Judge orders Kilmar Abrego Garcia to be immediately released from immigration detention

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GREENBELT, Md. (AP) — A federal judge in Maryland ordered Kilmar Abrego Garcia freed from immigration detention on Thursday while his legal challenge against his deportation moves forward.

U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis ruled that Immigration and Customs Enforcement must release Abrego Garcia from custody immediately.

“Since Abrego Garcia’s return from wrongful detention in El Salvador, he has been re-detained, again without lawful authority,” the judge wrote. “For this reason, the Court will GRANT Abrego Garcia’s Petition for immediate release from ICE custody.”

The Department of Homeland Security was highly critical of the judge’s order and vowed to oppose it, calling it “naked judicial activism” by a judge appointed by President Barack Obama, a Democrat. “This order lacks any valid legal basis, and we will continue to fight this tooth and nail in the courts,” said Tricia McLaughlin, the department’s assistant secretary.

Messages seeking comment were left with Abrego Garcia’s attorney Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg.

Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran national, has an American wife and child and has lived in Maryland for years, but he originally immigrated to the U.S. illegally as a teenager. An immigration judge in 2019 ruled Abrego Garcia could not be deported to El Salvador because he faced danger from a gang that targeted his family. When Abrego Garcia was mistakenly deported there in March, his case became a rallying point for those who oppose President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

Abrego Garcia was returned to the U.S. under a court order. Since he cannot be deported to El Salvador, ICE has been seeking to deport him to a series of African countries. His lawsuit in federal court claims Trump’s Republican administration is illegally using the deportation process to punish Abrego Garcia over the embarrassment of his mistaken deportation to El Salvador.

Meanwhile, in a separate action in immigration court, Abrego Garcia is petitioning to reopen his immigration case to seek asylum in the United States.

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Additionally, Abrego Garcia is facing criminal charges in federal court in Tennessee, where he has pleaded not guilty to human smuggling. He has filed a motion to dismiss the charges, claiming the prosecution is vindictive.

A judge has ordered an evidentiary hearing to be held on the motion after previously finding some evidence that the prosecution against Abrego Garcia “may be vindictive.” The judge said many statements by Trump administration officials “raise cause for concern.”

The judge specifically cited a statement by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche that seemed to suggest the Justice Department charged Abrego Garcia because he won his wrongful deportation case.

Letters: Tone it down and deliver, elected officials left and right

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Trapped between two fires

I’m writing as a Minnesota resident, Somali American, and former Republican candidate (2024). I’m not writing to attack either party. I’m writing because Minnesota increasingly feels trapped between two fires.

On one side, we have Democratic leadership that talks big but, to many families and small businesses, delivers rising costs, uneven education results, and a government that feels more confident than competent. 2025 felt like a low point for trust.

On the other side, we have a GOP that has not proven it can govern effectively — and too often tolerates rhetoric that paints entire groups with the same brush. That may excite national audiences, but it damages community trust here at home.

Many Somali Americans I know are frustrated with Rep. Ilhan Omar and feel under‑represented. I understand that frustration. But I won’t cross moral lines to “win.” Insults and blanket attacks are wrong, and they are also politically self‑defeating in Minnesota.

What worries me most is the complete lack of cooperation between state and federal leadership. When leaders choose rivalry over results, Minnesotans suffer — regardless of party.

So I’m stepping back from partisan politics for my own sanity. I’m focusing on building a business and serving our community in practical ways. But I’m asking our elected officials — left and right — to tone it down, talk to each other, and deliver on affordability, health care and public safety. We need adults in the room.

Fadil Jama, St. Paul

 

The danger of a single story

When President Trump labeled Somali immigrants “garbage,” he was weaponizing presidential power to diminish an entire community.  As novelist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie warned in her powerful TED Talk “The Danger of a Single Story,” power lies not only in the ability to tell another person’s story, but to make it the definitive story of that person.

Yes, some Somali Americans in Minnesota have been implicated in financial fraud.  That fact should be reported, but it should never become the sole lens through which we view an entire community — thousands of Somali families including refugees, healthcare workers, business owners and students.

The Somali American story includes triumphs over war and displacement, civic engagement in American politics, and contributions to Minnesota’s economy.  When politicians or the media reinforce the “single story” of crime and corruption, they obscure a larger truth.

Adichie reminds us that “stories can break the dignity of a people, but stories can also repair that broken dignity.”

