By Toluse Olorunnipa
Saturday, January 31, 2026
The state and local officials meeting with Tom Homan, who
was put in charge of the federal immigration operation in Minnesota this week,
have generally agreed that their encounters have been cordial and productive, a
welcome change from the militaristic approach taken by his predecessor. Homan
has also cast these discussions in a positive light, expressing optimism
Thursday that “commonsense cooperation” on immigration enforcement in
Minneapolis will allow him to draw down the thousands of agents that have
flooded the city for the past two months.
But beyond the pleasantries, Homan is finding little
appetite in Minnesota for the kind of targeted, aggressive immigration
enforcement he has long sought to enact in Democratic-run cities and states.
After the shooting deaths of Renee
Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents, there is even less trust among
local leaders that the Trump administration can be a reliable partner.
Although Homan has acknowledged that the immigration
surge in Minnesota has not “been perfect,” his upbeat predictions of a smooth
and swift détente seem to underestimate how much ill will the Trump
administration’s actions have caused among the state’s politicians, activists,
and residents. The killings of Good and Pretti-–each followed by a
Trump-administration push to denigrate the victims and box out local
investigators-–came against a backdrop of growing mistrust and frustration even
among officials who have typically embraced partnership with their federal
partners.
“One of the things that was exceedingly frustrating was
the fact that they were putting out information that was just utterly and
completely untrue,” Minnesota Department of Corrections Commissioner Paul
Schnell told me.
Schnell met with Homan this week. The prison-systems
leader told me that his agency felt it had no choice but to take the
extraordinary step of creating a
webpage to fact-check several statements made by the Department of Homeland
Security, which claimed that the state was routinely releasing violent
criminals onto the street.
Several of the convicted criminals DHS claimed it had “arrested”
in Minnesota had actually been in his department’s custody when they were
handed over to federal officials, Schnell said. These transfers, which took
place without fanfare inside state prisons, belied the administration’s
argument that it had sent 3,000 agents into Minnesota to hunt down criminals
because it was not receiving cooperation from local officials. Speaking to
reporters on Thursday, Homan acknowledged that the Department of Corrections
had been honoring ICE detainers—requests from the federal government for
information about inmates who may be subject to immigration removal
proceedings.
The broader challenge for the Trump administration is
that focusing on the kinds of violent criminals DHS has called “the worst of
the worst” won’t produce the mass-deportation
numbers that Trump has demanded. Schnell told me that he could find no
justification for the administration’s claim that there were more than 1,360
inmates with ICE detainers in Minnesota. He said his office repeatedly sought
clarity from DHS about the figure but received no answer, eventually opting to
launch the webpage, which is titled “Combatting DHS Misinformation.” Schnell
told me that the state prison system has only about 270 noncitizen inmates, or
less than 3 percent of its total population of about 8,000. The large
deployment of immigration officers to Minneapolis never made sense if the goal
was to target violent criminals, he said.
“You’re talking about the worst of the worst; and then you send your 3,000
agents into schools and hospitals and churches and small businesses?” Schnell
said. “Is that really where the worst of the worst are at?”
The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to a
request for comment. The White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson told me the
administration’s conversations with local officials were ongoing. “The Trump
Administration remains committed to enforcing federal laws and ensuring all
Americans feel safe in their communities,” she said by email. “Local leaders
should work with us, not against us, to achieve this goal.”
***
Homan, the administration’s “border czar,” arrived in
Minnesota this week and took
the reins from Greg Bovino, the ousted Border Patrol commander. He said
Thursday that federal immigration agents in the state will prioritize arresting
violent criminals, while acknowledging that the operation—which has swept up
refugees, children, and U.S. citizens with no criminal records—had “got away
from” its core mission.
Police in Minnesota have said they support the removal of
violent criminals from the community. But the federal government’s actions have
soured relations in a way that, for some, makes future coordination on
immigration enforcement unlikely, current and former officials told me. In
addition to killing two Minnesota residents, masked federal agents have roughed
up protesters and created a sense of fear in the community.
“Trust has been breached, and I don’t think you can get
that back,” Lucy Gerold, who served as a police officer in Minneapolis for more
than 30 years, told me. “I think they’ve lost the trust and breached the
ability to compromise or coordinate or cooperate.”
Gerold said she unwittingly found herself in the midst of
a federal immigration operation and was stunned by the lack of protocol and
professionalism. Despite having shown up in six unmarked cars to make an
arrest, the agents failed to secure the scene and control the flow of traffic.
The mix of protesters, moving cars, and armed agents created chaos, she said.
Although federal officials have said they want local police to help them
perform such tasks more smoothly, the Minneapolis Police Department is reluctant
to be associated with an operation that often appears disjointed,
unprofessional, and hostile.
