A federal judge ordered the release of two Venezuelan men accused of assaulting a federal immigration officer last month outside a north Minneapolis duplex, concluding that they do not present a heightened flight risk.
But they never made it out of the St. Paul courthouse.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers detained Alfredo Aljorna, 26, and Julio Sosa-Celis, 24, without explanation, shortly after the hearing.
“This re-detention is unconstitutional and they should be immediately released,” family attorney Brian Clark wrote in an emergency habeas petition filed late Tuesday, Feb. 3.
Minnesota’s Chief U.S. District Judge Patrick Schiltz ruled almost immediately that ICE could not move Sosa-Celis and Aljorna out of Minnesota. He gave the federal government until Friday, Jan. 6, to provide an explanation for its actions.
The routine court hearing was scheduled to weigh the conditions of their potential release. But it also offered the first outside glimpse of photographs that raise questions about the federal government’s account of what happened.
For two weeks, the court weighed conflicting accounts of the incident, which began with an attempted traffic stop on Interstate 94 and ended with an unidentified ICE agent shooting Sosa-Celis, who was not the original target of the enforcement action. A case of mistaken identity triggered the chaotic chain of events that culminated in hours of unrest that night.
The shooting occurred seven days after the killing of Renee Good by an ICE agent and more than a week before the killing of Alex Pretti by Border Patrol agents.