Dozens of Minneapolis police officers were assigned to work with the regional Homeland Security Task Force months before the start of Operation Metro Surge, MPR News reported Thursday. While few details are available on the ongoing task force, city officials said it is not related to immigration enforcement.
Police Chief Brian O’Hara signed an agreement with the FBI days after the killing of Alex Pretti authorizing a $30,000 payment to reimburse overtime costs for 63 officers assigned to the previously undisclosed task force, according to a document obtained by MPR News.
In other MPD news, MPR News reported that the department announced during a presentation on the city’s summer safety strategy that it has solved 80% of homicide cases in 2025, the highest rate in recent history.
Related: In Minneapolis, evictions are outpacing solutions
The Minnesota Reformer reported Thursday that between August and early March, a quarter of all arrests by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were classified as “collateral,” viewed by some as a way for officers to evade established civil rights protections.
Collateral arrests can occur during street sweeps or raids in which people are singled out by agents based on their appearance, questioned and, if agents believe the person could be subject to deportation, arrested. In Minnesota, at least 30% of immigration arrests since August were considered collateral, according to data from the Deportation Data Project obtained by the Reformer.
The AP reported on a grand jury indictment released Wednesday of three family members accused of assaulting a journalist affiliated with the conservative group Turning Point USA. The alleged assault happened at a protest against immigration enforcement operations outside the Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis.
Related: Documenters report: MPS finds additional $10 million in revenue
The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board has acknowledged that the entirety of the popular 6-acre Minnehaha Off-Leash Dog Park lies within Mni Owe Sni, a sacred site for the Dakota and other Indigenous peoples, according to reporting from the Star Tribune. The board has held private discussions with Native American advisors amid concerns about the dog park’s location on land that hold the remains of Dakota people.
The board also commissioned an archaeological assessment of the park which found its cultural value to be “significantly greater than originally anticipated,” though no other details have been released publicly.
The average price of gas in Minnesota has officially reached $4 a gallon and analysts say it could hit $4.09 by next week, FOX 9 reported Thursday.
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