911 audio details ICE detainee death in Minnesota facility
Newly released 911 audio captures a private security guard at a Minnesota immigration detention facility reporting that an ICE detainee had just attempted suicide and then "kept going" before being killed in custody, adding hard detail to what was previously just a vague federal death notice. The call describes staff intervening when the man tried to harm himself, then a confrontation that ended with the detainee down and unresponsive, while the guard pleads for medical help. This happened inside Minnesota’s contracted immigration detention system at the same time Operation Metro Surge has flooded the Twin Cities with federal agents and driven a spike in habeas petitions and civil‑rights challenges over federal conduct. The recording will be Exhibit A in whatever comes next — a state or federal investigation, a wrongful‑death suit, or both — because it’s a contemporaneous account that can be checked against later ICE reports, autopsy findings and any surveillance or body‑camera footage. For metro residents already watching federal officers shoot people on Minneapolis streets, it’s another reminder that the human toll of this surge doesn’t stop at the jail door.
📌 Key Facts
- A 911 call from a private guard at a Minnesota immigration detention facility reports that an ICE detainee had attempted suicide and then 'kept going' before being killed in custody.
- The call provides real‑time detail of staff actions and the detainee’s condition, going well beyond the barebones federal notice that someone had died in detention.
- The death occurs amid Operation Metro Surge, the Trump administration’s massive ICE deployment in the Twin Cities that has already triggered protests, lawsuits and hundreds of habeas petitions in Minnesota federal court.
📊 Relevant Data
Operation Metro Surge, launched in December 2025, deployed over 2,000 federal agents to the Minneapolis area to target noncitizens with criminal histories and those involved in fraud, with President Trump linking it to federal nutrition program fraud cases in Minnesota.
2,000 federal agents sent to Minneapolis area to carry out 'largest immigration operation ever,' ICE says — PBS NewsHour
Minnesota has the largest Somali population in the United States, with approximately 107,000 people of Somali descent in 2024, representing about 2% of the state's total population.
By the numbers: Minnesota's Somali population, according to Census data — KTTC
Somali immigrants in Minnesota commit crimes at a per capita rate two to five times higher than natives when using apples-to-apples comparisons, contrary to claims of similar rates based on misleading statistics.
Yes, Somali Immigrants Commit More Crime Than Natives — City Journal
Somali Minnesotans generate at least $500 million in income annually and pay about $67 million in state and local taxes.
Somali Minnesotans drive economic growth, pay $67M taxes annually — KSTP
In 2025, 32 people died in ICE custody, marking the deadliest year for ICE detainees in over two decades.
2025 was ICE's deadliest year in two decades. Here are the stories of those who died — The Guardian
Immigration became the leading component of population growth in Minnesota from 2020 to 2024, with over 81,000 new immigrants contributing to the state's demographic changes.
Immigration became the leading component of population growth in Minnesota this decade — Minnesota Chamber of Commerce
Male Somali immigrants aged 18-29 who arrived in the US at age 15 or younger have a higher incarceration rate compared to natives, according to analysis of incarceration data.
How a Manhattan Institute Comparison of Immigrant Incarceration Rates is Rhetorically Misleading — Cato Institute
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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