Homeland Security vastly overstating jail and prison immigration holds, MN Corrections says

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The Minnesota Department of Corrections contacted all county jails in the state Monday to ask how many people in custody had immigration detention holds. The number totaled 94, Corrections Commissioners Paul Schnell said Thursday.

Combined with the 207 people with immigration holds in Minnesota prisons, the number is about 1,000 less than U.S. Department of Homeland Security has been saying, Schnell pointed out.

With a federal immigration enforcement surge underway in Minnesota, DHS has repeatedly said 1,360 people in the state have detention holds and, in response to Pioneer Press questions Thursday, they repeated those numbers:

“As DHS stated, across the state of Minnesota nearly 470 criminal illegal aliens including violent criminal illegal aliens have been RELEASED into communities,” a DHS spokesperson said. “We have more than 1,360 active detainers on illegal aliens in the custody across all jurisdictions in Minnesota. We are once again calling on Governor Walz and his fellow sanctuary politicians to commit to honoring all ICE detainers. Instead, Governor Walz and Mayor Frey are actively encouraging an organized resistance to ICE and federal law enforcement officers.”

Schnell said DOC’s count is “nowhere close” to DHS’ 1,360 figure.

Meanwhile, a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement official said Thursday that “the 1,300 number is statewide in counties that we have lodged.”

“They may not have record of it if they don’t file them because they don’t honor them. They have no reason to keep them,” said Marcos Charles, ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations executive associate director.

‘Sheriffs want to help’

ICE can pick up people with detainers from the state’s Corrections Department, said Charles, who told reporters that federal immigration officials are now “opening up dialogue” with some Minnesota counties to see if they will honor their detainers as well.

“The governor should talk to the counties and let them honor our detainers. Many of these sheriffs want to help us,” he said.

But Schnell said Charles’ statement “that the governor controls the actions of county jails is patently false.”

State law says local law enforcement cannot hold people in custody in county jails solely based on civil immigration detainer requests from ICE, according to a legal opinion last year from Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison.

“Civil liability in this area can be substantial,” the opinion noted and pointed to two lawsuits in Minnesota, one in which a person was awarded $30,000 in damages and more than $248,000 in attorney fees and another settled for $200,000.

The “vast majority of sheriffs across the state do provide notification to ICE” of people who have immigration holds, Schnell said.

When a person is arrested and booked into a county jail, ICE works to determine a person’s legal status, Schnell said. “In the meantime, the person can be seen by the court, could be subject to a bail release, released on their personal recognizance … and there is nothing that the jail can do to hold custody of that person, to wait for ICE, to pick them up,” Schnell added.

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At the Dakota County jail, ICE placed roughly 80 detainers last year, said Sheriff Joe Leko. “Every single one, ICE was notified of their release and I can recall dozens and dozens of times of agents waiting there” to pick them up, he said.

Ramsey County Sheriff Bob Fletcher said his jail occasionally receives judicial arrest warrants that include a complaint signed by a deportation officer and a judge, which are different matters than immigration detainers. For example, a person currently in custody at the Ramsey County jail has such a warrant and is being held; the U.S. Marshals Service is scheduled to pick him up.

Jail rosters are public information. Two immigration officers were in the Ramsey County jail last week to interview people who may be in the U.S. illegally, Fletcher said. He said he hasn’t had reports of people being arrested by ICE as they left the jail.

The majority of people in the Ramsey County jail are “repeat offenders that are citizens,” Fletcher added.

County boards can enter into agreements with ICE, according to another advisory opinion from Ellison. Seven of Minnesota’s 87 counties have agreements with ICE. They are Cass, Crow Wing, Freeborn, Itasca, Kandiyohi, Mille Lacs and Sherburne counties, according to ICE.

Released or handed over?

Federal agents search for an address along Thomas Avenue near Avon Street in St. Paul’s Frogtown neighborhood on Friday, Jan. 16, 2026. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

Schnell said Thursday that DHS has insinuated that the feds arrested people who were released into the community when it was a matter of transferring them from prison into ICE custody.

He highlighted a Jan. 12 case.

