobuchar’s decision gives Democrats a high-profile candidate and proven statewide winner as their party tries to hold onto the office occupied by Gov. Tim Walz. The 2024 Democratic vice presidential nominee, Walz abandoned his campaign for a third term earlier this month amid criticism over mismanagement of taxpayer funding for child care programs.“Minnesota, we’ve been through a lot,” Klobuchar said in a video announcement Thursday. “These times call for leaders who can stand up and not be rubber stamps of this administration — but who are also willing to find common ground and fix things in our state.”Klobuchar cited Trump’s immigration crackdown in Minnesota, federal officers killing two Minnesotans who protested, the assassination of a state legislative leader and a school shooting that killed multiple children — all within the last year. She avoided direct mention of ongoing fraud investigations into the child care programs that Trump has made a political cudgel.“I believe we must stand up for what’s right and fix what’s wrong,” Klobuchar said.Klobuchar, who becomes the fourth sitting senator to seek leadership of a home state as governor in 2026, has been among the loudest Trump critics, most recently over the immigration enforcement effort that has prompted massive protests.Multiple Republicans already are campaigning in what could become a marquee contest among 36 governorships on the ballot in November. Among those running for the GOP nomination are MyPillow founder and chief executive Mike Lindell, a 2020 election denier who is close to Trump; Minnesota House Speaker Lisa Demuth; Dr. Scott Jensen, a former state senator who was the party’s 2022 gubernatorial candidate; and state Rep. Kristin Robbins.Immigration and fraud will be at issueThe Minnesota contest is likely to test Trump and his fellow Republicans’ uncompromising law-and-order approach and mass deportation program against Democrats’ criticisms of his administration’s tactics.Federal agents have detained children and adults who are U.S. citizens, entered homes without warrants and engaged protesters in violent exchanges. Minnesota resident and U.S. citizen Renee Good was shot three times and killed by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer in early January. On Saturday, federal officers fatally shot ICU nurse Alex Pretti during an encounter.Many Democrats on Capitol Hill, in turn, have voted against spending bills that fund Trump’s Department of Homeland Security. A standoff over the funding could lead to a partial government shutdown.Trump and other Republicans also will try to saddle Klobuchar — or any other Democrat — with questions about the ongoing federal investigation into Minnesota’s child care programs and its Somali community. Trump also has made repeated assertions of widespread fraud in state government, and his administration is conducting multiple investigations of state officials, including Walz. The Democrat has maintained that his administration has investigated, reduced and prosecuted fraud.Klobuchar has won across MinnesotaServing her fourth term in Washington, Klobuchar is a former local prosecutor and onetime presidential candidate who positions herself as a moderate and has demonstrated the ability to win across Minnesota.The senator won her 2024 reelection bid by nearly 16 percentage points and received 135,000 more votes than Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris, who had chosen Walz as her running mate. Harris outpaced Trump by fewer than 5 percentage points.Klobuchar gained attention during Trump’s first term for her questioning of his judicial nominees including now-Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. At Kavanaugh’s acrimonious confirmation hearings, she asked the future justice, who had been accused of sexual assault as a teenager, if he ever had so much to drink that he didn’t remember what happened. Kavanaugh retorted, “Have you?”The senator, who had talked publicly of her father’s alcoholism, continued her questioning. Kavanaugh, who was confirmed by a single vote, later apologized to Klobuchar.After Trump’s first presidency, Klobuchar was among the most outspoken lawmakers during bipartisan congressional inquiries of the insurrection on Jan. 6, 2021, when Trump supporters attacked the Capitol during certification of Democrat Joe Biden’s victory over him in the 2020 presidential election. As Senate Rules Committee chair, she pressed Capitol Police, administration officials and others for details of what authorities knew beforehand and how rioters breached the Capitol.“It’s our duty to have immediate responses to what happened,” she said after helping write a report focused not on Trump’s role but on better security protocols for the seat of Congress.2020 presidential bidKlobuchar sought the Democratic presidential nomination in 2020, running as a moderate in the same political lane as Biden. She launched her campaign standing outside in a Minnesota snowstorm to tout her “grit” and Midwestern sensibilities that have anchored her political identity.As a candidate, Klobuchar faced stories of disgruntled Senate staffers who described her as a difficult boss but also distinguished herself on crowded debate stages as a determined pragmatist. She outlasted several better-funded candidates and ran ahead of Biden in the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary. But Biden, then a former vice president, trounced her and others in the South Carolina primaries, prompting her to drop out and join others in closing ranks behind him.After Biden’s victory, Klobuchar would have been well-positioned for a Cabinet post, perhaps even attorney general. But the Senate’s 50-50 split made it untenable for Biden to create any opening for Republicans to regain control of the chamber.Klobuchar announced in 2021 that she had been treated for breast cancer and in 2024 announced that she was cancer-free but undergoing another round of radiation.Klobuchar joins Colorado Democrat Michael Bennet, Tennessee Republican Marsha Blackburn and Alabama Republican Tommy Tuberville as senators seeking to lead their home states. Bennet, Blackburn and Klobuchar are not up for reelection in 2026 so could remain in the Senate should they not win their gubernatorial races. Tuberville is in the final year of his six-year term and will leave the Senate in January 2027 regardless.___Barrow reported from Atlanta. Associated Press reporter Maya Sweedler in Washington contributed.

