Gov. Tim Walz denounced how Operation Metro Surge is treating Minnesota’s children on Tuesday, Feb. 3, and sent a letter to U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, demanding her agency stop tactics that put kids at risk.
“These are the people that our children should be around,” he said of education leaders by his side, “not masked agents carrying automatic weapons that are pulling them away from their families” and into inhumane conditions.
Though Liam Conejo Ramos, a Columbia Heights preschooler whose detainment in a Texas facility captured national attention, is now finally home, Walz said officials weren’t sure how many other Minnesota kids were sent out of state to detention centers with their parents.
Thanks to a court order, Liam and his father were released and returned to Minnesota on Sunday. But school leaders know of four Columbia Heights students who are still detained in Texas, he said.
As Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents have increasingly been spotted at schools, he said, he’s “demanding clear answers” from Noem about how many kids have been taken and why.
Causing ‘terror and trauma’
Walz said his expectations related to ICE haven’t changed since he met with Tom Homan, known as Trump’s border czar, a week ago.
“This force must leave Minnesota,” he said, adding that the two fatal shootings at the hands of federal agents, along with other human rights abuses, must be investigated by the state and nonpartisan professionals.
ICE agents’ numbers in Minnesota must return to what they were previously, he said.