
Police arrested about 100 clergy demonstrating towards immigration enforcement at Minnesota’s largest airport Friday, and thousands gathered in downtown Minneapolis regardless of Arctic temperatures to protest the Trump administration’s crackdown.
The protests are a part of a broader motion towards President Donald Trump’s elevated immigration enforcement throughout the state, with labor unions, progressive organizations and clergy urging Minnesotans to keep away from work, faculty and even outlets.
Metropolitan Airports Commission spokesman Jeff Lea mentioned the clergy had been issued misdemeanor citations of trespassing and failure to adjust to a peace officer and had been then launched. They had been arrested outdoors the principle terminal on the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport as a result of they went past the attain of their allow for demonstrating and disrupted airline operations, he mentioned.
Rev. Mariah Furness Tollgaard of Hamline Church in St. Paul mentioned police ordered them to go away however she and others determined to remain and be arrested to indicate help for migrants, together with members of her congregation who’re afraid to go away their properties. She deliberate to return to her church after her temporary detention to carry a prayer vigil.
“We cannot abide living under this federal occupation of Minnesota,” Tollgaard mentioned.
Protesters demand ICE go away Minnesota
The Rev. Elizabeth Barish Browne traveled from Cheyenne, Wyoming, to take part within the rally in downtown Minneapolis, the place the excessive temperature was minus 9 levels Fahrenheit (minus 23 levels Celsius) regardless of a vivid solar.
“What’s happening here is clearly immoral,” the Unitarian Universalist minister mentioned. “It’s definitely chilly, but the kind of ice that’s dangerous to us is not the weather.”
Protesters have gathered day by day within the Twin Cities since Jan. 7, when 37-year-old mom of three Renee Good was fatally shot by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer. Federal legislation enforcement officers have repeatedly squared off with group members and activists who monitor their actions.
Sam Nelson mentioned he skipped work so he might be a part of the march. He mentioned he’s a former pupil of the Minneapolis highschool the place federal brokers detained somebody after class earlier this month. That arrest led to altercations between federal officers and bystanders.
“It’s my community,” Nelson mentioned. “Like everyone else, I don’t want ICE on our streets.”
Organizers mentioned Friday morning that greater than 700 companies statewide have closed in solidarity with the motion, from a bookstore in tiny Grand Marais close to the Canadian border to the landmark Guthrie Theater in downtown Minneapolis.
“We’re achieving something historic,” mentioned Kate Havelin of Indivisible Twin Cities, one of many greater than 100 collaborating teams.
DHS confirms the detention of a 2-year-old and a 5-year-old
A 2-year-old named Chloe was detained together with her father as they drove house from a grocery retailer in South Minneapolis on Thursday, in response to a GoFundMe web page created by Minneapolis City Council member Jason Chavez.
Department of Homeland Security mentioned in an announcement that Border Patrol arrested Elvis Tipan Echeverria of Ecuador and that the toddler’s mom refused to take her so she was reunited together with her father at a federal detention facility.
According to an emergency petition filed in federal courtroom, a district choose granted an emergency injunction ordering Chloe’s launch into the custody of her lawyer. The little one, a citizen of Ecuador who was dropped at Minneapolis as a new child, has a pending asylum software and isn’t topic to a ultimate order of elimination.
DHS repeated its allegation Friday that the daddy of 5-year-old Liam Ramos deserted him throughout his arrest by immigration officers in Columbia Heights on Tuesday, resulting in the kid being detained, too.
Department spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin mentioned Liam was detained as a result of his father, (*100*) Alexander Conejo Arias, “fled from the scene.” The two are detained collectively on the Dilley Detention Center in Texas, which is meant to carry households. McLaughlin mentioned officers tried to get Liam’s mom to take him, however she refused to simply accept custody.
The household’s lawyer Marc Prokosch mentioned he thinks the mom refused to open the door to the ICE officers as a result of she was afraid she could be detained. Columbia Heights district superintendent Zena Stenvik mentioned Liam was “used as bait.”
Prokosch discovered nothing in state data to counsel Liam’s father has a felony historical past.
On Friday, Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino sought to shift the narrative away from Liam’s detention by attacking the information media for, in his view, inadequate protection of kids who’ve misplaced dad and mom to violence by individuals within the nation illegally. After briefly mentioning the 5-year-old throughout a information convention, he talked a few mom of 5 who was killed in August 2023.
Details from Good’s post-mortem
The Hennepin County Medical Examiner posted an preliminary post-mortem report on-line for Good that labeled her loss of life as a murder and decided she died from “multiple gunshots wounds.”
A extra detailed unbiased post-mortem commissioned by Good’s household mentioned one bullet pierced the left aspect her head and exited on the appropriate aspect. This post-mortem, launched Wednesday by the Romanucci & Blandin legislation agency, mentioned bullets additionally struck her within the arm and breast, though these accidents weren’t instantly life-threatening.
Antonio Romanucci, an lawyer for the household, mentioned in an announcement that the household continues to be awaiting the total report from the health worker and “hope that they communicate with Renee’s family and share their report before releasing any further information to the public.”
A spokesperson for the agency mentioned there have been no funeral plans to share but.
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Associated Press journalists Tiffany Stanley in Washington and Heather Hollingsworth in Mission, Kansas, contributed.
This story was initially featured on Fortune.com
