If Operation Metro Surge is over, did it accomplish its goals?

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The end of Operation Metro Surge appears to be in sight.

White House border czar Tom Homan announced Thursday that the federal law enforcement presence in Minnesota would be scaled back in coming days, claiming its multi-pronged mission had been accomplished.

Tom Homan speaks at a press conference at the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building on Thursday. (Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

“I’m very pleased to report that this surge operation and our work here with state and local officials to improve coordination and achieve mutual goals … have yielded the successful results we came here for,” Homan said.

What exactly they came here for has shifted somewhat in the 2½ months since the U.S. Department of Homeland Security launched what officials described as the largest immigration crackdown in its history.

The Trump administration’s stated goals when it launched Metro Surge in December were to investigate allegations of fraud within Minnesota’s Somali community and “target the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens in the Minneapolis area.”

It soon evolved into a mass deportation operation, employing as many as 3,000 masked agents fanned out across the Twin Cities under U.S. Border Patrol Commander-at-Large Gregory Bovino.

When Homan arrived to replace Bovino following the fatal shootings of Renee Macklin Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapolis, the border czar said DHS forces in the state would be drawn down as soon as local officials granted them greater access to county jails.

Were any of those goals achieved? That depends on who you ask.

Fraud investigations

Brooke Rody, of St. Paul, joined about 60 other people who came together to show their support of their Somali neighbors in front of the Dawah Mosque on Fairview Avenue in St. Paul on Friday, Jan. 9, 2026. “I’m a midwife and about 50% of my patients are Somali and I want to show up for them,” Rody said. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

The roots of Operation Metro Surge stretch back to mid-November, when right-wing media outlets circulated claims that Somali immigrants in Minnesota were funneling money from social welfare programs to the terrorist group al-Shabaab.

Fraud schemes targeting these programs in recent years have been well documented in local news coverage and have resulted in dozens of criminal convictions — a majority of them of Somali Americans. None of those cases was linked to al-Shabaab.

Assistant U.S. Attorney for Minnesota Joe Thompson was already investigating a new crop of what he described as “industrial-scale fraud” schemes in the state when the al-Shabaab allegations caught the attention of President Donald Trump.

Metro Surge began in early December when Trump ordered immigration agents and DHS investigators into Minnesota as he vilified Somali immigrants in a series of openly xenophobic public statements, even calling them “garbage” during a Cabinet meeting.

More attention was heaped on Minnesota’s fraud problems later that month when YouTuber Nick Shirley released a viral video leveling accusations at Somali-run day cares in the Twin Cities, claiming they stole $100 million in federal assistance.

The Trump administration responded on Jan. 6 by dispatching thousands more federal agents to the state. The next day, a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot and killed Macklin Good.

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Thompson’s office was reportedly pressured by administration officials to investigate Macklin Good’s widow, leading him and half a dozen other federal prosecutors in his office to resign.

The fraud investigations that drew the administration’s attention to Minnesota in the first place now appear hampered by the wave of resignations, according to B. Todd Jones, who served as Minnesota’s U.S. attorney under Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama.

“The investigations will slow down,” Jones said earlier this month. “You’ve had a drip, drip, drip of people that worked on those cases that have left during the last year because of the dynamics at the Department of Justice, and there’s more that’s happening as we speak.”

‘Worst of the Worst’

Federal immigration agents throw tear gas as they confront protesters near the site where federal agents shot and killed a 37-year-old Minneapolis resident Alex Pretti at Nicollet Avenue and 26th Street in Minneapolis on Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

Homan said Thursday that Metro Surge is leaving Minnesota safer, with more than 4,000 arrests. DHS said the operation targeted “criminal illegal aliens” with prior convictions for serious crimes such as sexual assault, domestic violence and gang affiliation, as well as individuals with final deportation orders.

Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty was among those who publicly disagreed that the state is more secure.

“Anyone who has witnessed this occupation in our community, or seen the footage online, knows that none of this has made us safer,” she said. “Instead, it has caused irreparable damage to our community. Alex Pretti and Renee Good are no longer with their families.”

DHS has a website highlighting the “Worst of the Worst,” and the agency includes nearly 500 people. They list their crimes, but the locations of the most offenses aren’t included, and neither are dates of birth. Without that information, independent verification of these cases through state and federal court records systems is unreliable.

But Minnesota Department of Corrections Commissioner Paul Schnell, who testified Thursday before the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs in Washington, said the “Worst of the Worst” website included nearly 70 people who served time in the state’s prisons and were “then transferred over to ICE because of our cooperation.”

