
Lawsuit accuses federal agents of racial profiling in Minneapolis immigration operation
Legal challenges continue to mount for the Trump administration over its ongoing immigration crackdown in Minnesota , where the shooting death of an unarmed U.S. citizen last week triggered days of sometimes violent protests. On Thursday, the American Civil Liberties Union filed a class-action lawsuit in U.S. District Court for Minnesota against Immigration and Customs Enforcement on behalf of three people who say they have been racially profiled in recent weeks, the ACLU said in a statement. âThe Trump administration has been clear in its targeting of the Somali and Latino communities through Operation Metro Surge. President Trump called people from Somalia âgarbage,â said âwe donât want them in our country,â and told them to âgo back to where they came from,ââ the statement read in part. âFollowing Trumpâs comments, ICE and CBP agents have indiscriminately arrested - without warrants or probable cause - Minnesotans solely because the agents perceived them to be Somali or Latino,â it said. According to the lawsuit, multiple masked ICE agents stopped U.S citizen Mubashir Khalif Hussen, 20, on Dec. 10 during his lunch break. Hussen, who is of Somali descent and is the manager of a local mental health provider, said in the lawsuit that he repeatedly told the agents that he was a citizen but that they refused to look at his identification. Hussen was put into an SUV and driven to a processing center where he was shackled and had his fingerprints taken, the lawsuit says. He was released after he provided a photo of his passport. âAt no time did any officer ask me whether I was a citizen or if I had any immigration status,â Hussen said in a statement. âThey did not ask for any identifying information, nor did they ask about my ties to the community, how long I had lived in the Twin Cities, my family in Minnesota, or anything else about my circumstances.â Federal agents questioned Mahamed Eydarus, 25, the same day, according to the lawsuit. He had just finished an overnight shift as a personal care assistant and was shoveling snow out of his parking space with the help of his mother when agents approached. They asked why Eydarus and his mother, who are both of Somali descent and both U.S. citizens, were speaking a foreign language, according to the lawsuit. The agents left after Eydarus and his mother showed the masked agents their identification, it says. In an emailed statement, the Department of Homeland Security denied wrongdoing and called the allegations âdisgusting, reckless, and categorically FALSE.â âWhat makes someone a target for immigration enforcement is if they are illegally in the U.S.-NOT their skin color, race, or ethnicity. Protected under the Fourth amendment of the U.S. Constitution, DHS law enforcement uses âreasonable suspicionâ to make arrests,â the statement read in part. âThere are no âindiscriminate stopsâ being made. The Supreme Court recently vindicated us on this question. DHS enforces federal immigration law without fear, favor, or prejudice.â The ACLU lawsuit follows a separate legal...
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