To honor the proud history of immigration in America, we must refuse the temptation to see any community through one distorted frame.  As citizens and journalists, our duty is not to amplify division, but to choose storytelling that recognizes our shared humanity.

Terry Hansen, Grafton, Wis.

 

Badly mismanaged our finances

I’m an independent voter and both parties like to pretend we don’t matter. The truth is that no party wins without us. We handed the Democratic Party good progress in November, but Tim Walz is another story. He got so caught up in spending all the money after COVID and then the national spotlight shown on him, he forgot about his primary job – governor of Minnesota. He has badly mismanaged the finances of this state, and he and his Democratic followers have held no state employee accountable for this “criminally inefficient” management of millions of our tax dollars. If the DFL weren’t so lazy, they would realize they need a new candidate for governor. Joe Soucheray hit the nail on the head in his column on Sunday (“Walz can’t — or won’t — explain the fraud under his watch”)..

Nancy Lanthier Carroll, Roseville

 

Some things …

The Morning Report email on Thursday, Dec 4, started with “Some things never change…” You are right: The first two articles discuss St. Paul’s ever-increasing taxes. Er, “levies.” Why do we keep voting to impoverish our citizens?

Jeffrey G Thomas, St. Paul

 

Among my guardian angels, Somalis

Fourteen weeks ago I was in the ICU department at United Hospital in St. Paul after double-bypass heart surgery. Among the nurses, attendants, staff drawing blood, some were of Somali ancestry. They were my guardian angels and I wouldn’t be here today without their love and care.

Scott Frantzen, Woodbury

 

It’s been 10 years

It’s been 10 years since Donald Trump told us his federal tax returns were being audited. It seems like that should be sufficient time to complete an IRS audit. Just curious if he will ever make the results public? The citizens of the U.S.A. deserve to know. What could he possibly be hiding?

Ronald Rice, St. Paul

 

Compassion with a shovel

I, like many Minnesotans, like to think of myself as hardworking and compassionate. I think Minnesota’s hard winters give us a daily sense of what it means to work for something but also open our hearts to how quickly a person can come into need. Whether rich or poor, any one of us could forget to dress properly for the cold, or have our car stuck in the snow. To me, the truly compassionate Minnesotan is not one with an “all are welcome” sign in their yard, but rather one who welcomes their neighbor by shoveling the sidewalk next door, not because they were asked to do so, but simply because they were already outside and physically able.

Ryan McCabe, St. Paul

 

Millions lost, no big deal. Just raise taxes

I just received my notice from the Department of Public Safety. I need to send the state $442.25 to renew my vehicle registration. Ordinarily, I would not give this a second thought. I would sit down, make out my check to the state, mail it in and wait for my new license plate tabs.

This money did not come easily to me, and yet I now know that the state now views the oversight of our tax dollars as of very little importance. If the state lacks funds, they will just tax more. If they lose a million here or a million there, no big deal. Heck, if its a billion dollars lost, no big deal.

How can any state agency or agencies be so incompetent? How can Gov. Walz be so incompetent?

Don Lohrey, Shoreview

 

Needs greater than a gala

I recently received an invite to a victory celebration party for our new Mayor Her. The invite included a list of every local and national Minnesota Democratic office holder in the seven-county area, along with an impressive listing of the individual “hosts” for the gala. Hosts were asked to donate $1,000. Co-host status was only $500.  I too could attend for a mere $100.

It’s ironic that just last month, these Democratic office holders were some of the same individuals wringing their hands over the threatened suspension of SNAP benefits. We were told of the potential tragedy that awaited thousands of starving Minnesotans. Yet now these same politicians are hosting a gala that no doubt will cost thousands of dollars. Likely costing no money out of their pockets, instead they tapped the unions and party faithful to foot the bill.

Instead, wouldn’t it have been better if this gala money was donated to Minnesota food shelters to help those in need?  So no, I won’t be spending $100 to attend. Rather I’ll be sending a check to my favorite food bank. Congratulations to our new mayor, but her agreeing to this gala doesn’t agree with the candidate for whom I voted.

Peter D. Engel, St Paul

 

Stand up to oppression

Living under a country of dictatorship? Who would want that?

In the Bible, dignity refers to inherent worth and honor bestowed upon human beings of God. In simple terms, dignity is the state of being worthy of honor and respect just by being a human being. Think of immigrants, people out of a country, could that be you?

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights emphasizes that all people are born with inherent dignity and equal rights. Adopted in 1948, the declaration outlines 30 rights and freedoms that belong to all of us, and that nobody can take that away from you.