“Multiple times during Operation Metro Surge, we honored pre-scheduled releases to ICE, as is our policy,” Schnell said in written testimony. “The next day, we would find DHS press releases and social media posts hailing these transfers as arrests made as part of federal agents’ efforts to remove ‘violent criminal illegal aliens from the streets of Minnesota.’

“The clear implication was that these individuals had been on the loose and were apprehended by federal agents as part of Operation Metro Surge due to Minnesota’s alleged non-cooperation, when in reality these individuals never touched the street — they went from a Minnesota prison cell into ICE custody due to our voluntary cooperation,” Schnell continued.

In contrast with county jails, the state’s 11 prisons house people after they are convicted of serious crimes and their release dates are known well in advance, “so ICE has ample time to arrange a pickup when a sentence ends,” Schnell added.

The offenses listed on the “Worst of the Worst” website were a mix of serious and less severe, such as property damage or violating court orders,” Schnell said. “These are not what most people would consider ‘worst of the worst’ violent felonies, since these crimes are often neither violent nor felonies.”

He added that “no one is denying that ICE took custody of some serious offenders — they did, and Minnesota welcomes the removal of truly dangerous individuals. But the data strongly indicates that those individuals were a minority of the surge’s targets, and that at least some were a direct transfer from facilities in Minnesota.”

Mass deportation and detentions

Demonstrators carrying shields that say “We Keep Us Safe” line up along the street during protests at the Bishop Henry Whipple federal building near Fort Snelling on Saturday, Feb. 7, 2026. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

For legal experts and other observers, more questions loom. How many detainees have been deported, and how many are lawful green card holders or applicants for asylum and permanent residency? How many detainees have been released from federal facilities and allowed to return home?

“Of that 4,000, who knows where all those people are?” said Virgil Wiebe, director of the Immigration Law Practice Group at the University of St. Thomas School of Law.

Given sweeping enforcement that at times seemed targeted and at other times focused on little more than accent and skin color, “I wouldn’t be surprised if DHS doesn’t have a number on how many actually got deported,” Wiebe said. “Sometimes there’s a rhyme and sometimes there’s a reason (for detention), and sometimes there’s not.”

According to the Cato Institute, which reviewed leaked government data, 73% of individuals detained by ICE have no criminal convictions on record, and nearly half had no conviction or pending criminal charges. Only 5% had previously been convicted of a crime of violence.

“The White House website was claiming that all 4,000 (detainees) were criminals,” Wiebe said. “It’s just ridiculous.”

During the president’s current term, the Trump administration’s efforts around mass deportation have resulted in more than 18,000 “habeas corpus” challenges in federal court from immigrants claiming their detention is illegal, which is more than were filed under the last three administrations combined, according to a national analysis of court filings conducted by ProPublica.

Hand in hand with Operation Metro Surge, DHS announced Operation PARRIS, which stands for Post-Admission Refugee Reverification and Integrity Strengthening — an effort to re-interview refugees whose green card applications are still under review and put them through fresh background checks and other “enhanced vetting.”

The stated goal of Operation PARRIS was to focus on 5,600 refugees awaiting lawful permanent resident status. Rather than simply schedule sit-down interviews, federal agents resorted to armed arrests, removing people from their homes for weeks at a time before releasing them, often out of state, without a bus ticket or plane ride back to Minnesota.

In numerous cases, within 24 hours of being detained at the Whipple Federal Building at Fort Snelling, lawful U.S. residents were flown to federal detention facilities in Texas before judges could order them to be freed. In late January, a federal judge in Minneapolis approved a temporary restraining order against Operation PARRIS, a decision the judge reaffirmed in early February.

“Mandatory detention, in addition to being practically impossible given the number of refugees awaiting inspection and adjustment, seems clearly to be a solution in search of a problem,” wrote U.S. District Judge John Tunheim, a Bill Clinton appointee, in the latest 20-page order. “The swift reinterpretation of long-held and consistently understood applications of the law raises serious constitutional questions.”

The next hearing in a class-action suit filed by the Advocates for Human Rights will take place Thursday at the federal courthouse in Minneapolis.

Will Operation Metro Surge deter future illegal immigration or the hiring of undocumented workers? Given an estimated 130,000 undocumented immigrants in Minnesota, 4,000 detentions would total a 3% reduction by the most liberal estimates, even if every detainee were, in fact, undocumented — and many were not.

“What I haven’t heard or seen are actions against employers,” Wiebe noted. “Maybe intelligence was gathered as a part of this operation, and there will be follow-up later. I’m not advocating (for that), but historically, the biggest burden falls on individual workers.”

