ICE twice unlawfully detained Minnesota student despite court order
ICE twice unlawfully detained Minnesota State Mankato student Mohammed Hoque despite a court order, according to FOX 9. Newly released Metro Surge data show more than 60% of arrestees had no criminal convictions (another 13% had only pending charges) and 63% had no immigration‑related convictions, and the Deportation Data Project says a national 3,000‑arrests‑a‑day quota may have driven the aggressive enforcement that led agents to repeatedly seize people like Hoque.
📌 Key Facts
- A newly released dataset quantifies Metro Surge arrests in Minnesota statewide and breaks them down by criminal‑history category.
- More than 60% of Metro Surge arrestees had no criminal convictions, and another 13% had only pending charges.
- Data show 63% of those arrested had no record of immigration‑related convictions or charges, indicating many targets were not previously flagged as immigration violators.
- The Deportation Data Project links this arrest pattern to a reported national quota of roughly 3,000 arrests per day, suggesting operational pressure on enforcement actions.
- Advocates and analysts say that operational pressure helps explain cases like Minnesota State Mankato student Mohammed Hoque, whom agents twice detained despite a court order.
📊 Relevant Data
The homicide rate in Ecuador surged to 25 per 100,000 people between 2021 and 2022, which is significantly higher than the global average of 6 per 100,000, driving many Ecuadorians to seek asylum in the United States, including Minnesota.
Ecuadorians fleeing their homeland seek a new start in Minnesota — Sahan Journal
Relative to undocumented immigrants, U.S.-born citizens are over 2 times more likely to be arrested for violent crimes, 2.5 times more likely for drug crimes, and 4 times more likely for property crimes, based on Texas data from 2012 to 2018.
Comparing crime rates between undocumented immigrants, legal immigrants, and native-born US citizens in Texas — Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)
Immigrants commit crimes at lower rates than the U.S.-born population, according to a significant body of research at U.S., state, and local levels.
Explainer: Immigrants and Crime in the United States — Migration Policy Institute
The number of asylum cases in Minnesota's immigration court originating from Ecuador surged by 900% in the last five years as of 2024, with nearly 120,000 Ecuadorians encountered at the U.S. border in the 12-month period ending September 2023.
Ecuadorians fleeing their homeland seek a new start in Minnesota — Sahan Journal
Since at least the 1800s, immigration and crime data show that immigrants commit fewer crimes than US-born citizens.
The immigration–crime link — American Economic Association
📰 Source Timeline (2)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time
- The newly released dataset quantifies Metro Surge arrests statewide and by criminal‑history category, showing that more than 60% of arrestees had no criminal convictions and another 13% had only pending charges.
- Data also show that 63% of those arrested had no record of immigration‑related convictions or charges, meaning many targets were not previously flagged as immigration violators.
- The Deportation Data Project links this pattern to a national 3,000‑arrests‑a‑day quota, suggesting operational pressure that helps explain why agents repeatedly grabbed people like Minnesota State Mankato student Mohammed Hoque despite court orders.