Judge hears arguments as state of Minnesota seeks temporary halt to ongoing ICE operation

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Judge hears arguments as state of Minnesota seeks temporary halt to ongoing ICE operation
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The hearing came two days after the shooting death of 37-year-old Alex Pretti.

A federal judge heard arguments Monday on the state of Minnesota's request for a temporary restraining order to halt the Trump administration'sAn attorney representing the state said in Monday's hearing that the enforcement action, dubbed "Operation Metro Surge," is the nation's single largest escalation of immigration enforcement, despite Minnesota not having the largest number of non-citizens with criminal convictions.

"Yet the federal government has sent an unprecedented force of thousands of masked agents armed with assault rifles to spread through our region in roving patrols that are racially profiling and inflicting violence on people," argued state attorney Lindsey Middlecamp. Brian Carter, another state attorney, argued that there's a lack of precedent because "the conduct is so outrageously unlawful we've never seen it before." "In the 250 years of this nation's history, we have never seen a federal government attack states based on personal animosity," Carter argued. "Well, we've seen the federal government take very robust responses to states that aren't yielding to federal authority," U.S. District Judge Katherine Menendez interrupted.When Judge Menendez asked what exactly the state wants her to do, Carter said, "End Operation Metro Surge." "The whole Operation Metro Surge is an illegal means to an illegal end, so just ending the whole thing is the appropriate remedy there," Carter said. "You understand the federal government has a lot of power in this area, so I'm trying to figure out what principle you're asking me to apply that will sort out legal federal law enforcement from this 10th Amendment argument," Judge Menendez said. An attorney representing the federal government called the state's request to end Operation Metro Surge "staggering." "The effect of their requested relief would be essentially removing the officers whom the president has concluded should be there to enforce federal immigration law," said attorney Brantley Mayers. "It's pretty staggering.""They're challenging one law enforcement initiative," replied Judge Menendez. "They're not challenging the enforcement of immigration law writ large." Mayers said that if the judge issues an order to end Operation Metro Surge, it "would be very difficult to implement."The judge also said she is "grappling" with the alleged illegalities identified by the state, pointing to other lawsuits filed in Minnesota. "Isn't the answer to the flood of illegality to fight each illegal act?" Judge Menendez asked, noting that the conduct of federal agents is already the subject of separate litigation. Menendez also questioned how she should draw the line between legitimate federal pressure and illegal coercion. "How do I decide when a law enforcement response crosses the line from a legitimate response to one that violates the 10th Amendment?" she asked. Carter argued that there are "4,000 masked, armed federal agents engaged in systemic, pervasive, and illegal violent behavior" that is "so far out on the other side of the line." "We've got retaliation, we've got racial profiling, we've got warrantless entries into homes," Carter said.Saturday in which she sought information about the state's voter rolls and records on Medicaid and Food and Nutrition Service programs as a condition for ICE agents to pull back on enforcement, "can only be described as a ransom note." "President Trump himself took to social media last night to reaffirm those very purposes. Their message is clear," Middlecamp said. "Minnesota can either change its laws and policies or suffer an invasion of masked armed forces. This is precisely the type of coercion and commandeering that violates the 10th Amendment." Middlecamp argued there has been "excessive force and unsupported detentions and arrests of legal observers" and said that DHS agents have been collecting photos and license plates of observers so they can confront them. "Even though they are not charged with a crime or reasonably suspected of a crime, there has been indiscriminate use of chemical irritants," she said.The attorney argued that Operation Metro Surge is having "clear impacts on the sovereign interest to create and protect public safety, public health, and public education." Sara Lathrop, an attorney for the city of Minneapolis, said the weekend's shooting "demonstrated in a terrifying way that the current situation is absolutely untenable."In response, Judge Menendez said that "not all crises have a fix from a district court injunction." Carter, the state attorney, wrapped up arguments by saying the state came to the court to "protect its sovereignty." "The state of Minnesota comes here today to protect its sovereignty, to stop the harm to its sovereign rights under the Constitution that sets states up as independent sovereigns," Carter said. "If we can't come to the court and vindicate those rights, where else does a state go?""I do not intend in any way for the depth of my analysis or whatever time I take to write to be seen as a belief that this is unimportant," she said. "It's because it's extremely important that I'm doing everything I can to get it right," the judge said.

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