“Will it deter (illegal immigration)? It’s really hard to answer, because they certainly achieved the goal of scaring the hell out of people, and not just people who were undocumented,” he continued. “People with green cards, people who are U.S. citizens, all were afraid to go to work. I don’t know if there will be enough residual fear to convince people to leave without a constant presence. If an occupying force leaves, I’m guessing the fear will subside.”

Local cooperation

Minnesota Corrections Commissioner Paul Schnell shows video from the Lino Lakes prison sallyport at the Department of Corrections offices in St. Paul on Jan. 22, 2026. DOC coordinated with ICE to turn over two people on Jan. 12, 2026, who had immigration detainers and who had reached the end of their prison terms, which was shown in the video. The next day, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security listed the two men as “criminal illegal aliens arrested yesterday during Operation Metro Surge.” (Mara H. Gottfried / Pioneer Press)

In explaining the administration’s decision to end operation Metro Surge on Thursday, Homan cited increased cooperation with officials in charge of county jails.

“We now have the ability to arrest criminal aliens in the safety and security of jails throughout the state at the time they’re being released, like we’ve done in other states,” he said. “As far as the jails, we got more cooperation.”

He said that’s important because arresting people who are public safety threats in a jail “just makes sense” from a safety standpoint, plus it reduces the number of agents needed for an arrest.

But on the ground, there don’t appear to be policy shifts at Minnesota’s county jails.

“We have not changed anything,” Dakota County Sheriff Joe Leko said Friday. The jail already gave “access to ICE to come into our jail to interview detainees to determine if they are going to be going through the (ICE) removal process.”

If someone has an ICE detainer, the Dakota County Sheriff’s Office notifies ICE “prior to release,” Leko added.

Hennepin County Sheriff Dawanna Witt, whose jail has been under particular scrutiny, said Friday that the county has not made changes to jail policy. A sheriff’s office spokeswoman said the jail does not notify ICE unless the federal agency has a judicially signed warrant.

“Let me be clear: The Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office does not conduct any civil immigration enforcement,” Witt said at a Friday news conference. “… Our office is operating in the exact same way as it did when I took office here at the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office. We have not entered into any new agreements with (the) federal government.”

There was a shift from when Homan replaced Bovino on the ground in Minnesota after federal agents fatally shot Pretti in Minneapolis.

“What changed was when Tom Homan came here, I could get a conversation with someone,” Gov. Tim Walz said at a Thursday news conference, adding there previously hadn’t been “a single interaction” with DHS Secretary Kristi Noem or Bovino about the immigration surge.

In addition to Walz, Homan also met with Witt and the mayors of St. Paul and Minneapolis, among other officials.

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Homan said Thursday that he’s “directed the strategic placement of (ICE) officers in certain areas throughout the state that can respond quickly to sheriffs who want to release somebody and notify us. We need to be nearby so they don’t hold them unnecessarily.”

Minnesota’s county jails and prisons cannot hold people in custody solely based on civil immigration detainer requests from ICE, according to an analysis by state Attorney General Keith Ellison of state and federal laws, and how courts have interpreted them.

In Dakota County, ICE is able to pick people up most of the time as they’re released from the jail in Hastings, but sometimes they don’t get there in time, Leko said.

Pioneer Press reporters Nick Ferraro and Alex Derosier contributed to this report, which includes information from the Associated Press.

Women’s hockey: Gophers swept by Buckeyes

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The game unfolded differently, but the end result was the same as the No. 3 Minnesota women’s hockey team lost at No. 2 Ohio State Saturday, completing a two-game series sweep at the hands of the Buckeyes.

Unlike Saturday, when the hosts scored the game’s first four goals before Minnesota’s late rally fell well short, the Gophers scored first in Columbus, Ohio, only to see the hosts blitz back past them by the end of the second period en route to a 3-1 win.

Chloe Primerano put the Gophers up 1-0 on a power play goal at 12:09 of the first period, but Ohio State knotted the score less than 150 seconds later.

The contest remained 1-0 for the first two-thirds of the middle frame before the Buckeyes took the lead for good at 15:54. Ohio State all-but sunk the dagger with a power-play tally 11 seconds before intermission. That strike proved to be the final score of the day.

Goaltender Hannah Clark made 23 saves for Minnesota (24-7-1 overall, 18-7-1 WCHA) while her counterpart, Hailey Macleod, made 21 saves for the Buckeyes (28-4, 22-4).

The loss ensured a third-place finish for the Gophers in the WCHA regular-season standings. Minnesota returns home for the final pre-playoff series of the season next weekend, with tenth-ranked Minnesota-Duluth paying Ridder Arena a visit. The Gophers/Bulldogs series opens Friday night at 6 p.m., with Saturday’s regular-season finale slated to start at 2 p.m. Friday night’s game will be televised on both Fox 9+ and BTN+.

