March 06, 2026
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Judges weigh contempt for U.S. Attorney Rosen over repeated ICE Metro Surge court‑order violations

Federal judges — led by Chief Judge Patrick Schiltz — are weighing whether to hold Acting U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen (or other top DOJ officials) in contempt after finding ICE and the U.S. Attorney’s Office repeatedly violated habeas, release and property‑return orders during Operation Metro Surge, with the court citing at least 210 order violations, imposing fines and warning of potential criminal contempt or jail. The surge has produced hundreds to more than 700 habeas petitions and over 1,000 related lawsuits that have overwhelmed a shrunken Minnesota U.S. Attorney’s Office (civil staffing cut roughly in half), prompting Rosen to defend his office as overburdened while judges and immigration lawyers point to continued re‑arrests, missing property and systemic noncompliance.

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📌 Key Facts

  • Operation Metro Surge prompted an unprecedented flood of habeas petitions in Minnesota — over 1,000 lawsuits by mid‑February — that has overwhelmed federal courts and the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
  • Federal judges have found repeated legal violations by ICE in multiple cases, including a warrantless battering‑ram home entry that a judge said violated the Fourth Amendment in the Garrison Gibson case; Gibson (who had checked in with ICE for about 15 years, wore an ankle monitor, and has no criminal record) was ordered released by a judge and was re‑arrested hours later.
  • Chief Judge Patrick Schiltz’s Feb. 26 supplemental order documents at least 210 violated court orders in 143 cases and warns the court may impose escalating coercive sanctions — including higher fines, personal sanctions, or jailing officials — if ICE/DOJ do not comply; other judges have already imposed civil contempt (e.g., Judge Provinzino fined SAUSA Matthew Isihara $500/day over missing IDs).
  • Acting U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen has repeatedly appeared in court to defend the office’s response, saying the office is operating 'reactive' and that transfers to Texas have largely stopped; judges remain skeptical and are actively weighing whether to hold Rosen or other DOJ officials in contempt and have ordered Rosen to testify in related hearings.
  • The U.S. Attorney’s Office says it is severely understaffed and strained by the surge — the civil division has been cut roughly in half, chief civil and many veteran AUSAs have departed, and the office has halted affirmative civil enforcement work to focus on habeas litigation — while some DOJ attorneys have publicly expressed burnout and DOJ headquarters has blamed 'activist judges.'
  • ICE operational failures include rapidly flying detainees out of state (often to El Paso), sometimes within hours, and failing to return personal property and IDs after judges ordered releases; those practices generated habeas wins, contempt motions, and judge findings that transfers or 'dumping' violated court directives (DOJ attributes many instances to volume/mistakes).
  • The surge has produced a high win rate for habeas petitions (immigration attorneys reported more than 90% of recent petitions yielded release or bond hearings), spurred emergency filings and fast court deadlines, strained local immigrant‑serving businesses and services, and prompted city and community organizations to coordinate aid and warn about related scams.
  • Senior ICE/DHS and DOJ disruptions include the sudden retirement of ICE General Counsel Jim Stolley during the litigation peak and DOJ admissions that sending thousands of agents into Metro Surge without a civil‑litigation plan created an 'impossible position' for line AUSAs.

📊 Relevant Data

Somali-born young men aged 18-29 in Minnesota have an incarceration rate of 5,030 per 100,000, compared to 2,450 per 100,000 for U.S.-born males in the same age group and 1,280 per 100,000 for non-Hispanic white natives.

Yes, Somali Immigrants Commit More Crime Than Natives — City Journal

The odds of incarceration for Somali immigrants aged 18-64 are more than 2.5 times those for U.S.-born males and more than 4.5 times those for native non-Hispanic whites, controlling for year, age, and state of residence.

Yes, Somali Immigrants Commit More Crime Than Natives — City Journal

The Somali population in Minnesota is 79,449, representing 1.4% of the state's total population as of recent data.

Somali population - Cultural communities — Minnesota Compass

During Operation Metro Surge, 4,000 people were arrested in Minnesota, with over 3,000 detained, and nationwide, 74.2% of ICE detainees have no criminal record or have been convicted and released.

By the Numbers: ICE in Minnesota — Mpls.St.Paul Magazine

Somali immigration to Minnesota began in 1992 amid Somalia's civil war, facilitated by U.S. refugee visas, leading to a community of 80,000 to 100,000 today, most arriving as refugees through permanent legal pathways with vetting and resettlement support.

