Reported ICE activity sent concerned citizens racing to Knollwood Mall last week, determined to track a convoy of unmarked vehicles carrying federal immigration agents.
It took less than half a mile for the agents to spot the tail.
One agent accelerated, then slammed on his brakes — immediately causing a minor collision with a Honda CR-V behind him. Abigail Salm, trailing two cars back, pulled over to film the encounter as men in camouflage pulled two occupants out of the SUV.
“Listen. Have y’all not learned from the last couple of days?” an officer clad in tactical gear said to Salm, 27. The fatal shooting of Renee Good happened 48 hours earlier.
“Learned what?” Salm pressed, according to a video of the interaction. “What’s our lesson here?”
“Following federal agents …” he said with an expletive, snatching the phone from her hand.
A heated verbal exchange resulted in her brief detention at the scene, alongside Blake Road in Hopkins on Jan. 9. Salm said she was restrained, manhandled and threatened to be shot by an armed agent.
“Operation Metro Surge,” touted by President Donald Trump as the largest immigration crackdown in history, deployed a legion of federal agents across the Twin Cities that far surpasses any single Minnesota police force. A growing number of bystanders and trained observers are mobilizing to lawfully monitor those federal enforcement efforts. They say agents are responding with increasing aggression that includes detainment, overt threats and physical abuse.