Wednesday, February 4, 2026

FASCIST AMERICA 2026: Outstanding Journalist, Critic, Public Intellectual, Author, and Political Analyst Adam Serwer On How and Why 'Minnesota Proved MAGA Wrong'

Minnesota Proved MAGA Wrong

The pushback against ICE exposed a series of mistaken assumptions.

by Adam Serwer
January 26, 2026
The Atlantic
 
Photographs by Jack Califano 

Jack Califano for The Atlantic

A man with a megaphone chases three ICE agents in a neighborhood at dusk

Listen1.0x           23:20 minutes

Updated at 10:44 a.m. ET on January 29, 2026

It took only a few minutes before everyone in the church knew that another person had been shot. I was sitting with Trygve Olsen, a big man in a wool hat and puffy vest, who lifted his phone to show me a text with the news. It was his 50th birthday, and one of the coldest days of the year. I asked him whether he was doing anything special to celebrate. “What should I be doing?” he replied. “Should I sit at home and open presents? This is where I’m supposed to be.”

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He had come to Iglesia Cristiana La Viña Burnsville, about 15 miles south of the Twin Cities, to pick up food for families who are too afraid to go out—some have barely left home since federal immigration agents deployed to Minnesota two months ago. The church was filled with pallets of frozen meat and vegetables, diapers, fruit, and toilet paper. Outside, a man wearing a leather biker vest bearing the insignia of the Latin American Motorcycle Association, his blond beard flecked with ice crystals, directed a line of cars through the snow.

The man who had been shot—fatally, we later learned—was Alex Pretti, an ICU nurse who had been recording agents outside a doughnut shop. Officials at the Department of Homeland Security claimed that he had threatened agents with a gun; videos of the shooting show him holding only his phone when he is pushed down by masked federal agents and beaten, his licensed sidearm removed from its holster by one agent before another unloads several shots into his back. Pretti’s death was a reminder—if anyone in Minnesota still needed one—that people had reason to be hiding, and that those trying to help them, protect them, or protest on their behalf had reason to be scared.

The church has a mostly Hispanic and working-class flock. Its pastor, Miguel Aviles, who goes by Pastor Miguel, told me that it had sent out about 2,000 packages of food that Saturday, and about 25,000 since the federal agents had arrived. Many of the people in hiding, he said, “have asylum cases pending. They already have work permits and stuff, but some of them are legal residents and still they’re afraid to go out. Because of their skin color, they are afraid to go out.”

Federal agents have arrested about 3,000 people in the state, but they have released the names of only about 240 of those detained, leaving unclear how many of the larger number have committed any crimes. Many more thousands of people have been affected by the arrests and the fear they have instilled. Minnesota Public Radio estimates that in school districts “with widespread federal activity, as many as 20 to 40 percent of students have been absent in recent weeks.”

I don’t know what the feds expected when they surged into Minnesota. In late November, The New York Times reported on a public-benefit fraud scheme in the state that was executed mainly by people of Somali descent. Federal prosecutors under the Biden administration had already indicted dozens of people, but after the Times story broke, President Trump began ranting about Somalis, whom he referred to as “garbage”; declared that he didn’t want Somali immigrants in the country; and announced that he was sending thousands of armed federal immigration agents to Minneapolis. This weekend, he posted on social media that the agents were there because of “massive monetary fraud.” The real reason may be that a majority of Minnesotans did not vote for him. Trump has said that “I won Minnesota three times, and I didn’t get credit for it. That’s a crooked state.” He has never won Minnesota.

Perhaps the Trump-administration officials had hoped that a few rabble-rousers would get violent, justifying the kind of crackdown he seems to fantasize about. Maybe they had assumed that they would find only a caricature of “the resistance”—people who seethed about Trump online but would be unwilling to do anything to defend themselves against him.

Instead, what they discovered in the frozen North was something different: a real resistance, broad and organized and overwhelmingly nonviolent, the kind of movement that emerges only under sustained attacks by an oppressive state. Tens of thousands of volunteers—at the very least—are risking their safety to defend their neighbors and their freedom. They aren’t looking for attention or likes on social media. Unless they are killed by federal agents, as Pretti and Renee Good were, other activists do not even necessarily know their names. Many use a handle or code name out of fear of government retaliation. Their concerns are justified: A number of people working as volunteers or observers told me that they had been trailed home by ICE agents, and some of their communications have already been infiltrated, screenshotted, and posted online, forcing them to use new text chains and code names. One urgent question among observers, as the videos of Pretti’s killing spread, was what his handle might have been.

Olsen had originally used the handle “Redbear” in communicating with me, but later said I could name him. He had agreed to let me ride along while he did his deliveries. As he loaded up his truck with supplies, he wore just a long-sleeved red shirt and vest, apparently unfazed by the Minnesota cold.

“This is my first occupation,” Olsen said as I climbed into the truck. “Welcome to the underground, I guess.”

 
Jack Califano for The Atlantic

 
Jack Califano for The Atlantic

The number of Minnesotans resisting the federal occupation is so large that relatively few could be characterized as career activists. They are ordinary Americans—people with jobs, moms and dads, friends and neighbors. They can be divided into roughly three groups.

The largest is the protesters, who show up at events such as Friday’s march in downtown Minneapolis, and at the airport, where deportation flights take off. Many protesters have faced tear gas and pepper spray, and below-zero temperatures—during the Twin Cities march on Friday, I couldn’t take notes; the ink in my pens had frozen.

Then there are the people who load up their car with food, toiletries, and school supplies from churches or schools to take to families in hiding. They also help families who cannot work meet their rent or mortgage payments. In addition to driving around with Olsen, I rode along with a Twin Cities mom of young kids named Amanda as she did deliveries (she asked me to use only her first name). Riding in her small car—her back row was taken up by three child seats and a smattering of stray toys—she told me that she’d gotten involved after more than 100 students at her kids’ elementary school simply stopped coming in. Parents got organized to provide the families with food, to shepherd their kids to school, and to arrange playdates for those stuck inside.

Amanda’s father and husband are immigrants, she said, and she speaks Spanish. “I can be a conduit between those who want to help and those who need help,” she told me. She calls each family before knocking on the door, so they don’t have to worry that they are being tricked by ICE. At one home, a woman asked us to go around back because a suspicious vehicle was idling out front. At another home, a little girl in pigtails beamed as Amanda handed her a Target bag full of school supplies.

Finally, there are those most at risk of coming into violent contact with federal agents, a group that’s come to be popularly known as ICE Watch, although the designation is unofficial—as far as I can tell, you’re in ICE Watch if you watch ICE. These are the whistle-wielding pedestrians and drivers calling themselves “observers” or “commuters” who patrol for federal agents (usually identifiable by their SUVs with out-of-state plates) and alert the neighborhood to their presence. Pretti and Good, the two Minneapolis residents killed by federal agents, fit in this category.

Trump-administration officials and MAGA influencers have repeatedly called these activists “violent” and said they are involved in “riots.” But the resistance in Minnesota is largely characterized by a conscious, strategic absence of physical confrontation. Activists have made the decision to emphasize protection, aid, and observation. When matters escalate, it is usually the choice of the federal agents. Of the three homicides in Minneapolis this year, two were committed by federal agents.

“There’s been an incredible, incredible response from the community. I’ve seen our neighbors go straight from allies to family—more than family—checking in on each other, offering food and rides for kids and all kinds of support, alerting each other if there’s ICE or any kind of danger,” Malika Dahir, a local activist of Somali descent, told me.

