Reports of ICE Ruses in Minnesota Deepen Fears Over Metro Surge Tactics
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Associated Press reporting from Minneapolis details a growing wave of complaints that federal immigration agents in Minnesota are disguising themselves as construction workers, utility crews, delivery drivers and even anti‑ICE activists as part of President Trump’s Operation Metro Surge. Restaurant owner Luis Ramirez filmed two men in spotless hard hats and high‑visibility vests outside his suburban Minneapolis business whose company branding could not be traced and who appeared to wear tactical gear under their clothing; DHS and ICE would not confirm whether they were agents. Legal advocates, including ACLU immigration director Naureen Shah, say such 'ruses'—long used to gain home entry without warrants—now appear to be deployed more broadly and in plain sight, eroding public trust in anyone in a uniform or work truck and raising fresh Fourth Amendment and due‑process concerns. Organizers with Unidos MN and other groups report agents showing up at construction sites dressed as workers and driving vehicles with stuffed animals or Mexican flag decals to evade citizen 'ICE watch' networks, though not all accounts have been independently verified. The pattern underscores how federal tactics and community surveillance are escalating in tandem, turning daily life—from dealing with tradespeople to entering federal buildings—into a minefield for immigrant communities already rattled by recent ICE and Border Patrol killings in Minneapolis.
Immigration & Demographic Change
Trump Immigration Crackdown
Civil Rights and Policing Tactics