Days before Pretti was killed, Minneapolis Police Chief
Brian O’Hara told me that it’s “potentially damaging to the legitimacy of law
enforcement” for his officers to be seen cooperating with a federal operation
that many residents view as an invasion. Homan’s desire for more support from
local police faces other obstacles. The Minneapolis city council recently
updated a rule spelling out the restrictions on how police can interact with
federal immigration officers. Known as a “separation
ordinance,” it says Minneapolis must “vigorously oppose” any efforts to use
its resources to support federal immigration enforcement, asserting that
community trust would be “destroyed” if local officials are seen collaborating
with Trump’s mass-deportation teams.
“Enforcing federal civil immigration laws alongside
federal agents who lack clear agency identification and/or who are masked or
otherwise concealing their identities or badges would be contrary to the values
of the city and harmful to the trust and public safety of city residents,” the
ordinance reads.
***
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey and Minnesota Governor Tim
Walz each said they had productive meetings with Homan, and appreciated the
opportunity to discuss the situation with him. Still, they seemed more
reluctant to cooperate with ICE or otherwise change their policy than Homan had
suggested in his press conference.
“I’m not sure I can do much more,” the governor told
my colleague Isaac Stanley-Becker this week, accusing the federal agents of
engaging in unconstitutional profiling. Speaking to the U.S. Conference of
Mayors on Thursday, Frey described the Trump administration’s actions as “an
invasion on our democracy” and reiterated his stance that the federal operation
needs to end immediately.
Hours after Homan told reporters that Minnesota Attorney
General Keith Ellison had “clarified” that county jails can tell the government
when violent offenders are scheduled for release, Ellison released a lengthy
statement asserting that his priority was bringing the federal surge to an
end and investigating the deaths of Good and Pretti.
“We will not make any concessions or compromises to
undermine our state sovereignty,” he wrote, adding that he “did not make, and
could not have made, any agreement” with Homan about how county officials would
interact with ICE.
The Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office, home to the state’s
largest jail system, has a policy of not honoring ICE detainer requests. When I
asked if Sheriff Dawanna Witt planned to revise that stance after meeting with
Homan this week, the HCSO spokesperson Megan Larson was noncommittal. Jails
have limited discretion, she told me, and any changes “must come through clear
statewide policy direction and legislation.”
In an advisory
opinion last year, Ellison wrote that local jails cannot legally hold
inmates in custody at ICE’s request if they are otherwise eligible for release.
Ellison said this week that he told Homan he stands by that opinion. He said he
also reiterated Minnesota state law, which requires state and local authorities
to contact ICE whenever a noncitizen is convicted of a felony.
Linus Chan, a law professor at the University of
Minnesota and an immigration attorney, told me that although he does not know
of a time when the state has not complied with that law, DHS is asking for
deeper cooperation that would allow its agents to search local jails and deport
people who have not been convicted or who are eligible for bail. Agreeing to
such a policy would be a major misread of what Minnesotans—many of whom have
taken to the streets to protest ICE—expect from their leaders, local activists
told me.
With Trump’s poll numbers sliding and infighting
and dysfunction plaguing the team behind the mass-deportation plan, some
Minnesota residents say cutting a deal now would amount to an ill-timed
surrender. Others are concerned that despite Homan’s charm offensive and
promises to turn down the temperature, federal authorities have continued to
comb through Minneapolis looking for people to arrest.
“Given how violent things have been and how awful the
situation has gotten, people are not going to just immediately want to turn
around and trust anything that is said by the federal government right now,”
Julia Decker, the policy director for the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota,
told me.
The arrests
of journalists and protesters this week by federal agents have further
inflamed tensions. Meanwhile, local officials have been frustrated by DHS’s
unwillingness to cooperate with their investigations into the shootings of Good
and Pretti. (The Justice Department announced
yesterday that it is opening an investigation into Pretti’s death.)
“The only time this situation will de-escalate is when
the federal occupying force ends its siege,” Hennepin County Attorney Mary
Moriarty said this week in a video message.
“They are the escalating factor, and they have been this entire time.”
Trump may have the final say on where the federal
operation goes from here. A day after saying he planned to “de-escalate a
little bit,” Trump on Wednesday attacked Frey for saying the city would not
enforce federal immigration law. The mayor, the president posted on social
media, was “playing with fire.”
And hours after Homan pledged a significant reduction of
forces from Minneapolis if local leaders agreed to work with him, Trump
appeared to cast doubt on the more cooperative approach. While attending a
premiere for First Lady Melania Trump’s documentary film, the president was
asked whether he was planning to pull back in Minnesota.
“No, no, not at all,” he said.
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