If the Minnesota resistance has an overarching ideology, you could call it “neighborism”—a commitment to protecting the people around you, no matter who they are or where they came from. The contrast with the philosophy guiding the Trump administration couldn’t be more extreme. Vice President Vance has said that “it is totally reasonable and acceptable for American citizens to look at their next-door neighbors and say, ‘I want to live next to people who I have something in common with. I don’t want to live next to four families of strangers.’” Minnesotans are insisting that their neighbors are their neighbors whether they were born in Minneapolis or Mogadishu. That is, arguably, a deeply Christian philosophy, one apparently loathed by some of the most powerful Christians in America.

 
Jack Califano for The Atlantic

On Wednesday, I met with two volunteers who went by the handles “Green Bean” and “Cobalt.” They picked me up in the parking lot of a Target, not far from where Good was killed two weeks earlier. Cobalt works in tech but has recently been spending more time on patrol than at her day job. Green Bean is a biologist, but she told me the grant that had been funding her work hadn’t been renewed under the Trump administration. Neither of them had imagined doing what they were doing now. “I’m supposed to be creeping around in the woods looking at insects,” Green Bean said.

Most commuters work in pairs—a co-pilot listens in on a dispatcher who provides the locations of ICE encounters and can run plates through a database of cars that federal agents have used in the past. Green Bean explained what happens when they identify an ICE vehicle. (Both ICE and Border Patrol are in Minneapolis, but everyone just calls them ICE.) The commuters will follow the agents, honking loudly, until they leave the neighborhood or stop and get out.

The commuters—as my colleague Robert Worth reported—do not have a centralized leadership but have been trained by local activist groups that have experience from past protests against police killings, and recent immigration-enforcement sweeps in L.A. and Chicago. The observers are taught to conscientiously follow the law, including traffic rules, and to try to avoid physical confrontation with federal agents.

If the agents detain someone, the observers will try to get that person’s name so they can inform the family. But ICE prefers to make arrests—which the ICE Watchers call “abductions”—quietly. More often than not, Green Bean said, when these volunteers draw attention, the agents will “leave rather than dig in.” She added, “They are huge pussies, I will be honest.”

As we cruised through the Powderhorn neighborhood, practically every business had an ICE OUT sign in the window. Graffiti trashing ICE was everywhere, as were posters of Good labeled AMERICAN MOM KILLED BY ICE. Listening to the dispatcher, Cobalt relayed directions to Green Bean about the locations of ICE vehicles, commuters who had been boxed in or threatened by agents, and possible “abductions.”

About 30 minutes into the patrol, Green Bean saw a white Jeep Wagoneer with out-of-state plates and read out the numbers. “Confirmed ICE,” Cobalt said, and we began following the Wagoneer as it drove through the neighborhood. Another car of commuters joined us, making as much noise as possible.

After about 10 minutes, the Wagoneer got onto the highway. Green Bean followed until we could be sure that it wasn’t doubling back to the neighborhood, and then we turned around.

 
Jack Califano for The Atlantic

Most encounters with ICE end like that. But sometimes situations deteriorate—as with Good, who was killed while doing a version of what Green Bean and Cobalt were now doing. The task is stressful for the observers, who understand that even minor encounters can turn deadly.

The next day, I drove around with another pair of commuters who went by “Judy” and “Lime.” Both told me they were anti-Zionist Jews who had been involved in pro-Palestinian and Black Lives Matter protests. Lime’s day job is with an abortion-rights organization, and Judy is a rabbi. “I did protective presence in the West Bank,” Lime told me, referring to a form of protest in which activists try to deter settler violence by simply being present in Palestinian communities. “This is very similar.”

About an hour into our drive, we came across an ICE truck. Judy started blaring the horn, and I heard her mutter to herself: “We’re just driving, we’re just driving, which is legal. I hate this.” I asked them both if they were scared. “I do not feel scared, but I probably should,” Lime said.

Judy said she had been out on patrol days after Good was killed, and had gotten boxed in and yelled at by federal agents. “It was very scary,” Judy told me. “Murdering someone definitely works as an intimidation tactic. You just have no idea what is going to happen.” She said that ICE agents had taken a picture of her license plate and then later showed up at her house, leaning out of their car to take another picture—making it clear to Judy that they knew who she was.

Green Bean had told me the same thing—that agents had come to her house, followed her when she left, and then blocked her vehicle and screamed at her to “stop fucking following us. This is your last warning.” Green Bean was able to laugh while retelling this. “I just stared at them until they left,” she said.

We drove past Good’s memorial. Tributes to her—flowers and letters—were still there, covered in a light powder of snow. We didn’t know at the time that residents would soon set up another memorial, for Pretti.

 
Jack Califano for The Atlantic

 
Jack Califano for The Atlantic

The broad nature of the civil resistance in Minnesota should not lead anyone to believe that no one there supports what ICE is doing. Plenty of people do. Trump came close to winning the state in 2024, and many people here, especially outside the Twin Cities, believe the administration’s rhetoric about targeting “the worst of the worst,” despite what the actual statistics reveal.

“You don’t have to go too far south” to find places where Minnesotans “welcome ICE into their restaurants and bars and sort of love what they do,” Tom Jenkins, the lead pastor of Mount Calvary Lutheran Church in suburban Eagan, which is also helping with food drives, told me. “A lot of people are still cheering ICE on because they don’t think that whatever people are telling them or showing them is real.”

Although most of the coverage has understandably focused on the cities, suburban residents told me that they had seen operations all over the state. “There are mobile homes not far from where I live,” Jenkins said. Agents “were there every day, you know: 10, 15, 20 agents working the bus stops and bus drop-offs.” He added: “They’re all over.”

Even among those involved in opposing ICE in Minnesota, people have a range of political views. The nonviolent nature of the movement, and the focus on caring for neighbors, has drawn in volunteers with many different perspectives on immigration, including people who might have been supportive if the Trump administration’s claims of a targeted effort to deport violent criminals had been sincere.

“One of the things that I believe, and I know most of the Latino community agrees, is that we want the bad people out. We want the criminals out,” Pastor Miguel, who immigrated from Mexico 30 years ago, told me. “All of us came here looking for a better life for us and for our children. So when we have criminals, rapists—when we have people who have done horrible things in our streets, in our communities—we are afraid of them. We don’t want them here.”

The problem is that federal agents are not going after just criminals. Growing distraught, Pastor Miguel said that one of the men who helped organize the food drive, a close friend of his who he believed had legal status, had been picked up by federal agents the day before I visited.

“I just—I didn’t have words,” he said. “And yet I cannot crumble; I cannot fall. Because all these families also need us.”

Jack Califano for The Atlantic


Jack Califano for The Atlantic

Two days after Pretti was killed, my colleague Nick Miroff broke the news that Gregory Bovino, the Border Patrol official who had led the operation in Minneapolis, would be leaving the city and replaced by Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan. Bovino, strutting around in body armor or his distinctive long coat, seemed to relish his role as a villain to his critics, encouraging aggressive tactics by federal agents and sometimes engaging in them himself. The day I accompanied Green Bean and Cobalt, Bovino fumbled with a gas canister before throwing it into a sparse crowd of protesters.

Bovino’s departure seemed an admission that Minnesotans aren’t the only Americans who won’t tolerate more deaths at the hands of federal agents. The people of Minnesota have forced the Trump administration into a strategic retreat—one inflicted not as rioters or insurgents, but as neighbors.

