MINNEAPOLIS β Police arrested about 100 clergy demonstrating against immigration enforcement at Minnesota's largest airport Friday, and thousands gathered in downtown Minneapolis despite Arctic temperatures to protest the Trump administration's crackdown.
The protests are part of a broader movement against President Donald Trump's increased immigration enforcement across the state, with labor unions, progressive organizations and clergy urging Minnesotans to stay away from work, school and shops.
The faith leaders gathered at the airport to protest deportation flights and urge airlines to call for an end to what the Department of Homeland Security called its largest-ever immigration enforcement operation.
Federal immigration officers stop a vehicle Friday in Minneapolis.
Metropolitan Airports Commission spokesman Jeff Lea said the clergy were issued misdemeanor citations of trespassing and failure to comply with a peace officer and were then released. They were arrested outside the main terminal at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport because they went beyond the reach of their permit for demonstrating and disrupted airline operations, he said.
Rev. Mariah Furness Tollgaard of Hamline Church in St. Paul said police ordered them to leave but she and others decided to stay and be arrested to show support for migrants, including members of her congregation who are afraid to leave their homes. She planned to go back to her church after her brief detention to hold a prayer vigil.
"We cannot abide living under this federal occupation of Minnesota," she said.
Protesters gather Friday in downtown Minneapolis.
Protesters demand ICE leave Minnesota
The Rev. Elizabeth Barish Browne traveled from Cheyenne, Wyoming, to participate in the rally in downtown Minneapolis, where the high temperature was minus 9 degrees Fahrenheit despite a bright sun.
"What's happening here is clearly immoral," the Unitarian Universalist minister said. "It's definitely chilly, but the kind of ice that's dangerous to us is not the weather."
Protesters gathered daily in the Twin Cities since Jan. 7, whenΒ an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer shot and killedΒ 37-year-old mother of three Renee Good. Federal law enforcement officers repeatedly squared off with community members and activists who track their movements.
Rabbi Sharon Kleinbaum and protesters gather Friday at Target in Minneapolis.
Sam Nelson said he skipped work to join the march. He said he's a former student of the Minneapolis high school where federal agents detained someone after class earlier this month. That arrest led to altercations between federal officers and bystanders. "It's my community," Nelson said. "Like everyone else, I don't want ICE on our streets."
Organizers said Friday morning that more than 700 businesses statewide closed in solidarity with the movement. "We're achieving something historic," said Kate Havelin of Indivisible Twin Cities, one of the more than 100 participating groups.
A woman uses a whistle as a convoy of federal agents drives by Friday in Minneapolis.
FBI agent resigns over Good investigation
An FBI supervisory agent in Minnesota resigned over the Justice Departmentβs handling of the investigation into Good's killing, two people familiar with the matter said Friday. She resigned because she felt pressured to not investigate the shooting in a way she felt the FBI ordinarilyΒ would have done, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The FBI declined to comment.
The Hennepin County Medical Examiner, meanwhile, posted Good's initial autopsy report online, which classified her death as a homicide and determined she died from βmultiple gunshots wounds.β
Federal immigration officers stop a vehicle Friday in Minneapolis.
DHS confirms detention of children
A 2-year-old was reunited with her mother Friday, a day after she was detained with her father outside their home in South Minneapolis, lawyer Irina Vaynerman said.
Vaynerman said they quickly challenged the family's detention in federal court. The petition states the child, a citizen of Ecuador, was brought to the U.S. as a newborn. The child and her father, Elvis Tipan Echeverria, both have a pending asylum application and neither are subject to final orders of removal.
A U.S. district judge barred the government from transferring the toddler out of state Thursday, but she and her father were on a commercial flight to Texas about 20 minutes later, according to court filings. They were flown back Friday.
Agents arrested Tipan Echeverria during a targeted operation, DHS said. The agency said the child's mother was in the area but refused to take the child.
Vaynerman rejected that explanation, saying Tipan Echeverria was "not allowed" to bring the child to her mother in their home.
A person shouts at federal agents Friday as they stop a vehicle in Minneapolis.
DHS repeated its allegation Friday that the father of 5-year-old Liam Ramos abandoned him during his arrest by immigration officers in Columbia Heights on Tuesday, leading to the child being detained, too.
Department spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said Liam was detained because his father, Adrian Alexander Conejo Arias, "fled from the scene." The two are detained together at the Dilley Detention Center in Texas, which is intended to hold families. McLaughlin said officers tried to get Liam's mother to take him, but she refused to accept custody.
The family's attorney Marc Prokosch said he thinks the mother refused to open the door to the ICE officers because she was afraid she would be detained. Columbia Heights district superintendent Zena Stenvik said Liam was "used as bait."
Prokosch found nothing in state records to suggest Liam's father has a criminal history.
On Friday, Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino sought to shift the narrative away from Liam's detention by attacking the news media for, in his view, insufficient coverage of children who lost parents to violence by people in the U.S. illegally. After briefly mentioning the 5-year-old during a news conference, he talked about a mother of five who was killed in August 2023.



