The ruling in federal court in Minnesota lands as Immigration and Customs Enforcement faces scrutiny over an internal memo claiming judge-signed warrants aren’t needed to enter homes without consent.
A federal judge in Minnesota ruled last Saturday that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents violated the Fourth Amendment after they forcibly entered a Minnesota man’s home without a judicial warrant.
The conduct of the agents closely mirrors a previously undisclosed ICE directive that claims agents are permitted to enter people’s homes using an administrative warrant, rather than a warrant signed by a judge.
The ruling, issued by US District Court judge Jeffrey Bryan in response to a petition for a writ of habeas corpus on January 17, did not assess the legality of ICE’s internal guidance itself. But it squarely holds that federal agents violated the United States Constitution when they entered a residence without consent and without a judge-signed warrant—the same conditions ICE leadership has privately told officers is sufficient for home arrests, according to a complaint filed by Whistleblower Aid, a nonprofit legal group representing whistleblowers from the public and private sector.



In a country with more guns than people? You do the math on that one. It’s only a matter of time until they attack the wrong house and get into a big firefight with Methany and Jim-bob.
ICE has a 30 billion dollar yearly budget, bigger than Canada’s entire military budget. They have planes and weaponized drones and satellite surveillance and machine guns and gas and bombs and a coordinated network of committed fascists. Small arms can’t really compete…
Methany don’t care.
Well ICE just killed another observer so I am going to guess it is going to get ugly now. I was just want to ride the storm out in peace.
If they show up at your house, riding the storm out in peace might not be an option for you.
I am literately sitting here waiting for a storm to hit. I am not talking in metaphor.
Easy on them hammers, Jake
Anytime, now.