A federal judge denied an effort by Minnesota and the cities of St. Paul and Minneapolis on Saturday to swiftly halt the Trump administration’s surge of immigration agents to the state, saying officials have not cleared the legal threshold to bring an immediate pause to the operation.
The highly-anticipated decision comes after attorneys for the Justice Department and Minnesota faced off in federal court over the state’s lawsuit to end the operation, which argued the surge of 3,000 agents violates its sovereignty and was motivated by political animosity by the Trump administration to change the state’s immigration laws.
The lawsuit, filed days after the fatal shooting of Renee Good by an immigration agent, took fresh urgency this week by lawyers for the state and cities who reupped their request to the judge to end the operation after the fatal shooting of 37-year-old Alex Pretti by federal officers in south Minneapolis.
In her decision to block an injunction that would have paused the operation as the case proceeds, U.S. District Judge Kate Menendez said the state had not shown exactly when the deployment impeded on the state’s sovereignty.
“A proclamation that Operation Metro Surge has simply gone ‘so far on the other side of the line’ is a thin reed on which to base a preliminary injunction,” she said.
While expressing disappointment in the denial, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey called the judge’s denial “just one step” in the lawsuit that remains pending in court.
“This decision doesn’t change what people here have lived through — fear, disruption, and harm caused by a federal operation that never belonged in Minneapolis in the first place. This operation has not brought public safety. It’s brought the opposite and has detracted from the order we need for a working city. It’s an invasion, and it needs to stop," Frey said.
Attorney General Keith Ellison previously made similar comments that if the judge blocks the state’s request, he will go “right back to the drawing board.” His office did not immediately respond to requests for comment about the order.