DOC notified ICE when two men — Meng Khong Yang and Joshua Fornoh — were in prison, in accordance with state law, Schnell said. ICE issued detainers for both men.

Schnell showed surveillance video from the sallyport at the Lino Lakes prison on Jan. 12, which he said showed this transfer of Yang and Fornoh to ICE.

“As is the case for every single release where there is an ICE detainer in place, we contacted them weeks before the individuals reached the end of their prison term … and we coordinated pickup arrangements with them,” Schnell said.

The next day, DHS included Yang and Fornoh in a press release that listed “criminal illegal aliens arrested yesterday during Operation Metro Surge.”

Assistant DHS Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in the release: “Minnesota’s sanctuary politicians have chosen to side with criminal illegal aliens and ignored their American victims. Just yesterday our law enforcement arrested rapists, armed robbers, and drug traffickers. We are doing what Governor Walz and Mayor Frey REFUSED to do — make Minnesota safe again.”

But Schnell emphasized that when it came to Yang and Fornoh, “their custody was transferred from the DOC directly to (ICE). They were not picked up in the community, as is implied.”

Requested meeting

DHS hasn’t provided a source for their numbers of people with ICE detainers, jurisdictional breakdown or timeframe.

Schnell said they’ve requested to meet with DHS to “square up these numbers, to talk about things that we think could improve processes,” but as of Thursday morning “we have not had a response to those inquiries.”

Schnell said he wants the public to understand that:

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• DOC operates state prisons, not county jails.

• “We do not decide who receives an ICE detainer.”

• “When DHS conflates the processes and procedures of state prisons, county jails and ICE detention into a single talking point, the result is misinformation.”

• DOC has reviewed every person that DHS has publicly named as those they’ve arrested and many were never in DOC custody, several have no Minnesota court or prison records, some had short stays in county jails in Minnesota, and some were in custody in other states.

“Many were released directly to ICE, including cases going back to 2009, 2001, even into the 1990s,” Schnell said. “In some cases, DHS publicly implied Minnesota recently released individuals who were transferred to ICE years ago or decades ago.”

Alex Derosier contributed to this report.

‘Heated Rivalry’ stars Hudson Williams and Connor Storrie to be torchbearers for Winter Olympics

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MILAN (AP) — The actors co-starring in the hit hockey romance TV series “Heated Rivalry” are set to be among the torchbearers carrying the Olympic flame on the way to the Opening Ceremony for the Milan Cortina Games.

The organizing committee announced Thursday that Hudson Williams and Connor Storrie will take part in the torch relay. The Opening Ceremony is scheduled for Feb. 6.

The series based off “Game Changers” books has captivated viewers with the fictional story of a Canadian and a Russian hockey player sustaining a decade-long secret relationship.

The first season became the the No. 1 series on HBO Max. Originally developed for the Canadian streaming service Crave, the show scored a distribution deal with HBO and has already been renewed for a second season, and it will broadcast in Italy beginning next month.

AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

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Minnesota employment flat in December; jobless rate 4.1%

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Minnesota’s monthly job growth was flat in December as job losses in the private sector were offset by government hiring, according to data released Thursday by the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development.

The state’s unemployment rate rose one-tenth of a percentage point to 4.1% as more people entered the workforce. This compares with a nation rate over the same period of 4.4%

The private sector lost 1,700 jobs between November and December on a seasonally adjusted basis, DEED said, and the Local Government subsector added 1,700 jobs in the same period. The labor force increased by more than 2,100 people and the labor force participation rate stayed at 68.2% over the month.

“While our unemployment rate remains low by historical standards, its gradual upward rise continues a trend we’ve seen over several months. Chaos and uncertainty associated with the federal government shutdown, erratic tariffs and changes to national immigration policy were already weighing on Minnesota’s economy, and it’s hard to imagine this month’s unprecedented federal actions in Minnesota will be anything but harmful in economic terms,” said DEED Commissioner Matt Varilek.

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Lindsey Vonn, Chloe Kim, Mikaela Shiffrin headline US ski and snowboard squad named to the Olympics

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By PAT GRAHAM and EDDIE PELLS, AP Sports Writers

Lindsey Vonn’s stirring return to ski racing in her 40s will hit its crescendo at the Milan Cortina Olympics, while the comeback quest of another U.S. gold medalist, snowboarder Jamie Anderson, came up short.