Fact Check Team: Minnesota's Somali community: from refugees to political powerhouses — ABC 33/40

📰 Source Timeline (15)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

March 06, 2026
1:15 AM
US Attorney Daniel Rosen defends himself, again, in contempt hearing for ICE order violations
Minnesotareformer by Max Nesterak
New information:
  • A new March 5 hearing focused specifically on Daniel Rosen personally defending himself again against potential contempt sanctions related to ICE’s noncompliance with court orders.
  • Additional detail on how judges pressed Rosen about systemic failures in obeying habeas and property‑return orders and whether his office has actually fixed the problems.
  • Fresh quotations or characterizations of the judges’ skepticism toward Rosen’s assurances, adding texture to earlier reports of 'no defiance, no disobedience' claims.
March 05, 2026
10:44 PM
U.S. Attorney says ICE detainees no longer being sent to Texas
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Paul.Blume@fox.com (Paul Blume)
New information:
  • U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen told Senior U.S. District Judge John Tunheim on Thursday that ICE detainees are no longer being sent to El Paso, Texas, because there are now enough detention beds in Minnesota.
  • Rosen appeared in court twice in the same week—Tuesday before Judge Jeffrey Bryan and Thursday before Judge Tunheim—over alleged Operation Metro Surge–related violations and potential contempt.
  • In Tunheim’s cases, the government is accused of violating at least six orders to immediately return personal belongings (IDs, phones, bank cards, etc.) to individuals judges had found were unlawfully arrested.
  • Rosen argued that belongings were sometimes left behind because ICE prioritized getting detainees back to Minnesota and released by the court’s deadline, calling the violations 'mistakes' and 'a product of the numbers' rather than contempt.
  • Judge Tunheim said he appreciated improved transparency and communication from the U.S. Attorney’s Office, remarking that often the court 'doesn’t hear anything,' but contempt is still under consideration.
March 04, 2026
2:42 AM
Judge weighs contempt against top Department of Justice official in Minnesota over ICE orders
Minnesotareformer by Max Nesterak
New information:
  • Judge Patrick Schiltz is now specifically weighing whether to hold Acting U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen (or another top DOJ official in Minnesota) in contempt over ongoing failures to comply with habeas and release orders in Operation Metro Surge cases.
  • The article details that despite prior warnings and supplemental orders, ICE/DOJ have continued to miss deadlines or ignore clear court directives in a subset of surge detentions, prompting the judge to actively consider contempt rather than just threaten it.
  • It adds fresh context from the latest hearing and filings about how the U.S. Attorney’s Office is handling the volume of habeas cases, what excuses DOJ is offering, and what kinds of sanctions (fines, personal sanctions, or jailing) are now on the table.
February 27, 2026
4:26 PM
Federal judge threatens top prosecutor with contempt 'again and again and again' for violated court orders
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Bill.Keller@fox.com (Bill Keller)
New information:
  • Schiltz’s Feb. 26 supplemental order says ICE and the U.S. Attorney’s Office have now violated at least 210 court orders in 143 cases (97 orders in 66 cases plus another 113 orders in 77 more cases).
  • He calls out U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen by name, quoting and rebutting a Feb. 9 email in which Rosen accused the judge of overstating the scope of ICE’s noncompliance.
  • Schiltz writes that DOJ’s own decisions — sending 3,000 ICE agents with no civil‑litigation plan — created an 'impossible position' for line AUSAs, and says the court is unaware of any other time in U.S. history a federal court has had to threaten contempt 'again and again and again' to force the U.S. government to obey orders.
  • In just the last week, the U.S. Attorney’s Office has already been cited twice for civil contempt, and Schiltz now explicitly raises the prospect of criminal contempt and jail if orders keep being violated.
  • Rosen has also been ordered to testify in a separate hearing next week over ICE’s failure to return property and paperwork to immigrants after release.
1:38 PM
Chief Judge Schiltz: ‘One way or another, ICE will comply with this court’s orders’
Minnesotareformer by Max Nesterak
New information:
  • Chief Judge Patrick Schiltz told lawyers in open court that 'one way or another, ICE will comply with this court’s orders,' signaling he is prepared to ratchet up sanctions beyond the earlier $500‑per‑day contempt fine against SAUSA Matthew Isihara.
  • The judge made clear he is considering direct coercive measures against the agency — including higher fines and, in extremis, jailing officials — if ICE continues to flout habeas release orders by transferring or holding people after relief is granted.
