U.S. Attorney’s Office in Minnesota charges 15 for opposing immigration enforcement

By Anthony Bettin, WCCO Staff

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    Minnesota (WCCO) — U.S. prosecutors in Minnesota on Tuesday announced charges against 15 people they say conspired to “violently oppose immigration law enforcement,” though U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen failed to describe a single example of injuries to federal agents when repeatedly questioned.

Twelve of the 15 people were arrested during raids by Homeland Security Investigations Tuesday morning, U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen said. One was already in custody on different charges, and two more remain at large. All of them are from the Twin Cities area, according to officials.

The individuals face charges including conspiracy to impede or injure federal officers, solicitation to commit a crime of violence, interstate threats, interstate stalking, assault on a federal officer and destruction of government property, Rosen said.

While Rosen made multiple references to “violence” by those charged, when repeatedly asked about specific injuries federal agents suffered — or even the number of agents injured — he did not offer any examples.

According to Rosen, those charged were connected to a group called Direct Action Minnesota, which his office previously said was a “Minneapolis-based antifa group.” Antifa, which is short for anti-fascist, is an umbrella term for a decentralized movement of mostly left-wing activists who oppose White supremacy, autocracy and other fascist ideals. President Trump in 2025 signed an executive order labeling the movement a “domestic terrorist organization.”

Also on Tuesday morning, the Immigration Defense Network said a constitutional observer’s home in south Minneapolis was raided by federal law enforcement and resulted in an arrest. It is unclear if the raid and arrest are connected to the U.S. Attorney’s announcement.

Earlier this year, when the Trump administration targeted Minnesota with what it called the largest federal deployment of law enforcement in United States history, federal agents shot and killed two Twin Cities residents and wounded another. Rosen said Tuesday that once federal investigations into the killings are complete, “we will not undercharge, we will not overcharge, but we will pursue federal prosecution in the manner that the evidence dictates.”

During Operation Metro Surge, clashes between protesters and federal agents were a near-daily sight on the streets of Minneapolis and at the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s local headquarters.

Two ICE agents have been charged at the state level for their alleged actions during the surge — one for pulling a gun on two people on a Twin Cities highway, and another for shooting a Venezuelan man through a door.

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