After Friday’s protest, when thousands marched in frigid downtown Minneapolis, chanting, “No Trump, no troops, Twin Cities ain’t licking boots!” I spoke with a young protester named Ethan McFarland, who told me that his parents are immigrants from Uganda. He had recently asked his mother to show him her immigration papers, in case she got picked up. This kind of state oppression, he said, is exactly what his mother was “trying to get away from” when she came to the United States.

McFarland’s remarks reminded me of something Stephen Miller, the Trump adviser, had written: “Migrants and their descendants recreate the conditions, and terrors, of their broken homelands.” In Minnesota, the opposite was happening. The “conditions and terrors” of immigrants’ “broken homelands” weren’t being re-created by immigrants. They were being re-created by people like Miller. The immigrants simply have the experience to recognize them.

The federal surge into Minneapolis reflects a series of mistaken MAGA assumptions. The first is the belief that diverse communities aren’t possible: “Social bonds form among people who have something in common,” Vance said in a speech last July. “If you stop importing millions of foreigners into the country, you allow social cohesion to form naturally.” Vance’s remarks are the antithesis to the neighborism of the Twin Cities, whose people do not share the narcissism of being capable of loving only those who are exactly like them.

A second MAGA assumption is that the left is insincere in its values, and that principles of inclusion and unity are superficial forms of virtue signaling. White liberals might put a sign in their front yard saying IMMIGRANTS WELCOME, but they will abandon those immigrants at the first sensation of sustained pressure.

And in Trump’s defense, this has turned out to be true of many liberals in positions of power—university administrators, attorneys at white-shoe law firms, political leaders. But it is not true of millions of ordinary Americans, who have poured into the streets in protest, spoken out against the administration, and, in Minnesota, resisted armed men in masks at the cost of their own life.

 
Jack Califano for The Atlantic

The MAGA faith in liberal weakness has been paired with the conviction that real men—Trump’s men—are conversely strong. Consider Miller’s bizarre meltdown while addressing Memphis police in October. “The gangbangers that you deal with—they think that they’re ruthless? They have no idea how ruthless we are. They think they’re tough? They have no idea how tough we are,” Miller said. “They think they’re hard-core? We are so much more hard-core than they are.” Around this time, Miller moved his family onto a military base—for safety reasons.

The federal agents sent to Minnesota wear body armor and masks, and bear long guns and sidearms. But their skittishness and brutality are qualities associated with fear, not resolve. It takes far more courage to stare down the barrel of a gun while you’re armed with only a whistle and a phone than it does to point a gun at an unarmed protester.

Every social theory undergirding Trumpism has been broken on the steel of Minnesotan resolve. The multiracial community in Minneapolis was supposed to shatter. It did not. It held until Bovino was forced out of the Twin Cities with his long coat between his legs.

The secret fear of the morally depraved is that virtue is actually common, and that they’re the ones who are alone. In Minnesota, all of the ideological cornerstones of MAGA have been proved false at once. Minnesotans, not the armed thugs of ICE and the Border Patrol, are brave. Minnesotans have shown that their community is socially cohesive—because of its diversity and not in spite of it. Minnesotans have found and loved one another in a world atomized by social media, where empty men have tried to fill their lonely soul with lies about their own inherent superiority. Minnesotans have preserved everything worthwhile about “Western civilization,” while armed brutes try to tear it down by force.

No matter how many more armed men Trump sends to impose his will on the people of Minnesota, all he can do is accentuate their valor. No application of armed violence can make the men with guns as heroic as the people who choose to stand in their path with empty hands in defense of their neighbors. These agents, and the president who sent them, are no one’s heroes, no one’s saviors—just men with guns who have to hide their faces to shoot a mom in the face, and a nurse in the back.

This article originally misstated the amount of food sent out by Iglesia Cristiana La Viña Burnsville.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:




Adam Serwer

Adam Serwer is a staff writer at The Atlantic.

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Tuesday, February 3, 2026

FASCIST AMERICA 2026: Outstanding Journalist, Author, Scholar, Public Intellectual and Critic Ta-Nehisi Coates On What Killed Renee Good and Alex Pretti And What It Means

The Blood-and-Soil Nationalism That Killed Alex Pretti and Renee Good

Pretti and Good were labeled “domestic terrorists” of The Homeland—rhetoric employed by the administration to justify the state taking life, by associating the dead with national villainy.

by Ta-Nehisi Coates
January 26, 2026
Vanity Fair


IMAGE:  American Progress by John Gast, c. 1872, which the Department of Homeland Security recently posted to social media.Courtesy of George A. Crofutt. Retrieved from the Library of Congress.

In the wake of poet and writer Renee Good’s killing, Donald Trump and his collaborators have done all they can to define her as an enemy of “The Homeland.” The administration claims, for instance, that Good was a “domestic terrorist,” a term it is now applying to Alex Pretti, the ICU nurse whom federal agents killed on Saturday. This rhetoric is employed to justify the state taking life, by associating the dead with national villainy. But the campaign against Good is different—because The Homeland takes particular and perverse interest in women deemed insufficiently reverent of hearth and home. Trump propagandists tell us that Good was part of a growing cabal of insolent white ladies turned violent; that she was a “lesbian agitator” in league with “68 IQ Somali scammers”; or that she was simply, as her killer apparently labeled her, “a fucking bitch.” For these and other sins, her castigation has extended into the afterlife: with Elon Musk’s AI tool, Grok, users churned out deepfakes of Good with bullets in her head and of her corpse in a bikini. This is all appropriate: In defending the undocumented, Good violated the sanctity of The Homeland, which is to say that she questioned the divine promise of American soil to a mythical and singular people.

For The Homeland is not “The State” or even “The Country.” The Homeland is not defined by simple geography. It exists beyond laws and norms. It is unconcerned with traditional American concepts like “liberty,” “freedom” or “pluralism.” The Homeland is that piece of earth providentially deeded to The Volk. The Homeland’s borders are drawn in untainted blood, its sanctity exemplified in proper gender conduct and the fulfillment of gender roles. It is The Homeland that ICE venerates in its recruitment posts festooned with victorious white settlers and vanquished indigenous Americans. It is The Homeland that Musk saluted (twice) at Trump’s inauguration. It is The Homeland that the late Charlie Kirk was fond of invoking:

I want to be able to get married, buy a home, have kids, allow them to ride their bike till the sun goes down, send them to a good school, have a low-crime neighborhood, not to have my kid be taught the lesbian, gay, transgender garbage in their school. While also not having them have to hear the Muslim call to prayer five times a day.

It is often said that The Homeland is skeptical of immigrants, but more precisely, The Homeland is skeptical of aliens. Asylum-seekers from Gaza fleeing a genocide have no place in The Homeland; Afrikaners suffering the indignity of post-apartheid are welcome. The Homeland is covetous of Northern Europeans, but regards Somali Americans as “garbage.” “Why can’t we have some people from Norway, Sweden, just a few?” Trump recently said. “But we always take people from Somalia, places that are a disaster, right? Filthy, dirty, disgusting, ridden with crime.” The criteria for these distinctions—between putative immigrant and indelible alien—are not complicated; for above all, The Homeland is a racist project.

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Securing The Homeland, they tell us, is an existential priority. It is also content.

Securing The Homeland is the central feature of the Trump administration. In Los Angeles and Chicago, Trump seeks to cleanse it. With Greenland and Venezuela, Trump seeks to expand and enrich it. Heterosexual men are the rightful defenders of The Homeland. Lesbian agitators, such as Good, are its nemeses. Christians are the lifeblood of The Homeland. “Stupid Muslims” are its cancer. A characteristic of The Homeland is that its foes must be subhuman—members of the LGBTQ+ community are “freaks,” disagreeable women are “ugly” pigs, and the residents of DC are “cockroaches.”