  • Schiltz used the hearing to warn that Minnesota’s federal docket is being overwhelmed by Metro Surge–related habeas work, and that he will not let ICE’s operational choices render the local court system 'dysfunctional.'
February 20, 2026
12:29 AM
ICE in Minnesota: Federal judge's contempt ruling highlights Minnesota court frustrations
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Paul.Blume@fox.com (Paul Blume)
New information:
  • U.S. District Judge Laura Provinzino held Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Isihara in civil contempt for failing to comply with her order in the habeas case of Rigoberto Soto Jimenez.
  • Provinzino had ordered Soto Jimenez released by Feb. 13 in Minnesota with all of his property returned; ICE instead dumped him in Texas without his Minnesota driver’s license or Mexican consular ID and never got him home or his IDs back by the deadline.
  • At a follow‑up hearing nearly a week later, Isihara admitted the government "dropped the ball" and blamed an overwhelmed, understaffed U.S. Attorney’s Office coping with roughly 1,000 Metro‑Surge habeas filings.
  • Provinzino imposed a personal $500‑per‑day civil‑contempt fine on Isihara for each day Soto Jimenez remained without his identification, though the Fox 9 piece reports the IDs were finally being returned, likely mooting the fine.
  • U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen publicly blasted Provinzino’s contempt order as a "lawless abuse of judicial power," underscoring open warfare between the bench and DOJ over Metro Surge detentions.
  • Politico legal‑affairs reporter Kyle Cheney told Fox 9 this is the first time he’s seen a judge actually punish a government official for noncompliance in the current wave of immigration habeas cases, after months of ignored threats.
February 19, 2026
8:08 PM
Lawyers filed over 1,000 lawsuits challenging immigrant detentions during Operation Metro Surge
Minnesotareformer by Max Nesterak
New information:
  • Provides a consolidated, updated case count and timeframe for Metro Surge–related habeas petitions that helps explain why the U.S. Attorney’s Office workload has become unsustainable.
  • Documents multiple instances where judges granted habeas relief specifically because ICE defied or ignored prior court orders about release or transfer, adding granular detail to the broader 'crushing burden' narrative.
  • Links individual habeas wins (and the legal theories behind them) to broader structural problems in how ICE and DHS rolled out Metro Surge without building any serious due‑process or legal review capacity into the operation.
February 11, 2026
11:08 PM
How to help Minneapolis community during ICE surge
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Madison.Hunter@fox.com (Madison Hunter)
New information:
  • City of Minneapolis is publicly directing residents to specific vetted local organizations for food, rental aid, and mutual aid during the ICE surge (e.g., We Love the Twin Cities, Greater Twin Cities United Way, MPLS for MPLS, Minneapolis Foundation, Minnesota Council of Nonprofits).
  • Article highlights Mercado Central as a flagship immigrant‑owned business hub on Lake Street that is struggling to generate sales and even make rent because of the ICE surge, and is now actively fundraising to stay open.
  • City warns of phishing and scam donation attempts tied to Operation Metro Surge and urges residents to vet organizations before giving.
February 07, 2026
3:25 PM
ICE is frustrating judges and exhausting DOJ attorneys
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Joe.Augustine@fox.com (Joe Augustine)
New information:
  • ICE’s own General Counsel Jim Stolley has suddenly retired, revealed via an out‑of‑office email, at the same time the surge litigation is peaking.
  • More than a dozen veteran AUSAs in Minnesota have left since Operation Metro Surge began; the civil division has been "cut in half," according to U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen.
  • Chief civil AUSA Ana Voss, who was managing more than 700 habeas petitions (already more than all of 2025 filings), is gone.
  • The lead prosecutor on an upcoming April Feeding Our Future fraud trial recently resigned after telling a judge he would personally try the case; two replacements were just assigned with about two months to prepare.
  • Minnesota DHS deputy commissioner John Connolly says the agency no longer knows who at the U.S. Attorney’s Office is actually receiving or working the state’s Medicaid fraud referrals.
  • Veteran prosecutor Thomas Calhoun Lopez, who’d handled more than 900 cases since 2000, resigned from an ICE‑assault case and has been replaced by a lawyer who only graduated law school in 2024 and was sworn into the Minnesota federal bar last week.
  • At least three DOJ attorneys now handling Metro Surge‑related matters were only admitted to practice in the District of Minnesota in the past few days.