    U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar said Thursday she is running for governor of Minnesota, promising to take on President Donald Trump while unifying a state that has endured a series of challenges even before the federal government’s immigration crackdown.

    Klobuchar’s decision gives Democrats a high-profile candidate and proven statewide winner as their party tries to hold onto the office occupied by Gov. Tim Walz. The 2024 Democratic vice presidential nominee, Walz abandoned his campaign for a third term earlier this month amid criticism over mismanagement of taxpayer funding for child care programs.

    “Minnesota, we’ve been through a lot,” Klobuchar said in a video announcement Thursday. “These times call for leaders who can stand up and not be rubber stamps of this administration — but who are also willing to find common ground and fix things in our state.”

    Klobuchar cited Trump’s immigration crackdown in Minnesota, federal officers killing two Minnesotans who protested, the assassination of a state legislative leader and a school shooting that killed multiple children — all within the last year. She avoided direct mention of ongoing fraud investigations into the child care programs that Trump has made a political cudgel.

    “I believe we must stand up for what’s right and fix what’s wrong,” Klobuchar said.

    Klobuchar, who becomes the fourth sitting senator to seek leadership of a home state as governor in 2026, has been among the loudest Trump critics, most recently over the immigration enforcement effort that has prompted massive protests.

    Multiple Republicans already are campaigning in what could become a marquee contest among 36 governorships on the ballot in November. Among those running for the GOP nomination are MyPillow founder and chief executive Mike Lindell, a 2020 election denier who is close to Trump; Minnesota House Speaker Lisa Demuth; Dr. Scott Jensen, a former state senator who was the party’s 2022 gubernatorial candidate; and state Rep. Kristin Robbins.

    Immigration and fraud will be at issue

    The Minnesota contest is likely to test Trump and his fellow Republicans’ uncompromising law-and-order approach and mass deportation program against Democrats’ criticisms of his administration’s tactics.

    Federal agents have detained children and adults who are U.S. citizens, entered homes without warrants and engaged protesters in violent exchanges. Minnesota resident and U.S. citizen Renee Good was shot three times and killed by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer in early January. On Saturday, federal officers fatally shot ICU nurse Alex Pretti during an encounter.

    Many Democrats on Capitol Hill, in turn, have voted against spending bills that fund Trump’s Department of Homeland Security. A standoff over the funding could lead to a partial government shutdown.

    Trump and other Republicans also will try to saddle Klobuchar — or any other Democrat — with questions about the ongoing federal investigation into Minnesota’s child care programs and its Somali community. Trump also has made repeated assertions of widespread fraud in state government, and his administration is conducting multiple investigations of state officials, including Walz. The Democrat has maintained that his administration has investigated, reduced and prosecuted fraud.

    Klobuchar has won across Minnesota

    Serving her fourth term in Washington, Klobuchar is a former local prosecutor and onetime presidential candidate who positions herself as a moderate and has demonstrated the ability to win across Minnesota.

