Bogus! Fuck ICE (7 Viewers)

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DHS complaining ICE agents in Minnesota can't take bathroom breaks in peace.
 
Cuban immigrant died in ICE concentration camp. ICE claimed suicide but medical examiner ruled homicide. He died from crushing his chest and larynx. In other words, stomped and choked. Two prisoners who testified they saw guards beat and choke him were immediately deported.
 
FBI field office initiated investigation into killing of Renee Good, routine with federal officer shooting. Assistant attorney general Todd Blanche forced agent to resign, shut down invest, and I stead began investigation of victim. Federal judge refused his request for warrant to investigate her because she is dead.
 
US Judge Rules ICE Raids Require Judicial Warrants, Contradicting Secret ICE Memo

ICE-Break-in-Security-2256901779.jpg


The ruling in federal court in Minnesota lands as Immigration and Customs Enforcement faces scrutiny over an internal memo claiming judge-signed warrants aren’t needed to enter homes without consent.

A federal judge in Minnesota ruled last Saturday that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents violated the Fourth Amendment after they forcibly entered a Minnesota man’s home without a judicial warrant.

The conduct of the agents closely mirrors a previously undisclosed ICE directive that claims agents are permitted to enter people’s homes using an administrative warrant, rather than a warrant signed by a judge.

The ruling, issued by US District Court judge Jeffrey Bryan in response to a petition for a writ of habeas corpus on January 17, did not assess the legality of ICE’s internal guidance itself. But it squarely holds that federal agents violated the United States Constitution when they entered a residence without consent and without a judge-signed warrant—the same conditions ICE leadership has privately told officers is sufficient for home arrests, according to a complaint filed by Whistleblower Aid, a nonprofit legal group representing whistleblowers from the public and private sector.

In a sworn declaration, Garrison Gibson, a Liberian national who has lived in Minnesota for years under an ICE order of supervision, says agents arrived at his home in the early morning on January 11 while his family slept inside. He says he refused to open the door and repeatedly demanded to see a judicial warrant.

According to the declaration, the agents initially left, then returned with a larger group, deployed pepper spray toward neighbors who had gathered outside, and used a battering ram to force the door open. The declaration was filed as part of a January 12 Minnesota lawsuit against Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem challenging federal immigration enforcement operations in the Twin Cities, which state officials characterize as an unconstitutional “invasion” by ICE and other agents that has roiled Minneapolis and Saint Paul. Federal officials did not contest Gibson’s habeas petition.

Gibson, who reportedly fled the Liberian civil war as a child, says agents entered his home without showing a warrant. His wife, who was filming at the time, warned that children were inside, he says, and that agents holding rifles stood in their doorway. “One agent repeatedly claimed ‘We’re getting the papers’ in response to her demand to see the warrant,” he says. “But without showing a warrant, and apparently without having one, five to six agents moved in as if they were entering a war zone.”

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US Judge Rules ICE Raids Require Judicial Warrants, Contradicting Secret ICE Memo

ICE-Break-in-Security-2256901779.jpg


The ruling in federal court in Minnesota lands as Immigration and Customs Enforcement faces scrutiny over an internal memo claiming judge-signed warrants aren’t needed to enter homes without consent.

A federal judge in Minnesota ruled last Saturday that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents violated the Fourth Amendment after they forcibly entered a Minnesota man’s home without a judicial warrant.

The conduct of the agents closely mirrors a previously undisclosed ICE directive that claims agents are permitted to enter people’s homes using an administrative warrant, rather than a warrant signed by a judge.

The ruling, issued by US District Court judge Jeffrey Bryan in response to a petition for a writ of habeas corpus on January 17, did not assess the legality of ICE’s internal guidance itself. But it squarely holds that federal agents violated the United States Constitution when they entered a residence without consent and without a judge-signed warrant—the same conditions ICE leadership has privately told officers is sufficient for home arrests, according to a complaint filed by Whistleblower Aid, a nonprofit legal group representing whistleblowers from the public and private sector.

In a sworn declaration, Garrison Gibson, a Liberian national who has lived in Minnesota for years under an ICE order of supervision, says agents arrived at his home in the early morning on January 11 while his family slept inside. He says he refused to open the door and repeatedly demanded to see a judicial warrant.

According to the declaration, the agents initially left, then returned with a larger group, deployed pepper spray toward neighbors who had gathered outside, and used a battering ram to force the door open. The declaration was filed as part of a January 12 Minnesota lawsuit against Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem challenging federal immigration enforcement operations in the Twin Cities, which state officials characterize as an unconstitutional “invasion” by ICE and other agents that has roiled Minneapolis and Saint Paul. Federal officials did not contest Gibson’s habeas petition.

Gibson, who reportedly fled the Liberian civil war as a child, says agents entered his home without showing a warrant. His wife, who was filming at the time, warned that children were inside, he says, and that agents holding rifles stood in their doorway. “One agent repeatedly claimed ‘We’re getting the papers’ in response to her demand to see the warrant,” he says. “But without showing a warrant, and apparently without having one, five to six agents moved in as if they were entering a war zone.”

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If the Supreme Court overturns this, imagine the repercussions! Democrats can create an Anti-Pedophile agency that goes through smashing doors of any Republicans that may be pedophiles and storm their property and computers. All they have to do is make up their own warrant before doing it.
 
If the Supreme Court overturns this, imagine the repercussions! Democrats can create an Anti-Pedophile agency that goes through smashing doors of any Republicans that may be pedophiles and storm their property and computers. All they have to do is make up their own warrant before doing it.
And yes, if being brown is enough evidence to profile a potential illegal immigrant, at this point being registered Republican is enough to assume they could be a child rapist.
 
Looks like they may have killed another person.

6-8 of them just take a person to the ground, one of them beats them in the head several times, and then they are there motionless with an ICE person pointing a gun at him.

No car trajectory, no nothing. Just a guy getting bombarded and then looks like he may have gotten murdered. I hope im wrong, it hasnt been made official, but all the videos are showing his feet and legs and they aren't moving. Ice agents run away then come back to him. They know they fucked up.
 

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