HOTO:  Portrait of American civil right activist Viola Liuzzo with her children.Getty Images.

For years a certain kind of liberal has either minimized such culture-war rhetoric coming from the other side or urged political actors of all stripes to ignore it in favor of “material” or “kitchen table” issues—as though the state regarding one’s life as “garbage” has no tangible consequence, as if the terms of a fight can be determined by the person getting punched. But Trump has clarified an inconvenient fact—the culture war is an actual war. ICE, full of myrmidons of The Homeland, enjoys an $85 billion budget, a sum “larger than the annual military budget of every country in the world except the United States and China,” as Caitlin Dickerson reported in The Atlantic. “Immigration and Customs Enforcement—just one component of the Department of Homeland Security—is getting more money than any other law enforcement agency in America.”

Befitting an administration filled with reality TV stars, a policy of human pain and suffering is presently being repackaged as spectacle.

Deportations are up under Trump, but that is not the true purpose of ICE. “They’re not serious about getting rid of as many people as they can. They’re serious about causing human pain and suffering,” a former ICE official told Dickerson. “Putting someone into detention isn’t a removal, it’s a punishment.” Thirty-two people died in ICE’s custody in 2025—the highest number in 20 years. And befitting an administration filled with reality TV stars, a policy of human pain and suffering is presently being repackaged as spectacle. Activists arrested in defiance of The Homeland have had their portraits altered via AI. Minor celebrities, their dubious status on the wane, have sought to supercharge their prospects by accompanying ICE on raids or even joining its ranks. Kristi Noem, the head of the Department of Homeland Security, posed in front of a group of immigrants sent to a torture site in El Salvador, in a show of sadistic titillation. Last June, LA County supervisor Janice Hahn watched as Noem led an ICE raid in Huntington Park. “I could tell she was doing a full camera crew production,” Hahn said. “She was getting hair and makeup done.” Noem, like the president she serves, has a flair for the theatrical. She cosplays in camouflage and bulletproof vests. The focus on appearance and production value is essential in a movement that seeks not just to purify the actual America, but to resurrect the America of legend and myth. Securing The Homeland, they tell us, is an existential priority. It is also content.

Many Americans horrified by The Homeland’s agents rampaging through whole communities, seizing children, perp-walking half-naked old men, and detaining whomever they feel like, with or without charges, all while enjoying “absolute immunity,” have settled on an interesting term: "occupation.” This designation is as correct as it is unoriginal—a fact more Americans would do well to remember. ICE has contracted surveillance tools that, according to Joseph Cox at 404 Media, allow it to “track phones without a warrant and follow their owners home or to their employer.” These tools, reportedly deployed across Minneapolis, were not created in America, but in Israel, still another homeland, enforcing the longest “occupation” in modern history. Thus, the citizens of Minnesota have, as American taxpayers, subsidized an occupation overseas that is effectively a laboratory for their own.

We did not blindly stumble into this era of Homeland rule. Almost 25 years ago, when the Department of Homeland Security was first proposed, there were inklings, even among supporters, that things might someday come to this. “Homeland isn’t really an American word,” Peggy Noonan wrote in The Wall Street Journal in 2002. She supported the formation of the department. But something bothered her about the name. “It’s not something we used to say or say now. It has a vaguely Teutonic ring—Ve must help ze Fuehrer protect ze Homeland!” Blogger Mickey Kaus, writing for Slate that year, echoed Noonan’s concerns, noting that the proposed department name “explicitly ties our sentiments to the land, not to our ideas.”

Russell Feingold, who was the junior Wisconsin senator at the time, saw something more substantive at work. Feingold saw gaps in the legislation that a would-be tyrant could easily exploit. A figure like that would be completely lacking in virtue, and Feingold’s colleagues could not imagine that the American people, in their infinite wisdom, would allow such an archvillain to ascend to the presidency.

“People said, ‘Russ, no president would do X, Y, or Z,’” Feingold recently told me. “In other words, the norms are strong enough that you’re just sort of a Cassandra.” Feingold was the lone Senate vote against the Patriot Act, and one of only nine senators to oppose the creation of the Department of Homeland Security. Feingold watched with alarm as, in the wake of 9/11, the country’s immigration policy was subsumed by counterterrorism.

PHOTO: A portrait of Renee Nicole Good is pasted to a light pole near the site of her shooting. Photo taken on January 8, 2026, in Minneapolis, Minnesota.Stephen Maturen/Getty Images.

“As soon as 9/11 occurred, within seconds, it became clear that the Bush administration was going to target Muslim and Arab Americans,” Feingold said. Indeed, over a period of months, the FBI detained 762 undocumented immigrants, mostly from Muslim or Arab countries, as persons “of interest.” The Department of Justice’s Office of the Inspector General later reported that detainment could result from something as simple as “a landlord reporting suspicious activity by an Arab tenant” or possession of “suspicious items,” such as pictures of the World Trade Center and other famous buildings. These men were held for weeks or months, with some denied contact with legal representatives, some physically abused, and some put on 23-hour lockdown. Most were deported. And despite being investigated in the wake of 9/11, none were ever charged with anything related to terrorism.

Feingold saw gaps in the legislation that a would-be tyrant could easily exploit. A figure like that would be completely lacking in virtue, and Feingold’s colleagues could not imagine that the American people, in their infinite wisdom, would allow such an archvillain to ascend to the presidency.

In 2008, after Barack Obama won the Democratic primary, Feingold began to see another, older trend emerge, one that is foundational to the Homeland mythos. While in the Senate, Feingold made a point to hold town meetings in all 72 of Wisconsin’s counties. The meetings were, by his telling, “pretty mellow,” filled with supporters and few conservatives. “They were always civil,” Feingold said. “And then Obama is elected, and…I start going to these last 15 or so town meetings, and it was unbelievable. The guy wasn’t even sworn in yet. And all of a sudden, all these people started coming, a kind of tough-looking crowd, and booing and saying, ‘He’s a socialist; he wasn’t born in the United States; he’s going to do this, he’s going to do that,’ and there was fire in their eyes. And it was very strange, because Obama had won many of these counties in the rural areas, and yet there was this thing that was happening.”

When pundits later tried to chalk up the growth of the Tea Party, then Trump’s first election, to “economic anxiety” and a snubbed working class, Feingold was skeptical. There was “this whole dynamic that coalesced [into] this sort of feeling of white people being under siege,” Feingold said. “That, to me, is sort of the political context that opens the door.”

But skeptical as he was, Feingold never saw things advancing this far. (He lost his 2010 reelection bid to Republican Ron Johnson, a Trump ally who remains in office and has yet to comment on the killing of Pretti.) “I’ll be the first to admit, the reason I did it was because I feared that someday there could be somebody who would do some of these things in an abusive way,” Feingold said of his vote against the DHS, “but I never imagined that there would be somebody who would do all of these things at every opportunity.”

The problem will almost certainly outlive Trump’s presidency. ICE’s budget has steadily increased through Democratic and Republican administrations. That funding has gone to what journalist Radley Balko calls “the most rogue, renegade, and certainly pro-Trump police agenc[y] in the federal government.” No matter who wins the midterms this year, or the presidential election in 2028, the Army of The Homeland will remain, and its enemies in the Democratic Party seem to have little desire to fight back.

And so then it falls to the people themselves.