    The senator won her 2024 reelection bid by nearly 16 percentage points and received 135,000 more votes than Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris, who had chosen Walz as her running mate. Harris outpaced Trump by fewer than 5 percentage points.

    Klobuchar gained attention during Trump’s first term for her questioning of his judicial nominees including now-Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. At Kavanaugh’s acrimonious confirmation hearings, she asked the future justice, who had been accused of sexual assault as a teenager, if he ever had so much to drink that he didn’t remember what happened. Kavanaugh retorted, “Have you?”

    The senator, who had talked publicly of her father’s alcoholism, continued her questioning. Kavanaugh, who was confirmed by a single vote, later apologized to Klobuchar.

    After Trump’s first presidency, Klobuchar was among the most outspoken lawmakers during bipartisan congressional inquiries of the insurrection on Jan. 6, 2021, when Trump supporters attacked the Capitol during certification of Democrat Joe Biden’s victory over him in the 2020 presidential election. As Senate Rules Committee chair, she pressed Capitol Police, administration officials and others for details of what authorities knew beforehand and how rioters breached the Capitol.

    “It’s our duty to have immediate responses to what happened,” she said after helping write a report focused not on Trump’s role but on better security protocols for the seat of Congress.

    2020 presidential bid

    Klobuchar sought the Democratic presidential nomination in 2020, running as a moderate in the same political lane as Biden. She launched her campaign standing outside in a Minnesota snowstorm to tout her “grit” and Midwestern sensibilities that have anchored her political identity.

    As a candidate, Klobuchar faced stories of disgruntled Senate staffers who described her as a difficult boss but also distinguished herself on crowded debate stages as a determined pragmatist. She outlasted several better-funded candidates and ran ahead of Biden in the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary. But Biden, then a former vice president, trounced her and others in the South Carolina primaries, prompting her to drop out and join others in closing ranks behind him.

    After Biden’s victory, Klobuchar would have been well-positioned for a Cabinet post, perhaps even attorney general. But the Senate’s 50-50 split made it untenable for Biden to create any opening for Republicans to regain control of the chamber.

    Klobuchar announced in 2021 that she had been treated for breast cancer and in 2024 announced that she was cancer-free but undergoing another round of radiation.

    Klobuchar joins Colorado Democrat Michael Bennet, Tennessee Republican Marsha Blackburn and Alabama Republican Tommy Tuberville as senators seeking to lead their home states. Bennet, Blackburn and Klobuchar are not up for reelection in 2026 so could remain in the Senate should they not win their gubernatorial races. Tuberville is in the final year of his six-year term and will leave the Senate in January 2027 regardless.

    ___

    Barrow reported from Atlanta. Associated Press reporter Maya Sweedler in Washington contributed.

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  • Congresswoman Ilhan Omar on syringe attack:

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    Minnesota U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar said she is doing OK one day after a man sprayed her with what sources say was apple cider vinegar at a Minneapolis town hall Tuesday night.

    Anthony Kazmierczak, 55, is in the Hennepin County Jail right now for allegedly assaulting Omar. He hasn’t been formally charged as of Wednesday afternoon, but was booked for probable cause of third-degree assault. Minneapolis Police said the FBI is leading this investigation into the attack.

    Omar, in an interview with WCCO News Wednesday, said she was looking down at her prepared remarks — she was only a few minutes into speaking — and heard a voice come close to her so she looked up and saw a man coming towards her.

    “I thought he spit on me because it was liquids, kind of fragmented,” Omar told WCCO, noting that she began to lunge towards him after she felt the substance on her before her security tackled him to the ground.

    When asked if she was scared when it happened, Omar said she “learned very young” from growing up with brothers that it was “important for you to stand up for yourself.”

    “My instinct is always to defend myself if something like that were to happen,” Omar said.

    She continued with her constituent event after she was sprayed. She explained she didn’t think it was anything chemical because she would’ve had a reaction to it. Republicans and Democrats alike condemned the attack.

    The incident comes as threats against members of Congress are on the rise. U.S. Capitol Police reported the number of threats they’re investigating against members of Congress, their families and staff is on the rise. There was a 58% increase in number of cases from 2024 to 2025.

