Minnesota, ICE and Federal Judge
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5-year-old boy detained by ICE released, back in MN
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A federal judge says she won't halt the immigration enforcement surge in Minnesota and the Twin Cities as a lawsuit over it proceeds.
The ruling in federal court in Minnesota lands as Immigration and Customs Enforcement faces scrutiny over an internal memo claiming judge-signed warrants aren’t needed to enter homes without consent.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security announced its intention Monday to appeal a ruling by a federal judge requiring Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to follow the law.
Federal immigration officers are now asserting new authority to forcibly enter homes without a warrant signed by a judge, despite a federal judge ruling such conduct unconstitutional after a family's home was broken into with only an administrative warrant.
Federal judge ruled ICE illegally detained Iowa man, accused agency of trying to "cover its tracks" after violating immigration detention procedures.
Days after ordering the leader of ICE to appear before him, a federal judge in Minnesota has ripped into the agency, accusing it of violating roughly 100 court orders since the start of 2026. The post 'ICE is not a law unto itself': Judge excoriates Trump administration for having 'violated' nearly 100 court orders in less than a month first appeared on Law & Crime.