  • A DOJ lawyer went viral after telling a judge, on the record, "this system sucks, this job sucks," and former Acting U.S. Attorney Anders Folk is publicly asking whether the office "can even do its job right now".
February 06, 2026
6:06 PM
Minnesota U.S. Attorney's Office overwhelmed by Operation Metro Surge litigation
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Paul.Blume@fox.com (Paul Blume)
New information:
  • U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen told the 8th Circuit that more than 700 habeas petitions have been filed through the first week of February, after January’s filings alone already doubled all of 2025.
  • Rosen says his civil division is down 50% in staffing and has 'canceled all affirmative civil enforcement work' to keep up with habeas cases and contempt hearings.
  • DOJ motions now admit U.S. Attorney’s Offices are under a 'crushing burden' from Metro Surge litigation and have shifted resources away from other 'critical priorities, including criminal matters.'
  • Minnesota district judges have 'overwhelmingly' sided with detained immigrants, ordering releases or bond hearings, which in turn generates contempt motions and rapid‑fire deadlines that keep AUSAs scrambling.
  • Rosen describes his office as operating in 'reactive' mode, with lawyers and paralegals 'continuously working overtime' and courts setting deadlines within hours, including nights, weekends and holidays.
February 04, 2026
8:49 PM
ICE attorney out after 'this job sucks' comment
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Paul.Blume@fox.com (Paul Blume)
New information:
  • Assistant U.S. Attorney Julie Le, who volunteered to help with Metro Surge habeas litigation and had been assigned more than 85 cases, told a federal judge in open court that 'this system sucks, this job sucks' and acknowledged government attorneys are 'overwhelmed.'
  • Le will no longer handle immigration‑related cases for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Minnesota after repeated ICE failures to comply with nearly 100 court orders in January and her comments about struggling to get ICE to obey judges.
  • Chief civil attorney Ana Voss, who was overseeing more than 600 habeas petitions stemming from Metro Surge, is also leaving an already depleted civil division.
  • A DOJ spokesperson responded by blaming 'activist judges' for the flood of habeas filings and insisting the Trump administration is 'more than prepared' to handle the caseload, despite more than a dozen AUSAs having left the office in 2026, including lead fraud prosecutors.
January 22, 2026
2:43 AM
ICE detainees have already filed more habeas petitions than in all of 2025
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Paul.Blume@fox.com (Paul Blume)
New information:
  • Federal habeas corpus petitions by ICE detainees in Minnesota have already hit 312 as of Jan. 21, surpassing the 260 filed in all of 2025.
  • Immigration attorneys report more than 90% of their recent habeas petitions are winning either outright release or a bond hearing for detainees.
  • Lawyers describe detainees being grabbed off Twin Cities streets and flown out of state—often to El Paso—within hours, sometimes spending only an hour at the Whipple Federal Building, forcing emergency filings.
  • The piece reiterates that in Gibson’s case a judge explicitly found ICE’s battering‑ram entry and warrantless home raid in north Minneapolis violated the Fourth Amendment and ordered his release.
January 16, 2026
4:38 PM
Liberian immigrant re-arrested hours after ICE release in Minneapolis
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Paul.Blume@fox.com (Paul Blume)
New information:
  • After the judge ordered his immediate release, ICE freed Garrison Gibson overnight and told him to report back to the Whipple Federal Building Friday morning, where agents re‑arrested him.
  • DHS has informed his attorney they intend to restart deportation proceedings to send him back to Liberia, despite the court’s finding that the battering‑ram home entry violated the Fourth Amendment.
  • Attorney Marc Prokosch says he is going straight back into court on two tracks: a new federal habeas petition and a renewed fight in immigration court against removal.
4:33 PM
Judge orders release of Liberian man arrested in Minneapolis by agents with a battering ram
Twincities by Associated Press
New information:
  • This piece is a fuller write‑up of the same case Judge Jeffrey Bryan decided, supplying narrative detail on the raid, the family’s livestream, and the terms of his release order.
  • It reiterates that agents had only administrative immigration paperwork, no judge‑signed warrant, when they used a battering ram on the north Minneapolis home’s front door.
  • It underscores that Gibson had checked in regularly with ICE for roughly 15 years, wore an ankle monitor, and has no criminal record, sharpening the contrast with DHS rhetoric about "criminal aliens."
1:19 AM
Judge: ICE violated Liberian man’s rights by bursting through front door during arrest
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Paul.Blume@fox.com (Paul Blume)