MINNESOTA
A friend from law school lives in Minneapolis.
Five days after the shooting of Renee Good, I wrote asking for her take on what was going on there. Three days later she responded.
Here is what she said:
"A friend wrote this and I thought it was an excellent explanation of how things are here. I modified it a bit:
'If you are not in Minnesota and it sounds exaggerated how bad it is here[,] [i]t's not exaggerated. The stories of US citizens, including native Americans, being detained: real. Citizens who are children being detained because they don't have "papers": real.
'Physical violence: real. Indiscriminate chemical spraying of peaceful protester: real. Smashing car windows, dragging P[eople] O[f] C[olor] out by their hair and pummeling, punching, kicking them without asking a question, including those screaming that they're a US citizen: real.
'Large groups roaming with guns in stores, parking lots, at schools, public libraries and malls: real. Going door to door with weapons drawn in some neighborhoods: real. US citizens and undocumented immigrants afraid to leave their homes, go to work, or get groceries: real. Schools closed: real.
'It is as bad as you are hearing, and worse.
'Meanwhile, thousands of Minnesotans are protesting, providing rides, delivering groceries, donating what they can.
'It isn't right.
'This is not how genuine, purposeful law enforcement is done.
'And it has nothing to do with fraud.
'Our city is under siege.'"
On Saturday, as part of that continuing siege, Border Patrol agents killed Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse with the Veterans Administration.
Pretti was standing with his two arms held aloft and a cell phone in his left hand. He then went to help a woman in front of him who an agent had pepper sprayed. With his back to the agents, he tried to lift her up. A scrum of agents tackled and pinned him face down. One removed and walked away with a gun he legally possessed and had not brandished.
One or more of the agents then shot him.
Ten times.
In the aftermath, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said Pretti had "committed an act of domestic terrorism." Assistant Homeland Security Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said "the officers attempted to disarm the suspect but the armed suspect violently resisted" and "an agent fired defensive shots." Apparently because Pretti was carrying a gun and bullets, albeit legally, she also said "This looks like a situation where an individual wanted to do maximum damage and massacre law enforcement".
Shortly after McLaughlin's statement, Trump's senior policy advisor, Stephen Miller, made the claim explicit. "A would be assassin tried to murder federal law enforcement," he said, "and the official Democrat account sides with the terrorists." A little more than a half hour after Miller spoke, Border Patrol Commander Greg Bovino echoed McLaughlin and Miller. Pretti, he said, had intended to "massacre law enforcement".
None of these statements were true.
At the point Pretti was shot, he was unarmed, face down and restrained.
On the Sunday talk shows, Republicans blamed Minnesota's Governor and Minneapolis's Mayor for the shooting, claiming local officials were unwilling to cooperate with the federal government because Minneapolis calls itself a sanctuary city.
No so-called sanctuary city, however, actually hides undocumented immigrants or interferes with federal law enforcement. Nor does Minneapolis. All of them arrest and prosecute undocumenteds for the crimes they commit, especially any that are violent. Crime is down appreciably throughout the nation as a whole and in Minneapolis in particular. And regardless of any jurisdiction's self-appointed "sanctuary" status, no well-trained and law-abiding police department would have done to Pretti what the Border Patrol agents did to him on Saturday.
For a number of reasons, it is time to abolish ICE and start over.
First, in order to more than double its force, ICE recruited 12,000 new agents this year. Five thousand of them are now deployed and the rest will be over the next six months. All of them, however, are poorly trained. What was once a six-month training course has been reduced to 42 days. Four weeks of in-person on the ground training has been replaced with a 40-hour on-line course. In those 42 training days, only four hours are devoted to de-escalation, and these are spread over the entire period.
Many of the trainees have not been well-received by veterans. As one senior ICE official put it, "These are people who have no business setting foot into our office" and "would have been weeded out during a normal hiring process." And beyond poor training, the recruitment effort itself has trafficked in white supremacist rhetoric.
Just after the Good killing, ICE put out a recruitment post with the all caps tag-line "WE'LL HAVE OUR HOME AGAIN. JOIN.ICE.GOV". The line is from a song with the same name. According to the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism, "it is a song only known in white nationalist circles" and includes lyrics supporting white replacement theory. As the Global Project concluded, its use by ICE "can't . . . be a mistake."
Second, Trump has changed ICE's mission. In the past, ICE engaged in targeted enforcement of the immigration laws and in both the Obama and Biden administrations was able to deport millions. Arrests were planned in advance and agents took suspects into custody safely and with the least amount of drama. No one was shot in the street.
Today, however, masked agents roam the streets outfitted as if they are in war zones ready for armed conflict. In Minneapolis they outnumber the local cops by orders of magnitude. Unlike the locals, they do not wear body cameras; in fact, that is the reason protesters have been told to video the agents and is probably what Pretti was doing when he held his phone aloft on Saturday.
Third, there need to be investigations of the killing of both Good and Pretti. In Good's case, the local coroner has already ruled her death a homicide and there is a good chance this will be the case with Pretti as well. The notion, however, that this administration can objectively conduct those investigation refutes itself.
In Good's case, the administration has already announced the agent who killed her did no wrong, all evidence to the contrary notwithstanding, and in both Good's and Pretti's case, it has told the local investigative authority with expertise in police use-of-force cases -- the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension -- to stay away. In Good's case, the federal authorities did not preserve the scene and thus have also effectively destroyed evidence. In Pretti's case, a federal court has ordered them not to destroy evidence but it is unclear what, if anything, was done to preserve the scene and gather evidence on Saturday.
Finally, the administration's rhetoric needs to be jettisoned.
The notion that protesters like Good or Pretti are "domestic terrorists" is false and disgusting. Good was a poet; Pretti a nurse. The claim that Pretti intended to "massacre" agents is baseless. Leaving aside the hypocrisy of GOP gun lovers now finding fault with Pretti's (legal) possession of a firearm, he never brandished his weapon; in fact, a federal agent had removed it by the time he was shot. He also wasn't committing a crime while otherwise legally possessing the weapon.
On ABC's This Week yesterday, House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) suggested the agents' tactics were required given epithets being thrown at them by the crowd or Minnesota's politicians. That too is nonsense. Well-trained police do not react to name-calling. They are supposed to be above it.
Trump, of course, is not.
Nor are Miller, Noem or Bovino.
Which is the real problem here.
If you send masked enforcers into the streets to invade homes without judicial warrants, cheer as they frog-march citizens out of those homes in their underwear, lie that you are only detaining the "worst of the worst" when the vast majority have no criminal records or charges whatsoever, and then call a poet and a nurse begging to differ "domestic terrorists" after your masked enforcers have killed them, the likelihood of professional policing vanishes . . .
And the analogy to Germany in the 1930s starts to make sense.
That is where we are today.
Real.
Not exaggerated.
