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Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons told lawmakers during a House Homeland Security Committee hearing on Tuesday that local police arrested 54 anti-ICE protesters overnight, a development that would have been almost unthinkable just a few weeks ago. During his testimony, Lyons described a noticeable shift on the ground as immigration enforcement operations continue in the city.
For weeks, Minneapolis had been a flashpoint. Demonstrators swarmed federal agents. Officers were filmed, heckled, and in some cases assaulted while trying to carry out what Lyons described as "targeted, intelligence-driven enforcement operation[s]." Instead of focusing on apprehending criminal illegal aliens, agents were stuck navigating angry crowds, something they weren't trained to do.
That appears to be changing.
Under questioning from Chairman Michael McCaul (R-Texas), Lyons confirmed that protests have cooled and ICE agents are once again able to concentrate on their core mission. "We've seen a de-escalation in the fact that the protests, while they still go on, have subsided, and ICE has been allowed to do their targeted, intelligence-driven enforcement operation," Lyons said.
The key detail was who made the arrests. According to Lyons, the 54 protesters were taken into custody by local authorities. "ICE officers did not have to be engaged in that," he told the committee.
That line spoke volumes.
For much of the recent unrest, ICE agents were left in a precarious position. McCaul pointed to what he described as a surge in hostility fueled by overheated rhetoric from Democrats about ICE. He noted "rhetoric on the left led to over a thousand percent increase in assaults on ICE officers" and "an increase of over eight thousand death threats to them."
Those numbers help explain why federal agents found themselves pulled into crowd-control situations they were never meant to handle.
"Your officers are not trained to effectuate crowd control," McCaul pointed out. "They are trained to move in surgically, go in and remove these dangerous, violent criminals from the United States of America."
McCaul argued that former Border Patrol commander Greg Bovino's leadership was the problem. He noted that under his watch, the situation deteriorated to the point where two shooting deaths occurred amid the chaos, and coordination between federal and local authorities broke down, which McCaul described as "a perfect storm."
McCaul described Homan as "a consummate professional, law enforcement professional," and made it very clear he supports President Trump's move to replace Bovino with Homan. And based on Lyons' testimony, the impact of the change has been immediate.