    “I am really OK. What happened to me is not OK, but they picked the wrong person,” Omar said. “I am not one to be intimidated.”

    An aide to the Congresswoman told WCCO’s Esme Murphy that attendees of the event were screened with a metal detector wand before entry, but the syringe was plastic and it wasn’t noticed. 

    Court records show Kazmierczak has a number of traffic violations, including two DWI convictions.

    Democratic Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz told CBS News Wednesday he spoke with Omar after the incident, and said rhetoric from the White House about her does not help.

    The president constantly attacks Rep. Omar, attacks her citizenship, attacks the very decency of it, and we’ve asked him time and time again to stop it,” Walz said. “I don’t believe he’s capable of stopping it.”

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    Caroline Cummings

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  • Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz tells Trump:

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    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz spoke to the press Sunday afternoon, one day after 37-year-old Alex Pretti was killed by federal agents in south Minneapolis — the third shooting this month amid Operation Metro Surge, and the second fatality carried out by federal immigration enforcement forces.

    “What’s the plan, Donald Trump? What is the plan?” Walz said. “What do we need to do to get these federal agents out of our state? If fear, violence and chaos is what you wanted from us, then you clearly underestimated the people of this state and nation. We are tired, but we’re resolved. We’re peaceful, but we’ll never forget. We’re angry, but we won’t give up hope. And above all else, we are clearly unified.”

    Walz said if President Trump’s intention was to “make an example of Minnesota,” it backfired.

    “We believe in law and order in this state. We believe in peace, and we believe that Donald Trump needs to pull these 3,000 untrained agents out of Minnesota before they kill another person, and we’re up here telling another story of a Minnesotan just trying to live their life without the interference,” Walz said. “To Americans who are watching this right now, and I don’t know, maybe you’re watching it with curiosity, bewilderment, horror, scorn or sympathy. I’ve got a question for all of you. What side do you wanna be on?”

    Full transcripts of Gov. Walz’s opening and closing statements

    Opening statement

    I had the privilege of talking with Michael and Susan, Alex’s parents, yesterday and the heartache in the hours after your son’s murdered in front of the world is one thing, but what stood out to me was a parent’s desire and their passion to make sure that the story of Alex was told.

    Someone who went to work to care for veterans, someone who was a valued co-worker, someone who relished and lived in this state in a big way whether it was outdoor activities or being down there on the street as a First Amendment witness to what ICE is doing to this, to this state.

    So, once again to Michael and Susan, when I talk to these parents, it’s always in deep confidential conversation. In this one, though, Michael was very clear to me. He said, “Don’t let them forget Alex’s story.”

    The world knows how he died. He died at the hands of ICE agents on the streets of Minneapolis. They want us to make sure we said how he lived. So to Michael and Susan, our deepest sympathies, but you have my commitment to continue to tell that story.

    So now we’ve got two Minnesotans dead, we didn’t have time to start telling [Renee Good‘s] story of a poet and a mother and a bright spirit, and now we’re telling Alex’s story.

    So my question is, what’s the plan, Donald Trump? What is the plan? What do we need to do to get these federal agents out of our state? If fear, violence and chaos is what you wanted from us, then you clearly underestimated the people of this state and nation.

    We are tired, but we’re resolved. We’re peaceful, but we’ll never forget. We’re angry, but we won’t give up hope. And above all else, we are clearly unified. If it was the intention of Donald Trump to make an example of Minnesota, then I’m damn proud of the example that the world’s seeing.

    We believe in law and order in this state. We believe in peace, and we believe that Donald Trump needs to pull these 3,000 untrained agents out of Minnesota before they kill another person, and we’re up here telling another story of a Minnesotan just trying to live their life without the interference.

    To Americans who are watching this right now, and I don’t know, maybe you’re watching it with curiosity, bewilderment, horror, scorn or sympathy. I’ve got a question for all of you: What side do you wanna be on?

    The side of an all powerful federal government that can kill, injure, menace and kidnap its citizens off the streets? On the side of a nurse at the VA hospital who died bearing witness to such a government? Or the side of a mother whose last words were, “I’m not mad at you”?

    The sight of tens of thousands of peaceful citizens who showed up to march when the wind chill was 40 below because they love this state and they love this country.