Anderson, a two-time champion in slopestyle who returned to the sport after having two kids, failed to reach a podium this season and will not join the U.S. Ski & Snowboard team in the mountains of Italy.

Mikaela Shiffrin made her fourth Olympic team, while snowboarder Chloe Kim is trying to make it three gold medals at three Olympics — though her health is in question after hurting her shoulder in training earlier this month.

They’re the headliners as U.S. Ski and Snowboard named its 97-person roster on Thursday. It contained few surprises, since virtually all the spots were determined based on results over the last two years.

The 41-year-old Vonn, Kim and Shiffrin, who have five Olympic gold medals between them, lead a roster that is short in experience. There are 48 first-time Olympians.

In all, there are 50 women and 47 men, ranging in ages from 15 (halfpipe freestyle skier Abby Winterberger) to 44 (snowboardcross rider Nick Baumgartner, at his fifth Olympics, and defending champion in the mixed event). The team is slated to be officially announced on Monday.

The skiers and snowboarders brought home 15 of the United States’ 25 medals at the Beijing Games four years ago. They’ll make up almost half of the entire contingent the U.S. brings to Milan Cortina.

“I am confident about the impact they will make in Italy,” U.S. Ski & Snowboard president and CEO Sophie Goldschmidt said. “More than the results, our athletes are also bringing some of the most captivating story lines to Milano Cortina.”

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Vonn returned last season after a partial knee replacement and quickly began to show the form that made her a four-time overall World Cup champion. She’s won two World Cup downhill races this season — to bring her career total to 84 — and will be a favorite in both speed events in Cortina. She may even pair with Shiffrin as the team combined event makes its Olympic debut.

Shiffrin is trying to bounce back after going 0 for 6 in her bid to win a medal four years ago. She captured gold in the slalom at the 2014 Sochi Games and gold in giant slalom four years later in South Korea. She’s locked in this season in the slalom, winning six races.

This will be the fourth and final Olympics for cross-country skier Jessie Diggins, a three-time Olympic medalist, including gold in the team sprint in 2018, who plans to retire at the end of the season.

“Throughout this season, we’ve seen quite remarkable results from our athletes across all 10 of our sports,” said Anouk Patty, the chief of sport for U.S. Ski & Snowboard. “I know this is one of the strongest teams we have sent to the Games.”

Alpine skiing

It’s been a bumpy road back to the Olympics for Breezy Johnson, who tore her right knee a month before the 2022 Beijing Games. The 30-year-old Johnson competed at 2018 Pyeongchang Games.

Vonn and Paula Moltzan both were once taught at Buck Hill in Minnesota under the tutelage of late coach Erich Sailer.

Ryan Cochran-Siegle was a silver medalist in the super-G at the Beijing Games.

Snowboarding

Eight years ago, Red Gerard lit up the Olympics by winning gold in slopestyle at 17. He’s back for his third Olympics and now, there’s another 17-year-old on the squad. It’s Ollie Martin, who is the first to land a pair of 2160-degree spins in opposite directions and could be a threat in both slopestyle and big air.

The post-Shaun White era on the halfpipe starts with a roster full of underdogs. Chase Josey returns for his third Olympics and Jake Pates is back after missing in 2022. Neither has finished higher than sixth.

Freeskiing

Nick Goepper, who has two silver medals and a gold in slopestyle, moves over to the halfpipe for his fourth Olympics. He’ll be joined there by Alex Ferreira, who has silver and bronze on the halfpipe.

David Wise, who has two gold medals and a silver, didn’t make the team after failing to reach the podium over the qualifying period. Also missing is big air silver medalist Colby Stevenson.

In slopestyle, Alex Hall returns to defend his slopestyle title.

Moguls & aerials

Jaelin Kauf is the reigning Olympic silver medalist in moguls, while Chris Lillis will try to add to the gold medal he won with Ashley Caldwell and Justin Schoenefeld in mixed team aerials in China four years ago. Winter Vinecki has a fitting first name as she competes in her second Olympics.

AP Winter Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics