Oglala Sioux Tribe says three tribal members arrested in Minneapolis are in ICE detention

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By GRAHAM LEE BREWER

The president of Oglala Sioux Tribe in South Dakota on Tuesday called for the immediate release of tribal members who were detained at a homeless encampment by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in Minnesota last week.

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Three of the four Oglala Sioux Tribe members who were arrested in Minneapolis on Friday have been transferred to an ICE facility at Fort Snelling, President Frank Star Comes Out said in a statement released with a memorandum sent to federal immigration authorities.

“The Oglala Sioux Tribe’s memorandum makes clear that ‘tribal citizens are not aliens’ and are ‘categorically outside immigration jurisdiction,’” Star Comes Out said. “Enrolled tribal members are citizens of the United States by statute and citizens of the Oglala Sioux Nation by treaty.”

Details about the circumstances that led to their detention were unclear.

In the memorandum sent to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, Star Comes Out said the when tribal nation reached out to the agency it was provided with only the first names of the men. Homeland Security refused to release more information, unless the tribe “entered into an immigration agreement with ICE.”

DHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday evening.

Star Comes Out said the tribe has no plans enter an agreement with ICE.

In a post to his Facebook page, Star Comes Out said that the four detained tribal members are experiencing homelessness and living under a bridge in Minneapolis. One of the members was released from detention.

In the press release, he demanded information on the status of the three men in detention, the release of all tribal citizens in ICE custody and a meeting between the tribe and the government.

6 puppies treated for a suspected opioid overdose in Washington will find new homes soon

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By CEDAR ATTANASIO

SEATTLE (AP) — Six puppies in rural Washington state will soon be up for adoption after being revived after a suspected drug overdose — and some of them might go home with the fire-station staff who saved them.

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Two people dropped off three of the sickened puppies at Sky Valley Fire, about an hour’s drive northeast of Seattle, on Sunday. Officials believe the animals either breathed or ate fentanyl.

Firefighters sprayed the anti-overdose medication naloxone up their noses, and also treated them with oxygen and even performed CPR. It wasn’t long before their tails started wagging, Battalion Chief Brandon Vargas said Tuesday.

Meanwhile, sheriff’s deputies tracked down the people believed to have dropped off the dogs and found three more puppies that also needed treatment. An animal cruelty or neglect investigation is underway. The pair claimed they were caring for the puppies temporarily, authorities said.

There have been a number of other cases nationally where pets have been saved after being exposed to fentanyl or other opioids.

The puppies have a clean bill of health, but are being quarantined for about one more week before being released for adoption, said David Byrd, manager of Snohomish County Animal Services.

The Everett animal shelter that has been monitoring their health has been overwhelmed with adoption offers, and asked people to not call the shelter with questions about the puppies.

“We definitely have some personnel that are interested in wanting to adopt those,” Vargas said.

ICE Prosecutor Who Runs Racist X Account Returns to Dallas Immigration Court 

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In February of last year, the Texas Observer reported that James “Jim” Joseph Rodden—an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) assistant chief counsel who acts as a prosecutor for ICE in immigration court in Dallas—operates a white supremacist X account named GlomarResponder, based on an overwhelming number of biographical details that the Observer matched through publicly available documents, other social media activity, and courtroom observation.

The account has over 17,000 followers and has routinely posted hateful statements, including that “America is a White nation,” that “‘Migrants’ are all criminals,” and that “All blacks are foreign to my people,” in addition to posts with apparent praise of Adolf Hitler.

After the Observer’s initial story was published, Rodden was apparently pulled from federal immigration court schedules. Three members of Congress sent letters to ICE and the Department of Homeland Security demanding an investigation into Rodden. ICE responded in a letter last March to Congressman Marc Veasey, who represents part of Dallas, stating that the ICE Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) “understands the seriousness of the allegations and will ensure the allegations are addressed appropriately, fairly, and expeditiously” and that typically “OPR administrative investigations are completed within 120 days.” ICE has not provided any further information since.

Upon receiving a tip from a source that works inside the Dallas Immigration Court, the Observer arrived at the courtroom of Judge Deitrich H. Sims Tuesday afternoon ahead of the day’s merits hearings for federal immigration cases. When the Observer opened the door to the courtroom, Rodden was sitting at the prosecutor’s desk. A court clerk said the Observer was not allowed to sit in on the hearings. The Observer also obtained a photo of Rodden exiting the courtroom Tuesday wearing his staff badge. 

James Rodden at the federal immigration court in Dallas on January 13, 2026.

ICE did not immediately respond to the Observer’s request for comment on Rodden’s employment status. 

Rodden’s apparent return to work as an ICE prosecutor in immigration court comes at a time when ICE’s aggressive immigration enforcement tactics are driving national controversy and mass protests, especially after an ICE agent in Minneapolis shot and killed Renee Good, a mother and award-winning poet, on January 7.