Now is the time to stand up to oppression with justice and liberty for all. Today, in the year 2025, we have in only six months lost freedom of speech, due process, women’s rights, protection of climate change. Our National Guard, our sons and daughters who we raised and trained to protect us from harm, have now turned on the American family with guns pointed at us.

This is America today when we shout out God Bless America the land of the free and the brave. With liberty and justice for all.

Muriel Hinich, Bayport

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Tom Horner: Minnesota can win with AI. Consider these 3 lessons from mining.

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One of Minnesota’s oldest industries, mining, provides important lessons for the state’s success in capturing the economic opportunities of artificial intelligence. Three lessons are especially important.

Add value

First, raw materials create immediate wealth, but sustainable prosperity is in value-added processes. Minnesota’s Iron Range produced the material for the steel that built the 20th Century and is just as vital today. But Minnesota didn’t just ship away its minerals. It also exported wealth by allowing other states and countries to dominate the value-added processing and manufacturing.

Today, AI data centers are proposed for communities throughout Minnesota. These centers are the “mines” of AI, exploiting the raw technology of the advanced chips. The centers generate revenue, but sustainable wealth is in the commercial applications of AI.

Minnesota is well-positioned to exploit the potential for value-added wealth. The state already has a strong foothold in AI research and development, advancing new uses for AI chips and improving manufacturing processes.

In addition, the state is home to the kind of industries that are among the early adopters of advanced AI. The state’s life sciences sector, for example, includes more than 7,000 companies employing 326,000 workers. Many of these are well-paying jobs in areas like medical devices, biotech and health IT. Mayo Clinic and other health leaders are well-along in adapting AI to better serve patients and customers.

Sustainable wealth, including new companies and good jobs, is in value-added applications.

Don’t protect, compete!

Second, Minnesota is not an island. In today’s economy ideas and capital move quickly around the world. Those that adapt to the global exchange of financing and expertise will be tomorrow’s job creators.

Staying competitive in a global marketplace has spurred innovation on the Iron Range. Seems something as basic as a mineral extracted from the ground wouldn’t be ripe for cutting-edge creativity. Yet, the iron ore of a century ago gave way to taconite in the mid-20th Century to a more environmentally friendly and purer iron-ore pellet today. This new pellet is essential to modern steelmaking and keeps the Iron Range viable in domestic and foreign steelmaking.

Maintaining a global market for AI chips also is essential to keeping U.S. manufacturers in the forefront of innovation and sophistication. Some policymakers have argued for export barriers and other restrictions on AI technology. A bill pending in Congress would give U.S. customers the “right of first refusal” before AI chips could be exported, according to the legislation’s lead sponsor Sen. Jim Banks (R-IN). In practice, the GAIN AI Act — Guaranteeing Access and Innovation for National Artificial Intelligence — would create a slow and ponderous process for all sales.

The GAIN AI Act and other protectionist policies undermine our incentives to stay on the cutting edge of technology. Protectionism preserves complacency; competition encourages the innovation needed to maintain leadership. U.S. manufacturers are able to compete with the world’s best. Imposing artificial barriers on the sale of AI chips is a concession by some policymakers that U.S. companies can’t compete on a level playing field. That’s not just an admission of defeat. It is a path to a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Smart science, effective policy, supportive Minnesotans

The third lesson from the Iron Range is that success takes a village, or in this case, an entire state. The Iron Range has survived the region’s boom and bust cycles with smart science, effective policy and supportive Minnesotans. When natural ore was depleted, researchers at the University of Minnesota developed new methods to mine and process taconite, a low-grade iron ore that is plentiful but more costly to produce. To offset the higher production costs, Minnesota voters approved a constitutional amendment to create a more favorable tax environment for the industry.

Minnesota’s burgeoning AI industry will need the same multi-discipline leadership. Research and training at the University of Minnesota and other post-secondary institutions will be essential to creating the knowledge, start-up companies, and workers key to the future of a globally competitive, environmentally responsible mining industry in Minnesota.

State and federal lawmakers need to develop the tax and spending policies that will support research, education and the public and private investments needed to create next-generation technology. The state’s congressional delegation, both Republican and Democrats, is needed to promote a “Minnesota First” agenda that rejects ineffective and unproductive restrictions on AI leadership like the GAIN AI Act.

Minnesota has the foundational assets to be a leader in AI manufacturing and applications. The path forward is paved with the lessons to be learned from one of the state’s defining industries.