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Olympic Curling: Team Peterson wins again, improves to 3-1 in round robin play

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Team Peterson’s push for a spot in the Olympic medal round took another step in the right direction Saturday in Italy.

Tabitha Peterson and Co. dropped Japan 7-4 in round robin play, moving the Americans to 3-1 in these Olympics.

That puts the U.S. in a tie with Switzerland for second place, a half game behind undefeated Sweden. The top four teams at the end of round robin play reach the medal rounds.

Team Peterson —which features East Metro sisters Tabitha and Tara Peterson as well as Taylor Anderson-Heide and Cory Thiesse, the latter of whom won a silver in mixed doubles earlier in these Olympics — next plays at 7:30 a.m. Sunday against China. China is 2-1 in round robin play.

Japan led 3-2 through four ends, but the United States responded by scoring a point each in the fifth and sixth frames.

The Americans led 4-3 heading into the eighth end, with Japan possessing the hammer.  But with the U.S. having three stones in scoring position, Japan sailed its final stone through the house to give the Americans a rare three-point steal to effectively seal the match.

Japan mustered only one point in the ninth end, at which point it conceded.

Japan, who’d medaled in each of the previous two Olympics, fell to 1-3 with the loss.

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Joe Soucheray: If ICE returns to Minnesota, it had better do things differently

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White House border czar Tom Homan said Thursday that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement will be scaling back, that the surge in Minnesota is effectively over, and to that hallelujahs rang out. The presence of ICE was calamitous and heartbreaking.

But we’re scaling back, he said. We are leaving.

Homan knew perfectly well that he couldn’t admit chaos or in any way reflect poorly on his employer. It was a bit like the city burned down and Homan could not really apologize for the agency’s campfire jumping its ring of rocks.

Homan was a Barack Obama appointment in 2013, named by President Obama as the executive associate director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement. In 2015, Obama awarded Homan a Presidential Rank Award as a Distinguished Executive. He was named acting director of the agency by President Donald Trump in 2017.

Homan has never looked or sounded the part, of a distinguished executive that is. He has the nasal stamp of a fight manger with an up-and-comer under his wing at Gleason’s Gym, 130 Water St., Brooklyn, N.Y. He is a New Yorker, but from West Carthage, way up in the northwest corner of the state. He is a third-generation lifelong cop, just as his grandfather and father. Now he wears suits and gratefully enough wore a suit when he came to town to act the role of the adult in the room. His appointee here, Greg Bovino, wore an overcoat of theatrical rank and a Sam Brown belt. That didn’t help.

It is not at all untoward to congratulate Homan and even thank him, although the ICE sins were of such gravity that it is unlikely anybody out on the street would bake him a pie. But he was the desperately needed adult, apparently successful in convincing the governor, Tim Walz, and the Minneapolis mayor, Jacob Frey, to tone down their hectoring, which was tantamount to fanning the flames so dangerously escaping the fire.

This state could not have taken much more. It was a horrible and intrusive 72 days or so, two people shot dead, children taken, disorder and fear around every corner. It was a lousy deal. In the coldest stretch of the year, the citizens turned out every day and every night to confront, to shriek, to question, to bang drums, to blow whistles and to plead. It is probably a miracle that even Homan’s superiors knew that lines were being crossed and that this surge was not working.

Homan, get to Minnesota.

And if his arrival and the outcome is a miracle, we’ll take it.

Now what do we do? So long as Trump steers his presidency by grievance and personal affronts, ICE could return. Trump does not win Minnesota and his dander is unpredictable, as blue states in particular incur his wrath.

But the chaos cannot all be blamed on Washington. Minnesota, and Minneapolis especially, are governed by democratic socialists who are predisposed to holding law enforcement in contempt. Well, ICE deserved what it got, but a functioning city cannot continue to hold dear blatant separation ordinances that require local officials to ignore federal law. There has to be a better way. There must have been a better way. Homan and his first boss, Obama, deported approximately 3 million people, a record, and there wasn’t a peep from Minnesota, not a peep. In fact, Obama was called the “Deporter-in-Chief.”

I wanted to ask Homan what the difference was between then and now. I got as close as being in the same building with him when he arrived at KSTP-TV for a Tom Hauser interview. But Homan’s schedule was tight and I was informed, forget it, pal.

OK. But the difference is important. If ICE comes back, it better have specific targets and a specific plan. Don’t tell us, just do it.

And for our part, God willing and the creek don’t rise, we’ll have a different governor and a different mayor in Minneapolis.

Joe Soucheray can be reached at jsoucheray@pioneerpress.com. Soucheray’s “Garage Logic” podcast can be heard at garagelogic.com.

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