Rodden’s X account, GlomarResponder, is set to private but is still active. On September 28, 2025, the account responded to the question “Can anyone point to me exactly where America started going downhill?” The account responded: “November 6, 1860”—the date that President Abraham Lincoln, the president whose administration ended slavery, was elected.

The post ICE Prosecutor Who Runs Racist X Account Returns to Dallas Immigration Court  appeared first on The Texas Observer.

Opinion: Kingsbridge Armory Deal Shows Community is Key to Building in New York

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“After 30 years of organizing and a unanimous City Council vote, the Kingsbridge Armory is finally moving forward with a plan rooted in community priorities,” the author writes. “For the Bronx, this is a historic milestone. For New York City, it should be a model.”

A 2023 press conference where city leaders announced long-awaited renovation plans for the Kingsbridge Armory. (Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office)

New York’s recent mayoral transition is giving the city a fresh opportunity to reconsider not only what it builds, but also how projects get built and who gets to shape them. As Mayor Zohran Mamdani sets his housing and economic development agenda, he should look no further than the Bronx’s massive Kingsbridge Armory: a public asset that sat empty for three decades amid neighborhood-wide displacement, disinvestment and widening inequality. 

Late last year, I stood at City Hall with Councilmember Pierina Sanchez, Congressman Adriano Espaillat, New York City Economic Development Corporation leadership, and dozens of union workers to announce a milestone Bronx residents have organized for across generations, reflecting a hard-won shift in what New York City can be if it chooses to build with communities. 

After 30 years of organizing and a unanimous City Council vote, the Kingsbridge Armory is finally moving forward with a plan rooted in community priorities: family-sustaining jobs, small business protections, deep affordability, and environmental standards that match the urgency of this moment. For the Bronx, this is a historic milestone.  For New York City, it should be a model.  

What makes Kingsbridge different is not simply the scale of the building, but the scale of the community leadership behind it. From the very first day of planning, my organization, the Northwest Bronx Community and Clergy Coalition, organized to ensure that the Armory redevelopment reflects the needs and leverages the assets of the people who live and work in Kingsbridge. In 2022, we helped launch and co-lead the Together for Kingsbridge visioning process alongside Councilmember Sanchez and NYCEDC, engaging more than 4,000 Bronx community members over seven months through meetings, surveys and workshops. 

People were clear: they wanted a project that prioritized young people, created family-sustaining jobs, built wealth for existing residents, supported local businesses and maximized community ownership. That process, which culminated with the “Together for Kingsbridge” vision plan, produced a community vision that helped set the terms for what the project should be. 

But visioning alone is not sufficient. Communities across the city know what it feels like to be asked for input after the major decisions are already made. Once the city selected a developer, we reimagined what it would mean for the community to be more than a stakeholder and instead to be a partner with real leverage. We signed on as a development partner and brokered an unprecedented agreement to take an ownership stake in the Armory, securing upfront commitments to community space, affordable commercial and manufacturing space, and family-sustaining jobs. 

The partnership worked both ways. While this agreement amounts to major wins for the community, it also strengthens the project’s ability to succeed. NWBCCC brought aligned funders and mission-driven capital to the table. We also initiated the process to identify commercial and community tenants who can thrive at the Armory, and we brokered critical conversations between the developer, community leaders, and key decision-makers. We didn’t just fight back against out-of-touch or ill-conceived ideas for the Armory—we fought forward as partners, helping shape a project that can actually deliver.  

We also organized to ensure the project will be built with union labor through a Project Labor Agreement, because public assets should not be developed on the backs of underpaid workers.  

And then, the night before the historic City Council vote, our coalition landed one of the most important safeguards of the project: a signed Community Benefits Agreement. That hallmark, legally-binding agreement not only enshrines our community priorities into the blueprint for the Armory; it establishes expectations for accountability and transparency so the commitments can be tracked, enforced and protected over time. After months of negotiating the agreement and years of community organizing, the plan for the Armory’s redevelopment is one that we can be proud of.

This is what community power looks like—aligning stakeholders, raising mission-aligned capital, and advancing a new model for development that actually gets projects built.  

The Kingsbridge Armory will unlock opportunities for generations of Bronxites. It can create real pathways for young people, anchor local entrepreneurship, and reinvest wealth back into the community that kept this vision alive. New York City has a choice to make in the new administration: it can continue the old pattern of top-down development that fuels displacement and distrust, or it can adopt the Kingsbridge model where communities are engaged early and meaningfully, and able to own and govern the future being built in their backyards.

Let Kingsbridge be a lesson to the city, the state, and the developers working in our neighborhoods: real community partnership is how progress becomes real and how it lasts. 

Sandra Lobo is the executive director of the Northwest Bronx Community and Clergy Coalition.

The post Opinion: Kingsbridge Armory Deal Shows Community is Key to Building in New York appeared first on City Limits.