Tom Horner is a public affairs executive and a former Independence Party candidate for governor of Minnesota.

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Farmers got more money from Trump. They still have more problems

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By JOSH FUNK and MARK VANCLEAVE, Associated Press

RANDOLPH, Minn. (AP) — When Donald Trump promised new tariffs while running for president, Gene Stehly worried that trade disputes would jeopardize his international sales of corn, soybeans and wheat.

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A little more than a year later, Stehly said his fears have become a reality, and Trump’s latest promise of federal assistance is insufficient to cover farmers’ losses.

“Maybe this will all come out to be better at the end, but I can tell you right now, it certainly isn’t the case at the moment,” Stehly said.

Trump announced Monday that his Republican administration would distribute $12 billion in one-time payments to farmers, who have suffered from persistently low commodity prices, rising costs and declining sales after China cut off all agricultural purchases from America during the trade war.

While rural areas remain conservative bastions, farmers’ patience with Washington is wearing thin. Several of them described the government bailout, an echo of similar policies during Trump’s first term, as a welcome stopgap but one that won’t solve the agricultural industry’s problems.

“It’s a bridge. It’s not the ultimate solution we’re looking for,” said Charlie Radman, a fourth-generation farmer who grows corn and soybeans on the land his family has owned near Randolph, Minnesota, since 1899. “What we really want to have is a little more certainty and not have to rely on these ad hoc payments.”

Farmers caught up in trade war

American soybean and sorghum farmers typically export at least half of their crops. They were hit the hardest by Trump’s trade dispute with China, the world’s largest buyer of soybeans that has increasingly relied on harvests from Brazil and other South American nations.

Trump and his Cabinet have boasted about the deal he struck with Chinese President Xi Jinping in October. But Liu Pengyu, the spokesperson for the Chinese embassy, said this week that “agriculture trade cooperation between China and the United States is proceeding in an orderly manner” without giving specifics.

So far, China has bought only about a quarter of the 12 million metric tons of soybeans that U.S. officials said would be purchased before the end of February, raising doubts on whether Beijing would follow through on that pledge or commitments to buy 25 million metric tons annually in the next three years. China hasn’t confirmed those numbers.

“In general, I don’t trust their motives and integrity of their promises,” said Bryant Kagay, who farms in northwest Missouri.

Even if China does buy the agreed amount of American soybeans, that would only bring U.S. farmers near to the amount they were selling every year before Trump took office.

That’s a big part of why Minnesota farmer Glen Groth said he’d “like to see the administration focus more on opening up markets outside of China.” In addition to finding other international buyers, agriculture groups are pushing to expand domestic uses like biodiesel, ethanol, aviation fuel and animal feed.

Dan Keitzer, a soybean and corn farmer in southeast Iowa, said recent bumper crops and technological advancements that produce bigger harvests means that the industry needs more customers.

“I think most farmers would tell you that they don’t want to go to the mailbox and get a check from the government. That’s not why we farm,” he said. “We need more demand for our product.”

Aid is considered a Band-Aid

Trump has placated farmers with money before. During his first term, he provided $22 billion in 2019 to help cushion them from trade disputes with China. There was $46 billion in 2020, an expanded number that reflected financial challenges from the COVID-19 pandemic.

The $12 billion that he announced this week won’t quell farmers’ fears about the future. They’re already ordering supplies for next year’s crops and meeting with their bankers to discuss the loans they will need. But they’re trying to stay optimistic that crop prices will improve if they find more buyers.

The aid payments will be capped at $155,000 per farmer or entity, and only farms that make less than $900,000 in adjusted gross income will be eligible. But during the first Trump administration a number of large farms found ways around the payment limits and collected millions.

Farmers would like to see Trump aggressively tackle concerns about higher costs that are eating into their bottom line.

Trump signed an executive order over the weekend directing the Justice Department and Federal Trade Commission to investigate anti-competitive practices anywhere in the food supply chain, starting with the fertilizer, seed and equipment that farmers rely on and continuing to deal with meat packing companies and grocers who help determine what price consumers pay.

Tregg Cronin, who farms and ranches with his family in central South Dakota, said he’s grateful for the president’s acknowledgment that farmers are “caught in the middle” of the trade war.

But he said that any checks that farmers receive from the government will likely “get turned around and sent right out the door.”

Funk reported from Omaha, Neb. Associated Press writers Hannah Fingerhut in Des Moines, Iowa, Sarah Raza in Sioux Falls, S.D., and Didi Tang in Washington contributed to this report.