    You’re allowed to decide at any point that you’re not with us anymore. If you voted for this administration, heck, even if you thought Operation Metro Surge was a good idea, sounded like the thing to do a month ago, you’re still allowed to look at what’s happening here in Minnesota and say, “This isn’t what I voted for and this isn’t what I want.”

    I ask you not to stand by idly. Speak out, share what you’re seeing to others and urge others to put politics aside. We’re no longer having a political debate. We’re having a moral debate.

    We all want secure borders and immigration enforcement that prioritizes criminals, and I want to thank the press, especially the local press, who has done a deep dive to show that’s exactly what Minnesota does.

    But what you’re seeing is not common sense, lawful or humane enforcement. That’s not what this occupation is about.

    Let me say our conversation should not be about, and I know we get asked of what we’re doing out there, how many state patrol or police or national guard I can put on the street. This isn’t about how many people I can put on the street, it’s about how many of these people, these ICE agents and whoever else was thrown into this unholy mess, how many Donald Trump can get out of here?

    Minnesotans, you’ve won the hearts and minds of people across this country, and you’ve done it through your peaceful, resolved defense of your neighbors and the Constitution. 

    So once again Minnesotans, stay peaceful, stay safe. Change is coming and we can feel it. But this fight still goes on.


    Closing statement

    I’m going to close with one thing that I promised the parents, with Michael and Susan, and I speak to all Americans on this over these last 24 hours, what you saw, you’re now knowing more about this young man, beloved by his family, accomplished ICU nurse, skillful ability to work with veterans, someone who is beloved by community, no criminal record, lawful firearms owner.

    And you know what you saw, and then you heard the most powerful people in the world, certainly in this country — the president, vice president, Greg Bovino, Kristi Noem — narrate to you what you were looking at that this was a domestic terrorist, crazed, running at law enforcement with the intent to kill massive numbers of them, sullying his name within minutes of this event happening. And then closing the crime scene, sweeping away the evidence, defying a court order and not allowing anyone to look at it.

    I don’t care if you are conservative and you are flying a Donald Trump flag, you’re a libertarian, don’t tread on me, you’re a Democratic Socialist of America. This is an inflection point, America. If we cannot all agree that the smearing of an American citizen and besmirching everything they stood for and asking us not to believe what we saw, I don’t know what else to tell you.

    This has to be the moment.

    Your government here in Minnesota, I’ve made it clear I’m accountable for things that happen here, and I will take responsibility for that. Someone has to be accountable. Someone has to hold the final decision on this. And sitting behind a keyboard at 2 a.m. and besmirching a VA nurse and a son and a co-worker and a friend is despicable beyond all description.

    This is not “we need to see both sides.” This is not “we need to wait for this.” This is basic human decency. And at this point in time, I’m just asking try, for a moment, to set aside the political side of it and go back and ground in the humanity of this. This family has gone through enough, and to have the most powerful man in the world drag their dead son with absolutely no evidence and gaslight the entire country? This is enough.

    And I would say, President Trump, you can end this today. Pull these folks back. Do humane, focused, effective immigration control. You’ve got the support of all of us to do that, let our law enforcement continue to do what they do, making Minnesota one of the safest states in the country, one of the best places to live. Allow our children to go back to school. We have got children in Minnesota hiding in their houses, afraid to go outside.

    Many of us grew up reading that story of Anne Frank. Somebody is going to write that children’s story about Minnesota. And there’s one person who can end this now.

    And I’ll go back to it again. Please show some decency, pull these folks out, reset this situation and allow us to do the job that the attorney general and myself were elected to do: protect the people of Minnesota and carry out the laws of Minnesota.

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  • Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz says

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    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz says “this is an inflection point” after fatal shooting of Alex Pretti – CBS News









































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    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and the state’s Attorney General Keith Ellison gave an update on Sunday in the aftermath of Border Patrol’s fatal shooting of Alex Pretti.

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  • Sen. Amy Klobuchar takes first step in run for Minnesota governor, source says

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    Sen. Amy Klobuchar has made the first steps in a Minnesota gubernatorial campaign, a source close to the senator tells WCCO.

