Minnesota, Illinois Sue Trump Administration To Block Immigration Surges

The US state of Minnesota has sued the Trump administration in federal court in an attempt to block a surge of federal immigration agents into the state.

The lawsuit argues the deployment amounts to an unconstitutional “federal invasion”. Minnesota’s Attorney General Keith Ellison said immigration operations had upended life for millions and caused “chaos and violence”.

It comes after Renee Good, 37, was shot dead by an immigration agent in Minneapolis last week, triggering large protests in the city.

On social media, President Donald Trump said agents were “patriots” who were removing convicted criminals, and warned of a “day of reckoning” for Minnesota.

The lawsuit asks a federal court to declare the deployment illegal, but the Trump administration has described Monday’s legal action as “baseless”.

It has also pledged to significantly increase its deployment to the area.

The administration has said immigration agents are targeting illegal migrants, and that further agents are needed to ensure their safety during operations.

In a news conference announcing the legal challenge, Ellison said the deployment violated the state’s “sovereign authority to protect the health and wellbeing of every single person who lives within our borders”.

On Tuesday, Trump posted on Truth Social that “thousands of already convicted murderers, drug dealers and addicts” were living in Minnesota.

“All the patriots of ICE want to do is remove them from your neighborhood and send them back to the prisons and mental institutions from where they came”, he added.

Accusing Minnesota Democrats of fomenting protests to distract attention from a fraud scandal in the state, he added in all capital letters: “Fear not, great people of Minnesota, the day of reckoning & retribution is coming!”

During a news conference on Monday to announce the lawsuit, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey alleged that agents were illegally targeting people who they assumed to be immigrants based on racial profiling.

He said their actions had led to an increase in calls to 911, and forced city police to work overtime to investigate incidents involving Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

And Ellison, the state attorney general, said: “The unlawful deployment of thousands of armed, masked, and poorly trained federal agents is hurting Minnesota.”

He accused the Trump administration of “persecuting the state of Minnesota because of our political views”. Democrats currently hold the governorship and control the state legislature.

But the Department of Homeland Security accused Minnesota officials of “prioritizing politics over public safety”.

“This is a baseless lawsuit, and we look forward to proving that in court”, said the agency’s spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin.

During the news conference, prosecutors said they would attempt to get a court to issue a temporary restraining order to block the deployment as early as Tuesday.

It comes as the Department of Homeland Security says it plans to send more agents into the state as part of its Operation Metro Surge.

The department says the deployment is necessary to combat illegal immigration and crime. According to recent estimates, around 2,000 agents have been deployed to Minnesota.

Over the weekend, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem told Fox News that “hundreds more” immigration agents would be sent to the area “in order to allow our ICE and our Border Patrol individuals that are working in Minneapolis to do so safely”.

CNN reported that as many as about 1,000 agents from US Customs and Border Protection were being deployed to Minneapolis, citing two federal law enforcement sources.

The state of Illinois and the city of Chicago filed a similar lawsuit on Monday against what it called an “organized bombardment” and “occupation” by federal immigration agents.

“Uniformed, military-trained personnel, carrying semi-automatic firearms and military-grade weaponry, have rampaged for months through Chicago and the surrounding areas,” the Illinois lawsuit states.

The shooting of Good last week led to debate over federal law enforcement operations in US cities.

Federal officials allege that the 37-year-old was attempting to run over immigration agents with her car when she was shot. Local officials have disputed this, and say firing shots was unnecessary.

The FBI has said it will investigate the shooting. Local officials say they are being shut out of the federal investigation.

 

SOURCE: aol.com

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