In these moments, I find comfort and inspiration in ancestors and martyrs. More than half a century ago, as the writer Jelani Cobb recently noted, activist Viola Liuzzo, a housewife and mother of five, left her family in Detroit and headed south to join the march to Montgomery, and in the process left the privileges of white ladyhood behind. For transgressing against The Homeland of that era—the neo-Confederate South—Liuzzo was murdered by white supremacists. Just as Good was slandered by The Homeland’s authorities as a domestic terrorist and a “fucking bitch,” Liuzzo was slandered by The Homeland’s rulers as a heroin addict and nymphomaniac who’d gone south to make a cuckold of her husband.

But the slander was, itself, revelatory, for it demonstrated The Homeland’s perverse, exacting norms, its obsession with hierarchy, its rigid borders and the high price levied on anyone who dared cross them. Forces of the neo-Confederate South “did not simply represent a threat to African Americans, as was the popular perception,” Cobb wrote. “They were a mortal danger to anyone who disagreed with them, regardless of the person’s race, background, or gender.”

Perhaps we are in such a moment now, where a death demonstrates to the country the broad nature of the threat. But this is a passive hope, and in Liuzzo’s life, we find a more active call to action. Liuzzo was born into poverty. Her father was a coal miner; her husband, a union organizer. Hers was the kind of salt-of-the-earth family often celebrated in the anthems of The Homeland. Whereas The Homeland sees freedom as the sole prerogative of its tribe, Liuzzo’s vision extended out to humanity itself. While understanding the economic exploitation of her family, she also understood that whiteness had enrolled her in the exploitation of others.

When Liuzzo acquired this knowledge, when she got woke, she was transfigured into a traitor to her race and a menace to The Homeland. For being a menace, for being woke, she was killed—as was Renee Good. (As was Alex Pretti.) But revelations have their blessings too. In this case, a life, however brief, that is clean and does not depend on the oppression and debasement of others. The revelation of deep human ties, the belief that we are all equally chosen, doomed Liuzzo, Good, and Pretti, as revelation so often does. But it also immortalized them.
 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Ta-Nehisi Coates

Ta-Nehisi Coates is the author of The Beautiful Struggle, We Were Eight Years in Power, The Water Dancer, and Between the World and Me, which won the National Book Award in 2015. He is the recipient of a National Magazine Award and a MacArthur Fellowship. He is currently the Sterling Brown Endowed Chair in the English department at Howard University. See more from V.F.’s THE GREAT FIRE project here, which Coates guest-edited for the September 2020 issue.

Monday, February 2, 2026

FASCIST AMERICA 2026: The Deadly Actions of the Trump/MAGA Regime, Its Massive Criminal Infrastructure, and the Demagogic Fascist Language Used To Rationalize, Justify, Promote, and 'Defend' Their Behavior Since Reasserting and Reassuming Power on January 20, 2025 Is Not Merely The Hegemonic Administrative and Ideological Expressions Of What Currently Passes For the U.S. Federal Government and Its Homicidal Societal/Cultural Values and Coercive Philosophy But Is A Reigning Pathological Metaphor For What American Society in General is Responsible for Allowing To Happen To All Of Us and the Rest Of The World As We Fail To Properly Acknowledge Exactly Who and What We Are In Our Collective Response(s) To These Ongoing Crises and Deeply Rooted Challenges We Far Too Often Refuse To Take Responsibility For. Meanwhile Our Various Abdications Directly and Indirectly Aids and Abets the Mass Psychosis That Characterizes The Historical Epoch Called the 21st Century

COMPLY or DIE: The Death of the American Citizen and the Rise of the Police State 
 

Wajahat Ali

January 27, 2026

VIDEO:  
 

#ComplyOrDie #PoliceState #CivilRights

America is being conditioned to accept a new rule: comply or die and the cost is now clear as state violence expands into everyday life. I’m joined by Danielle Moodie to expose how decades of foreign occupation tactics, media gaslighting, and constitutional erosion have converged into a domestic police state

http://Thelefthook.substack.com #ComplyOrDie

#PoliceState #CivilRights #Authoritarianism #StateViolence #AbolishICE #DemocracyInCrisis #Fascism #Constitution #Accountability #ice #trending #uspolitics #news #maga #breakingnews

The Arrest of DON LEMON and Black Journalists, and MAGA's Attack on the First Amendment!



Wajahat Ali

January 31, 2026

VIDEO:  
 

#FirstAmendment #FreeThePress #DonLemon

Journalists Don Lemon, Georgia Fort, Traheen Crews, and Jamael Lundy were arrested not for violence but for doing their jobs. After failed court attempts, the DOJ pushed indictments through a grand jury, sending a chilling message observation itself is now criminalized. This isn’t about one protest or one church in Minnesota. It’s about whether a free press still exists in America and who gets targeted first when it doesn’t. Danielle Moodie joins us to break down why journalists are being targeted, how authoritarian crackdowns begin, and what this means for the future of press freedom in America

http://Thelefthook.substack.com #FirstAmendment#FreeThePress#DonLemon #JournalismIsNotACrime#PressFreedom#Authoritarianism#Fascism#DemocracyInCrisis #trending #news #trump #free

 
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/01/27/us/minneapolis-shooting-ice-minnesota

Ilhan Omar Is Attacked During Minneapolis Town Hall on Immigration Crackdown

A man sprayed the Democratic representative, a frequent target of President Trump’s, with a strong-smelling substance before being removed by security. Mr. Trump suggested he might look to “de-escalate” the operations in Minneapolis.


Published January 27, 2026
Updated January 28, 2026

VIDEO:

https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/politics/100000010672659/ilhan-omar-town-hall-minnesota.html?smid=url-share

“And D.H.S. Secretary Kristi Noem must resign"



During a town hall in Minneapolis, a man sitting directly in front of Representative Ilhan Omar rushed to the lectern and sprayed her with a pungent liquid. He was immediately tackled and removed from the room. Credit: Octavio Jones/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

by Reis Thebault 

Here’s the latest.

A man attacked Representative Ilhan Omar during a town hall in Minneapolis on Tuesday evening, hours after President Trump suggested that he might “de-escalate” the aggressive immigration crackdown in Minnesota that has rattled the community and left two protesters dead.

The man sprayed Ms. Omar with a strong-smelling liquid from a syringe before being tackled by security. He was arrested and booked into jail on suspicion of assault, said Trevor Folke, a spokesman for the Minneapolis police.

Ms. Omar, a Democrat who represents part of Minneapolis and has been a frequent target of Mr. Trump, was visibly shaken by the attack. But she continued speaking after a brief pause. As she was escorted out of the town hall by a pair of security guards, she told reporters, “I’ve survived war, and I’m definitely going to survive intimidation and whatever these people think they can throw at me, because I’m built that way.”

Just before the man attacked, Ms. Omar had called for abolishing U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and impeaching the homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, who has come under fire for making false statements about the killing of Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapolis.

The police identified the man accused of spraying Ms. Omar as Anthony J. Kazmierczak, 55.

Earlier on Tuesday, Mr. Trump promised a “very honorable and honest investigation” into Mr. Pretti’s killing despite federal agencies’ unwillingness to cooperate with state investigators and indications in court records that they were conducting only a minimal inquiry.

Though Mr. Trump has taken less of a hard line about the killing than Ms. Noem and some other members of his administration, on Tuesday he again cast blame on Mr. Pretti for carrying a legally permitted weapon, which had been seized from him by federal agents who restrained him before he was fatally shot. “You can’t walk in with guns,” Mr. Trump told reporters, while also calling Mr. Pretti’s death “a very unfortunate incident.”