    Klobuchar on Thursday filed preliminary paperwork with the Minnesota Campaign Finance Board. She’s expected to announce her plans in the coming days.  

    The move comes weeks after fellow Democrat Tim Walz’s decision to end his bid for an unprecedented third term in office.

    Klobuchar, 65, is now in her fourth Senate term. She is one of Minnesota’s most dependable Democratic candidates, with a track record of handily defeating her Republican rivals.

    A native of Plymouth, Minnesota, Klobuchar is the daughter of legendary Minnesota journalist Jim Klobuchar, who died in 2021 at age 93.

    Klobuchar studied law at Yale University and the University of Chicago, and practiced law before being elected Hennepin County attorney in 1999. 

    She first ran for Senate in 2006, defeating Republican Mark Kennedy by 20 percentage points and becoming the first woman in Minnesota to hold the office.

    Klobuchar continued that double-digit victory trend in her next three Senate races, respectively beating Republicans Kurt Bills, James Newberger and Royce White.

    In 2020, Klobuchar launched a brief bid to be her party’s presidential nominee, eventually ceding to President Biden.

    She is currently chair of the Democratic Steering and Policy Committee and previously chaired the Committee on Rules and Administration.

    If Klobuchar wins the 2026 gubernatorial election, she will have to resign her Senate seat. Walz, in his final weeks as governor, must then appoint a temporary replacement — though it’s possible that decision would be made by Klobuchar after becoming governor.

    Several Republican candidates are vying for endorsement at the state GOP convention this spring, including:

    Some GOP candidates have pledged to take their fight to the primary on Aug. 11, 2026, whether or not they get the coveted endorsement.

    Minnesota hasn’t elected a Republican governor since 2002, when Tim Pawlenty beat Democrat Roger Moe and Independence Party candidate Tim Penny.

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  • Sen. Amy Klobuchar takes first step in run for Minnesota governor, source says

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    Sen. Amy Klobuchar has made the first steps in a Minnesota gubernatorial campaign, a source close to the senator tells WCCO.

    Klobuchar on Thursday filed preliminary paperwork with the Minnesota Campaign Finance Board. She’s expected to announce her plans in the coming days.  

    The move comes weeks after fellow Democrat Tim Walz’s decision to end his bid for an unprecedented third term in office.

    Klobuchar, 65, is now in her fourth Senate term. She is one of Minnesota’s most dependable Democratic candidates, with a track record of handily defeating her Republican rivals.

    A native of Plymouth, Minnesota, Klobuchar is the daughter of legendary Minnesota journalist Jim Klobuchar, who died in 2021 at age 93.

    Klobuchar studied law at Yale University and the University of Chicago, and practiced law before being elected Hennepin County attorney in 1999. 

    She first ran for Senate in 2006, defeating Republican Mark Kennedy by 20 percentage points and becoming the first woman in Minnesota to hold the office.

    Klobuchar continued that double-digit victory trend in her next three Senate races, respectively beating Republicans Kurt Bills, James Newberger and Royce White.

    In 2020, Klobuchar launched a brief bid to be her party’s presidential nominee, eventually ceding to President Biden.

    She is currently chair of the Democratic Steering and Policy Committee and previously chaired the Committee on Rules and Administration.

    If Klobuchar wins the 2026 gubernatorial election, she will have to resign her Senate seat. Walz, in his final weeks as governor, must then appoint a temporary replacement — though it’s possible that decision would be made by Klobuchar after becoming governor.

    Several Republican candidates are vying for endorsement at the state GOP convention this spring, including:

    Some GOP candidates have pledged to take their fight to the primary on Aug. 11, 2026, whether or not they get the coveted endorsement.

    Minnesota hasn’t elected a Republican governor since 2002, when Tim Pawlenty beat Democrat Roger Moe and Independence Party candidate Tim Penny.

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    Stephen Swanson

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  • After Minneapolis, Dems confront political vulnerabilities to battle Trump on immigration, furor over ICE

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    Democrats had planned to campaign in the midterm elections on affordability and health care, two issues where Americans are particularly unhappy with President Donald Trump. But the aggressive immigration crackdown in Minnesota, including the killing of Renee Good during a confrontation with federal agents, has scrambled the party’s playbook.

    Now Democrats are trying to translate visceral outrage into political strategy, even though there’s little consensus on how to press forward on issues where the party has recently struggled to earn voters’ trust.

    Some Democrats want to abolish Immigration and Customs Enforcement, a proposal that echoes “defund the police” rhetoric from Trump’s first term, and impeach administration officials such as Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.

    Others have taken a different approach, introducing legislation intended to curb alleged abuses by federal agents. But those ideas have been criticized by activists as insufficient, and there is mounting pressure to obstruct funding for deportations.

    “We’re Democrats. I’m sure we’re going to have 50 different ideas and 50 different ways to say it,” said Chuck Rocha, a party strategist who is advising several House and Senate candidates on immigration this year.

    If Democrats fail to strike the right balance, they could imperil their efforts to retake control of Congress and statehouses around the country. They could also hamper a chance to rebuild credibility with voters whose dissatisfaction with border enforcement under Democratic President Joe Biden helped return Trump, a Republican, to the White House.

    Neera Tanden, president of the Center for American Progress and Biden’s former domestic policy adviser, believes the party can thread the needle.

    “It’s not too much to ask that we have a government that can produce a secure border, that can deport people who are not legally here, and that can also respect people’s civil and human rights,” she told The Associated Press. “This country has done that before, and it can do it again.”

    Immigration crackdowns have spread from city to city since Trump took office, but the latest operation in Minnesota has generated some of the most intense controversy.

    Good, 37, was fatally shot by a federal agent earlier this month, prompting protests and angry responses from local Democratic leaders. Administration officials accused Good of trying to hit an agent with her car, an explanation that has been widely disputed based on videos circulating online.

    “I think the party is very unified in our disdain and concern of the actions certainly of DHS and ICE,” said Rep. Robert Garcia of California, the top Democrat on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. “We should campaign on fairness and due process for all people,” Garcia added, “which is being violated every single day by ICE and DHS. We should be aggressive in that posture.”

    But pushing back on the administration requires Democrats to step onto difficult political terrain.

    About 4 in 10 U.S. adults trusted Republicans more to handle immigration, according to a Washington Post/Ipsos poll from September, higher than about 3 in 10 who said the same about Democrats. On the issue of crime, Republicans also held the advantage. About 44% thought Republicans were better, compared with 22% for the Democrats.

    Republicans feel confident that their intertwined messages on crime and immigration will resonate with voters in the midterms. They frequently highlight violent criminals detained or deported, downplaying examples of nonviolent migrants who have been swept up.

    “If Democrats want to make 2026 a referendum on which party stands for strong immigration policies and protecting public safety, we will take that fight any day of the week,” said Republican National Committee spokeswoman Delanie Bomar.

    Some Democrats are more interested in using the issue as a way to pivot back to core messages about health care and the cost of living.

    “I want everybody to understand, the cuts to your health care are what’s paying for ICE to be doing this,” New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said last week. “The cuts to your health care are what’s paying for this.”

    Democratic strategists have circulated the clip as an example of a potentially effective pitch, particularly after Trump slashed funding for some safety net programs during his first year in office.

    The president’s approval may be slipping on the issue of immigration.

    His approval rating on the issue has fallen since the start of his term, according to Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research polling, from 49% in March to 38% in January.

    Juan Proaño, CEO of the League of United Latin American Citizens, the oldest Hispanic civil rights group in the U.S., said crackdowns have hurt Trump politically.

    “Republican members of Congress are really uncomfortable with these agencies and their existing tactics, because they know it’s going to hurt them back at home come election cycle,” he said.

    Proaño said he had been disappointed with how Democrats had accommodated the Trump administration on immigration in the last year, but he praised changes in the party’s strategy since Good’s death was captured on video.

    “I think everyone just gasped at that, and I think there has been a marked shift since then,” he said.

    Some people who have vocally supported Trump in the past, like podcast host Joe Rogan, have expressed reservations.

    “Are we really going to be the Gestapo?” he asked recently.

    But Trump has not shown any sign of backing down. The administration has ramped up the number of federal agents deployed to Minnesota and the Justice Department issued subpoenas to the state’s Democrats, including Gov. Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, as part of an investigation into whether they obstructed or impeded enforcement operations.

    Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin, who used to lead the party in his home state of Minnesota, said “there’s a lot of pain and anguish.”

    “It’s heartbreaking,” he said in a recent interview. “It’s chilling to think that this is the United States of America, what is supposed to be a beacon for democracy and freedom.”

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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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  • Josh Shapiro says Kamala Harris’ team asked if he was an Israeli agent during vetting process

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    Josh Shapiro says Kamala Harris’ team asked if he was an Israeli agent during vetting process – CBS News









































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    Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro says former Vice President Kamala Harris’ team asked him if he was a double agent for Israel while he was being vetted to be her running mate. Political strategists John McCarthy and Lance Trover join with analysis.

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  • DOJ investigating Gov. Tim Walz, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey over alleged conspiracy to impede immigration agents

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    The Justice Department is investigating Minnesota officials, including Gov. Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, over an alleged conspiracy to impede federal immigration agents, an extraordinary escalation in the Trump administration’s clash with Democratic leaders there, multiple sources familiar with the matter told CBS News.

    One of the sources, a U.S. official, said the investigation stems from statements that Walz and Frey have made about the thousands of Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and Border Patrol agents deployed to the Minneapolis region in recent weeks.

    Subpoenas are likely to be issued in the probe, sources familiar with the matter told CBS News.

    A Justice Department spokesperson declined to comment.

    “This is an obvious attempt to intimidate me for standing up for Minneapolis, our local law enforcement, and our residents against the chaos and danger this Administration has brought to our streets,” Frey said in a statement to CBS News. “I will not be intimidated. My focus will remain where it’s always been: keeping our city safe.” 

    Walz said in a statement: “Two days ago it was Elissa Slotkin. Last week it was Jerome Powell. Before that, Mark Kelly. Weaponizing the justice system and threatening political opponents is a dangerous, authoritarian tactic. The only person not being investigated for the shooting of Renee Good is the federal agent who shot her.”

    Nearly 3,000 federal immigration agents have been dispatched to Minneapolis, with a stated objective of arresting people suspected of being in the U.S. illegally and probing allegations of fraud in Minnesota. The Department of Homeland Security has called the massive deployment the largest operation in its history.

    The large-scale presence of federal agents has triggered widespread local backlash, sparking protests and clashes, especially after the killing of Minnesota resident Renee Good by an ICE officer last week.

    Walz and Frey, both Democrats, have vocally denounced the federal deployment to the Twin Cities, accusing federal agents of creating chaos and undermining public safety through aggressive tactics.

    Earlier this week, Frey said the federal deployment had created a situation that was “not sustainable.”

    “We’re in a position right now where we have residents that are asking the very limited number of police officers that we have to fight ICE agents on the street,” Frey said. “We cannot be at a place right now in America where we have two governmental entities that are literally fighting one another.”

    Walz and Frey have called for protests to remain peaceful. The governor urged Minnesotans not to “fan the flames of chaos” in a message on X Thursday.

    Attorney General Pam Bondi wrote on X Friday, “A reminder to all those in Minnesota: No one is above the law.”

    Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, who visited Minneapolis with FBI Director Kash Patel on Friday, appeared to make a vague reference to the investigation earlier this week.

    “Walz and Frey- I’m focused on stopping YOU from your terrorism by whatever means necessary. This is not a threat. It’s a promise,” Blanche wrote on X earlier this week.

    Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on Thursday said: “Mayor Frey and Governor Walz have to get their city under control. They are encouraging impeding and assault against our law enforcement which is a federal crime, a felony.”

    Noem has said rhetoric from Walz and Frey “perpetuated” violence directed at federal officers, arguing their comments undermined public trust in law enforcement and emboldened protesters on the ground.

    The federal inquiry is focused on a federal statute, 18 U.S.C. § 372, one U.S. official told CBS News, which makes it a crime for two or more people to conspire to prevent federal officers from carrying out their official duties through “force, intimidation or threats.”

    The statute has historically been used in cases involving coordinated efforts to obstruct federal officials, including actions involving violence or threats. Public criticism of federal policy has historically been treated as protected speech unless involving direct coordination or incitement to obstruct law enforcement.

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