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Minnesota
Related: About this forum'Tinted windows and out-of-state plates': How ICE watchers look for agents in their neighborhoods (Twin Cities)
https://www.mprnews.org/story/2025/12/05/twin-cities-ice-watchers-keep-tabs-for-agents-in-their-neighborhoods Tinted windows and out-of-state plates: How ICE watchers look for agents in their neighborhoods, MPR, 12/5/25
Photo: An East African man falls to the ground as Homeland Security Investigations officers detain him outside a home in south Minneapolis on Thursday. The federal agents eventually left without making any arrests
Wednesday was Lucia Webbs second day doing ICE watch in Minneapolis. It was just two days after the federal government launched its expanded immigration enforcement actions in the Twin Cities.
In her car, she followed federal immigration agents from south Minneapolis to a park-and-ride lot by the Minneapolis VA Medical Centers light rail stop. Thats when her car was boxed in by four ICE vehicles and surrounded by mostly masked federal agents.
One agent told her she cant be chasing them around the city. She replied that she wasnt chasing. The agent said she was breaking the law by following them, and that he would arrest her if she didnt stop impeding. Minnesota law requires vehicles to travel 500 feet behind emergency vehicles when theyre responding to an emergency, although Webb said the ICE vehicles hadnt activated emergency lights.
The agent told her, You can not do this.
Webb insisted, Yes, I can. Yes, I can.
The 31-year-old south Minneapolis resident who works for a nonprofit, is just one of hundreds, and likely thousands, of Twin Cities residents volunteering to make ICEs job in Minnesota as difficult as possible.
Photo: An East African man falls to the ground as Homeland Security Investigations officers detain him outside a home in south Minneapolis on Thursday. The federal agents eventually left without making any arrests
Wednesday was Lucia Webbs second day doing ICE watch in Minneapolis. It was just two days after the federal government launched its expanded immigration enforcement actions in the Twin Cities.
In her car, she followed federal immigration agents from south Minneapolis to a park-and-ride lot by the Minneapolis VA Medical Centers light rail stop. Thats when her car was boxed in by four ICE vehicles and surrounded by mostly masked federal agents.
One agent told her she cant be chasing them around the city. She replied that she wasnt chasing. The agent said she was breaking the law by following them, and that he would arrest her if she didnt stop impeding. Minnesota law requires vehicles to travel 500 feet behind emergency vehicles when theyre responding to an emergency, although Webb said the ICE vehicles hadnt activated emergency lights.
The agent told her, You can not do this.
Webb insisted, Yes, I can. Yes, I can.
The 31-year-old south Minneapolis resident who works for a nonprofit, is just one of hundreds, and likely thousands, of Twin Cities residents volunteering to make ICEs job in Minnesota as difficult as possible.
much more at link. And yes, they use whistles too. And chat apps.
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'Tinted windows and out-of-state plates': How ICE watchers look for agents in their neighborhoods (Twin Cities) (Original Post)
progree
Sunday
OP
SWBTATTReg
(25,954 posts)1. Good for them in watching these thugs. The thugs seem to think they can get away w/ anything, break the law,
apprehend U.S. citizens instead of who they're supposed to be grabbing.
GiqueCee
(3,168 posts)2. Detaining actual criminals...
... would be too much like work, and they might get hurt. Besides, it's all about the quotas. Busting anyone who looks at them sideways fulfills their obligation to keep the numbers up, and besides, kicking the crutches out from under little old ladies is fun, and it makes one feel like real he-man.
Being a terrorist is its own reward!
(for the terminally obtuse)