In the three days after Mr. Pretti’s death, Mr. Trump has had to reckon with a broad backlash over the encounter and his administration’s immediate moves to blame the victim, including by labeling him a “domestic terrorist” and “an assassin.” On Tuesday, Customs and Border Protection officials said two agents fired the shots: a Border Patrol agent and a C.B.P. officer.

Mr. Trump promised he was “watching over” the investigation into Mr. Pretti’s death but did not offer details. He also noted that he had dispatched his border czar, Tom Homan, to take over the immigration crackdown in Minneapolis.

State officials have asked a judge to compel federal cooperation with their investigation into Mr. Pretti’s death. And nine progressive prosecutors from around the country announced the start of a coalition to assist in prosecuting federal law enforcement officers accused of wrongdoing.

Here’s what we’re covering:
  • Watchdog report: Counter to claims by Ms. Noem, a preliminary review by U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s internal watchdog office did not indicate that Mr. Pretti had brandished a weapon during his encounter with federal agents, according to an email sent to Congress and reviewed by The New York Times. The review asserted that he had been resisting arrest. 
  • Border czar: Mr. Homan met with Gov. Tim Walz, whose office said that they had agreed to continue working toward a swift reduction in federal forces in the state and impartial investigations into the killings of Mr. Pretti and Renee Good, a Minneapolis woman fatally shot by an agent earlier this month.
  • Operational overhaul: In addition to sending Mr. Homan to Minnesota, Mr. Trump planned to pull Gregory Bovino, a Border Patrol official who has been the face of much of the administration’s enforcement efforts, out of the state, according to two federal officials. But the president pushed back on the idea that any change in approach in the state was a retreat. “I don’t think this is a pullback,” he said, while repeating conspiracy theories and hyperbolic claims that demonstrators there are “paid insurrectionists” and “paid agitators.”
Michael Gold, Ernesto Londoño, Lauren McCarthy, Tyler Pager and Mitch Smith contributed reporting.
 
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/28/us/politics/ilhan-omar-trump-attack.html 

Attack on Ilhan Omar Follows Years of Trump’s Targeting Her

President Trump has spent years demonizing and dehumanizing the Somali-born Democrat from Minnesota, fueling escalating threats against her.

Listen to this article · 10:13 minutes  

Representative Ilhan Omar, Democrat of Minnesota, speaking before a man sprayed her with a liquid at a town hall event in Minneapolis on Tuesday night. Credit: Victor J. Blue for The New York Times
 
by Annie Karni
Reporting from Washington
January 28, 2026
New York Times

As President Trump riled up a rally crowd on Tuesday night describing immigrants bent on harming and killing Americans, he singled out one person in particular as an example of a bad actor.

Foreigners coming into the United States, he told his audience in Iowa, “have to show they can love our country; they have to be proud — not like Ilhan Omar.”

The crowd booed. They recognized the name of the Democratic congresswoman from Minnesota, whom the president has demonized and dehumanized for years with racist and xenophobic attacks, venting that she should “go back” to her country, referring to her as “garbage,” and mocking her hijab by calling it a “little turban.”

Not long afterward, at her own event in North Minneapolis, Ms. Omar was attacked by a man who rushed the lectern where she was speaking, spraying her with a strong-smelling liquid.

The scene, which unfolded as Ms. Omar was calling for the resignation of Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary who has carried out Mr. Trump’s immigration crackdown, was shocking but hardly surprising.

It was exactly the type of situation that has caused so many lawmakers to cancel town hall events, in an era when violent threats against public officials have skyrocketed, becoming a chillingly routine part of the job.

But Ms. Omar is something of a special case. A Somali-born Muslim woman elected to Congress in an era defined by Mr. Trump’s bigoted attacks against immigrants, Ms. Omar has in the past seen death threats against her rise to the highest levels among U.S. lawmakers.

Security officers restrained a man who attacked Ms. Omar during the event on Tuesday night. Credit: Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

When those threats have surged after Mr. Trump has targeted her by name, Ms. Omar has sometimes been assigned a 24-hour security detail from the Capitol Police. That added protection is available at the discretion of the House speaker.

But for the past year, Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, has not offered it to her, she noted in an interview last December. After the attack on Tuesday, Ms. Omar made a formal request for extra Capitol Police protection and Mr. Johnson agreed, according to two people familiar with the matter.

Ms. Omar’s campaign also sent out a fund-raising appeal to help her afford the private security that is often with her when she appears in public, as was the case on Tuesday.

Ms. Omar knew there was a possibility of violence erupting when she walked into her town hall on Tuesday night, prepared to address a community on edge after the killing of Alex Pretti by federal immigration agents.

And when she was attacked, Ms. Omar reacted with defiance. She did not cower behind the lectern; she instinctively lunged at the man attacking her and insisted on finishing her remarks even as her security detail and staff tried to persuade her to retreat. She did not cancel other events for the week and held a news conference at Karmel Mall in Minneapolis on Wednesday.

In short, Ms. Omar barely flinched.

“I’m built that way,” Ms. Omar said calmly as she left the community room at Urban League Twin Cities after her event, reminding a CNN reporter that she was a survivor of war.

Her reaction to the incident underscored Ms. Omar’s identity as a feisty fighter whose grit in the face of years of attacks portraying her as a dangerous political saboteur has only appeared to embolden Mr. Trump. He has raged against her using violent language of the sort that can motivate extremists and provoke assaults such as the one that unfolded on Tuesday.

“Ilhan’s toughness in the face of a bully and in the face of threats is what pisses off people like Donald Trump,” Representative Greg Casar, Democrat of Texas, said in an interview on Wednesday.

Her response was so stoic that her political adversaries online used it to back up their conspiracy theory that the attack had been staged, a charge that Mr. Trump quickly leveled.

Ms. Omar “probably had herself sprayed, knowing her,” he told ABC News.
President Trump returning to the White House on Tuesday night. He has repeatedly insulted Ms. Omar and suggested without evidence after the attack on her that it was staged. Credit:  Doug Mills/The New York Times

But it was difficult to see the attack as unrelated to Mr. Trump’s years of insults and slurs that for years have placed a target on Ms. Omar’s back.

At a recent cabinet meeting, the president referred to Ms. Omar as “garbage.” At a December rally in Pennsylvania, he complained that Ms. Omar “does nothing but bitch.”

He added: “Why is it we only take people from shithole countries?”

Earlier this week, Mr. Trump announced on Truth Social that the Justice Department was investigating Ms. Omar who, he claimed “left Somalia with NOTHING, and is now reportedly worth more than 44 Million Dollars.” Ms. Omar’s financial disclosures show that her husband, a venture capitalist, makes millions of dollars in income. But it was not clear how the president arrived at the $44 million figure. An investigation into Ms. Omar’s finances begun under the Biden administration appeared to have stalled for lack of evidence.

At the same time, Mr. Trump has targeted Somalis in general, saying, “I don’t want them in our country,” a refrain he began using during his first term when he would often whip up his rally crowds to cheer and chant for Ms. Omar to be sent back to the country where she came from.

For years, Mr. Trump has also helped spread the baseless conspiracy theory that she was married to her brother and residing in the United States illegally.

“She should get the hell out,” Mr. Trump said at his December rally in Pennsylvania. “Throw her the hell out! She does nothing but complain.”

The crowd responded by chanting: “Send her back! Send her back!”

After the assassination attempts against Mr. Trump during the 2024 campaign, and the assassination of Charlie Kirk, the right-wing influencer, Republicans blamed Democrats’ harsh language about the president and his political followers for causing the violence. But that has not stopped Mr. Trump from continuing to fan the flames himself when it comes to his political adversaries.
 
