March 05, 2026
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DOJ Says 38 of 39 Suspects in St. Paul Church Storming Now Arrested, Probing Possible FACE Act Violations

The Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division says that 38 of the 39 people indicted over the January 2026 storming of Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota, have now been arrested, including two suspects taken into custody while abroad, with one remaining at large. Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon disclosed on X that all but one of the 39 indicted individuals tied to the disruption of a worship service by an anti‑ICE protest group are now in custody and vowed that the final suspect will be found and arrested. DOJ is investigating whether the attack on the church, which protesters targeted over claims that a pastor was linked to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, violated federal civil‑rights laws and the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act, which also protects houses of worship. In the same piece, civil‑rights veteran Dr. Alveda King, niece of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., condemned the tactics as hostile and contrary to the nonviolent legacy of the 1960s movement, stressing that churches should be gathering places, not targets, even for those protesting federal immigration policy. The case is drawing attention online from both religious‑liberty advocates and immigration activists, who are watching how aggressively the Trump administration’s DOJ applies FACE Act and civil‑rights charges to protest actions directed at churches.

Federal Civil Rights Enforcement Protests and Religious Institutions Immigration & Demographic Change

📌 Key Facts

  • DOJ has indicted 39 individuals over the January 2026 storming of Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota, and says 38 have now been arrested.
  • Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon stated that two of the suspects were apprehended abroad and that one indicted individual remains at large.
  • The DOJ Civil Rights Division is investigating possible violations of federal civil-rights statutes and the FACE Act arising from the disruption of an ongoing church service by anti‑ICE protesters.

📊 Analysis & Commentary (1)

States Are Trying to Fight Civil Terrorism—but Not Everyone Is Happy
City-Journal March 05, 2026

"A City Journal opinion arguing that state prosecutors and lawmakers are right to treat violent, politically motivated attacks on institutions as a kind of 'civil terrorism' while warning that enforcement must be narrowly targeted to avoid civil‑liberties abuses and partisan misuse."

📰 Source Timeline (1)

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