Ms. Omar stayed and finished her town hall event after being attacked Tuesday night. “I’m built that way,” she said, in maintaining a calm but defiant demeanor. Credit: Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

Ms. Omar was 8 years old when her family fled Somalia because of its civil war. She lived in a refugee camp in Kenya for four years before immigrating to the United States and becoming an American citizen. Elected in 2018 as one of the first two Muslim women ever to serve in Congress, Ms. Omar has had her time in the national spotlight overlap completely with her time as a recurring target for Mr. Trump.

In response to Mr. Trump, she has fought back harder. At one point, she released a timeline of her marital and divorce history, in an attempt to quash the unsubstantiated rumor about marrying her brother.

Nina Jankowicz, a prominent specialist in online disinformation who has studied the attacks against Ms. Omar, said that she has been one of the most attacked lawmakers for years, working under a steady stream of accusations about impropriety, corruption and the constant subject of sexualized rumors.

“It’s in some ways the least surprising possible target for an attack,” said Ms. Jankowicz, who briefly ran a government board in the Biden administration created to counter disinformation. “Omar and the rest of ‘the Squad’ have proven they are undeterred by the many heinous attacks they have been subject to over the years,” she said, referring to the group of young, progressive women of color in Congress.

“You develop a thick skin,” she added. “You also become a little bit jaded, which can be dangerous.”

After the attack on Tuesday night, Ms. Omar’s allies blamed Mr. Trump, suggesting he had fueled the violence through his racist language.

“It is not a coincidence that after days of President Trump and VP Vance putting Rep. Omar in their crosshairs with slanderous public attacks, she gets assaulted at her town hall,” Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Democrat of New York, said online. “Thank God she is okay. If they want leaders to take down the temp, they need to look in the mirror.”

In addition to being a Black woman from Africa and an immigrant, Ms. Omar has provided a particularly rich target for Mr. Trump and the Republicans in Congress who follow his lead because she has at times made seemingly antisemitic and anti-American comments that have raised eyebrows even among her Democratic colleagues.

In 2019, Democrats joined Republicans in criticizing her for writing online that certain pro-Israel groups were “all about the Benjamins, baby,” seeming to reference an antisemitic trope about Jews and money. She apologized for the comment.

Two years later, Ms. Omar appeared to equate terror attacks carried out by groups like Hamas with actions of the U.S. government when she wrote: “We have seen unthinkable atrocities committed by the U.S., Hamas, Israel, Afghanistan, and the Taliban.” She later said she had not meant to compare them.

In 2023, the House voted along party lines to remove Ms. Omar from the Foreign Affairs Committee over her past comments about Israel. Ms. Omar reacted with her typical defiance.

“Take your vote or not — I am here to stay,” Ms. Omar said on the House floor at the time. “I am Muslim. I am an immigrant. And interestingly, from Africa. Is anyone surprised that I am being targeted? Is anyone surprised that I am somehow deemed unworthy to speak about American foreign policy?”

Still, Tuesday night’s attack appeared to cross a line even for the same Republicans who in the past have criticized Ms. Omar.

“Regardless of how vehemently I disagree with her rhetoric — and I do — no elected official should face physical attacks,” Representative Nancy Mace, Republican of South Carolina, wrote online. “This is not who we are.”

These days, Ms. Omar said she assumes the Somali community in Minnesota has been targeted in part because she has become the president’s personal obsession. Still, she has said she believes that the only way to handle a bully is to continue to get in his face.

“I’m ok,” she wrote online after Tuesday night’s attack. “I’m a survivor so this small agitator isn’t going to intimidate me from doing my work. I don’t let bullies win.”

Ms. Omar responded to the announcement of a Justice Department investigation with the same impudence. “Sorry, Trump, your support is collapsing and you’re panicking,” she said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Annie Karni is a congressional correspondent for The Times.
Rep. Maxwell Alejandro Frost Is Assaulted at Sundance Film Festival

Mr. Frost, Democrat of Florida, said he was punched by a man who said the lawmaker would be deported. The man was arrested on charges of aggravated burglary and assault.

Listen to this article · 2:34 minutes 

Learn more


Representative Maxwell Alejandro Frost, Democrat of Florida, said he was attacked during the Sundance Film Festival. Credit: Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times

by Jin Yu Young
January 25, 2026
New York Times

Representative Maxwell Alejandro Frost, Democrat of Florida, was hit in the face by a man who told the lawmaker that he would be deported at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, over the weekend.

The attacker “told me that Trump was going to deport me before he punched me in the face,” Mr. Frost said in a social media post on Saturday. “He was heard screaming racist remarks as he drunkenly ran off.”

The Park City police said they responded to reports of an assault just after midnight on Saturday at the High West Saloon, a whiskey distillery and bar where a private party was being held.

Danielle Snelson, a community outreach lieutenant with the Park City Police Department, identified the assailant as Christian Young in an email Saturday night. Mr. Young “assaulted Florida Congressman Maxwell Frost and a female who was attending the private event,” Ms. Snelson said.

Mr. Young had “unlawfully” entered the event after being turned away because he did not have an invitation, according to Ms. Snelson. The police did not offer a possible motive for Mr. Young’s entry or assault.

The police arrested Mr. Young and booked him into the Summit County Jail on charges of aggravated burglary and two counts of simple assault.

Mr. Frost’s family moved from Cuba to Florida in the early 1960s, part of a wave of hundreds of thousands of Cuban refugees who were flown to the United States, according to his campaign website.

Elected in 2022 at the age of 25, Mr. Frost became the first member of Generation Z to win a seat in Congress. He represents District 10, an area in Central Florida that includes much of Orlando.

Representative Hakeem Jeffries, Democrat of New York, was one of several politicians who expressed their shock over the attack on social media. “Hate and political violence has no place in our country,” Mr. Jeffries said in a post on X.

“I am okay. Thank you for all the well wishes. We are in scary times,” Mr. Frost said in a later post on his personal X account. “Please stay safe and do not let these people silence you. Onwards.”

A representative from Sundance Film Festival did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

According to Variety, the festival organizers said in a statement that they “strongly condemn last night’s assault and abhor any form of violence, harassment, and hate speech.”

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Jin Yu Young is a reporter and researcher for The Times, based in Seoul, covering South Korea and international breaking news.



Family of man killed by off-duty ICE agent in LA demands charges: ‘The ache will never go away’

After Renee Good’s killing in Minneapolis, calls grow for accountability in the shooting of Keith Porter Jr on New Year’s Eve


US citizens and permanent residents: have you been racially profiled by ICE?
Sam Levin in Los Angeles
Friday 16 January 2026
The Guardian (UK) 

a man with a baseball capKeith Porter Jr.
 
Family and friends of a Los Angeles man who was killed by an off-duty US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer over the holidays are urging local officials to arrest and prosecute the federal agent.

Keith Porter Jr, a 43-year-old father of two, was fatally shot by an ICE officer on New Year’s Eve outside his apartment complex, according to LA and federal officials. An LA police department (LAPD) spokesperson said after the incident that Porter had fired gunshots into the air. A US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spokesperson said the off-duty immigration officer was “forced to defensively use his weapon” while responding to an “active shooter”.

Much about the incident remains unclear. There’s no footage of the shooting. Porter’s family and local activists have argued that, contrary to the DHS’s portrayal of the events, Porter was not threatening anyone and was celebrating the new year. Jamal Tooson, an LA attorney representing Porter’s family, said Porter’s actions possibly merited arrest or citation by the LAPD, but the ICE agent, who was not charged with local law enforcement duties, instead subjected him to “a death sentence”.

Trump press secretary launches tirade against reporter who asked about ICE
Read more

Activists, local politicians and some celebrities have rallied around Porter’s killing, with many of them voicing increasing concerns about ICE’s aggressive raids and violent tactics in cities across the country. And the DHS’s track record of making false and distorted claims about people they have accused of crimes and violence has fueled concerns that the government cannot be trusted to provide a truthful account of Porter’s death.

Those fears have only intensified in the wake of an ICE officer’s fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis last week. Good’s killing sparked nationwide protests, with the DHS calling her a “domestic terrorist” without evidence and Donald Trump insisting the officer, Jonathan Ross, fired in self-defense as Good “ran him over” with her car. Footage, however, showed her car was turning away from the officer when he shot her, and that he did not lose his footing or appear to be injured during the encounter.

Organizers against police brutality, including Black Lives Matter Los Angeles, mobilized community members to testify at an LA police commission meeting on Tuesday, demanding the LAPD disclose the name of the ICE officer who shot Porter and pursue criminal charges.

A woman holds pictures of Renee Nicole Good and Keith Porter during a protest in Los Angeles on 10 January. Photograph: Étienne Laurent/AFP/Getty Images

“I’m heartbroken and I know that ache will never go away,” Wanda Turner, a longtime friend of Porter’s family, who considered herself to be a second mother to him, said in an interview. “The officer needs to surrender and do what’s right. I want him charged. Even if he thought Keith was doing something wrong, it wasn’t his place to just shoot and kill him.”

Late Friday afternoon, after publication of this story, Stacie Halpern, a criminal defense lawyer, confirmed she was representing the ICE officer who shot Porter, and identified him as Brian Palacios.

She said Palacios’ shooting of Porter was lawful and in self-defense.
 
‘Help our community get justice’

The shooting of Porter, who leaves behind daughters aged 10 and 20, was not caught on camera, and local and federal authorities have disclosed very few details about the ongoing investigation or what they believe happened between the two men.

The LAPD said in a statement that its officers responded to 911 calls to the complex in LA’s Northridge neighborhood at about 10.40pm and found Porter “on the ground”, and he was soon after declared dead. The LAPD said the ICE officer had “confronted” Porter, but declined to answer further questions about the incident.

ICE said in a statement that its officer lived at the complex and had “exchanged gunfire” with Porter. “Fortunately, our brave officer was not injured while protecting his community,” the statement said.

Tooson, the family lawyer, has said Porter may have fired “celebratory” gunshots to ring in the new year, telling the LA Times he believed several people were firing guns into the air. He also said a witness said they didn’t hear the ICE agent identify himself as an officer.

Tooson told reporters he did not believe there was “any exchange of gunfire” between Porter and the agent and suggested there was a “lack of corroborating witnesses and evidence, such as shell casings indicating Porter fired toward the agent”.

A person holds a sign for Keith Porter in Seattle on 11 January. Photograph: Lindsey Wasson/AP

The outrage around Porter’s killing has swelled in recent days, with protesters holding signs with his and Good’s faces, saying “Murdered by ICE”, and celebrities at the Golden Globe awards on Sunday wearing “ICE Out” and “Be Good” pins to honor them.

In LA, longtime community activists and Porter’s family have organized several vigils and protests. At the LA police commission’s weekly meeting on Tuesday, speakers one by one condemned Porter’s killing and called on LA leaders to take swift action.

“When are we going to press charges on this murderer? When is he going to be named? When is he going to be arrested?” said Jsané Tyler, Porter’s cousin. She questioned whether the ICE officer had been given a sobriety test or forced to turn over his service weapon and whether he took any steps to render aid. In Good’s shooting, witness videos showed agents blocking bystanders who attempted to provide medical aid.

“This is systemic. When is there going to be value placed on our lives?” continued Tyler, who is part of Black Lives Matter LA. “As an organizer, I never thought I would be standing here for one of my family members … I urge you guys, regardless of federal intervention, to really help us, help his family, help our community get justice.”

Dr Melina Abdullah, a co-founder of Black Lives Matter LA who has been supporting Porter’s family, said that in addition to seeking the ICE agent’s arrest and prosecution, “We’re demanding an end to the character assassination of Keith. He’s the victim, not the suspect … It’s disgusting the way DHS is talking about him.”

Halpern, Palacios’ attorney, said by phone on Friday that her client was “defending himself and the community” and repeated the assertions shared by ICE that Porter had fired at the officer. Palacios’ name was first reported by the LA Times.

LAPD declined to comment on his identification.
 
‘A wonderful soul’

US law enforcement agencies have long faced backlash for demonizing and spreading misinformation about people killed by officers. LA activists argued the DHS was particularly unreliable, pointing to its account of Good’s killing, which Minneapolis’s mayor called “bullshit” and the state’s governor said was “propaganda”. The DHS has also come under scrutiny for claiming ICE officers have been widely subjected to “assaults”. Court records reviewed by the LA Times last year revealed many cases of alleged attacks involved no injury to the officer, and prosecutions have repeatedly ended in dismissals and acquittals.

“We cannot trust what is being shared with us by entities representing ICE agents, because they have not been truthful,” said Eunisses Hernandez, an LA city council member, who has been supporting Porter’s family on Monday. “When protests happened last year … the federal government said Los Angeles was burning to the ground. That was not happening.”

Hernandez called for more transparency: “We need to know who these people are in our neighborhoods taking people’s lives. This federal agent could still be participating in raids happening in my district.”

The DHS did not respond to detailed questions about the case and advocates’ criticisms and on Friday did not immediately respond to inquiries about the officer’s identity.

Greg Risling, a spokesperson for the LA district attorney, said in an email on Thursday his office responded to the scene and was investigating the case, and prosecutors would “review all evidence disclosed by the investigation to determine whether or not the law enforcement officer acted lawfully”. On Friday, he declined to comment on the officer’s identity.

Hernandez brought Porter’s mother, Franceola Armstrong, to a city council meeting last week, where Armstrong recalled how her son had called her every morning to say “I love you”. “Keith Porter was a wonderful soul. His heart was big,” the mother said.

A vigil for Keith Porter in Los Angeles. Photograph: Courtesy of Black Lives Matter LA

Turner, the longtime friend of Porter’s family, said it was painful to see officials “sully his reputation” and that he should be remembered for his joyful attitude: “He loved to make you smile.”

Adrian Metoyer III, a Los Angeles film-maker, said he and Porter, nicknamed “Pooter”, had been best friends since they met as teenagers in 1996, bonding over sports: “Pooter was hilarious, a joker, the life of the party.” Metoyer, now 45, served as a foster parent to teenage boys when he was in his 20s and recalled Porter’s support: “He was my second in command, my go-to guy to assist me in caretaking. He was always there to help people.”

Porter more recently held multiple jobs, at one point serving as an aide to students with special needs while employed at Home Depot, Metoyer said.

And he was a proud “girl dad”, Metoyer added; he shared footage of an interview he filmed with Porter in 2022 reflecting on his life. “I got two beautiful young girls and I’m going to raise them the way I’m supposed to,” Porter says in the footage while wearing a Dodgers shirt. “I pray. I talk to God. I talk to family. Because at the end of the day, that’s all I really got. But I feel rich … It’s gonna be hard to break me, because I have a strong spirit and I grew up with a whole lot of love.”

This article was updated on 16 January 2026 to include confirmation of the ICE officer’s name

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