Another report from MN from a friend of a friend, a US Citizen:

I am a US citizen from Minneapolis. Yesterday, while doing legal observation, ICE stopped their cars to harass my friend and me. They sprayed pepper spray into the vent of our vehicle. We held our hands in the air and told them we were not obstructing, that the car was in park and they were free to drive forward and away. There was no active immigration raid. They returned to their cars, and drove forward a bit, then decided to stop again. They surrounded us, smashed the windows of our car, opened the doors (they were unlocked), ripped my friend and I out of the car and arrested us on charges of obstruction.
I was put in an unmarked SUV, separated from my friend. As I was put in the back seat an ICE agent tore the whistle off my neck and said “I’ll be taking this, I might need it later.” My phone was knocked out of my hand while being arrested. As we drove away I asked the driver and the passenger if they wouldn’t mind buckling my seatbelt, as they were driving erratically. I was ignored. I asked them if I could have the handcuffs loosened, as I was losing circulation, and was told no. At one point the passenger realized his own driver's license was in the backseat next to mine, and tried to surreptitiously grab it without me seeing it.
We were taken to the Whipple federal building, where I saw dozens of brown people being processed in an unheated garage. I was frisked, told of my charges, and saw buses and vans being prepped. I later learned that these were being filled with detainees and driven to the airport for deportation. As we were led in, I noticed that the building was very busy. I got the impression that one of the 2 agents bringing me around was being trained. At multiple points throughout my stay, government agents were unable to open doors, not sure where they were meant to be going, and overall confused and overwhelmed. They couldn’t figure out how to use the building phones, or complained about a lack of cell service preventing them from checking the internet or making calls.
The people in the cells were extremely scared. We heard people screaming "let me out!", crying, wailing and terrified screams. There were cells with as many as 8 people. I have no way of knowing how long they have been there, if they were allowed any contact with the outside world, or if they were being brought food or water. Most people were staring at the ground with almost no energy. I was not allowed to talk to anyone imprisoned. I distinctly remember seeing a desperate woman. She was staring at the ground with her head in her hands crying, hopeless, while her friend or family member sat on a bathroom seat observed by 3 men.
My friend and I were put in an area for "USCs," which we eventually learned meant US citizens, separated by gender. We were imprisoned for 8 hours, during which my friend was never allowed a phone call. I was allowed to call my wife and tell her where I was. During my interview with Special Agent William and Special Agent Garcia, they asked me to empty my pockets. When I pulled out gloves, Agent William said those were meant to be taken when I was processed, and complained about having to fill out the form again. He frisked me once more, where he found glass in my pocket from when our car window was shattered. He filled out the form listing my personal items again, but put the wrong date. I was read my rights, I pleaded the fifth and was led back to my cell.
Food, water, and bathroom breaks were extremely difficult to acquire. I would ask over the intercom provided in the cell for a bathroom break, be told someone was on their way, then ask again 20 minutes later, be told someone was on their way, wait another 20 minutes, etc. Eventually they either turned off the intercom or it stopped working, because no one would respond. I could get water and bathroom breaks by pounding on the glass when someone happened to walk by and beg them directly. Hours would go by without anyone checking on us. I am vegan and the only food they offered were turkey sandwiches, fruit snacks with gelatin, and granola bars with honey. I eventually ate a granola bar out of hunger.
I was in the cell alone for between 1 and 2 hours, then another man was put into my cell, whose shirt was ripped open from his arrest, and an injured toe, who was carried aggressively into an unmarked car during his arrest. After about 4-5 hours, another man was brought in who had a cut on his head from his arrest. He told me he was tackled by 4 or 5 agents during his arrest. At no point was he offered medical assistance.
Later I was told that a lawyer was here to see me, and I was able to speak with him in a visitation room. The special agent told me that the door could not be closed all the way, so it was cracked during my interaction with my lawyer. I got the impression that they were not used to having lawyers present, and were trying to follow procedure as best they could. I asked an agent if the other detainees were allowed lawyers and was not answered.
At one point, 3 men from the department of Homeland Security Investigations brought me into a cell. They insinuated that they could help me out. After inquiring several times what exactly they meant they finally told me that they could offer undocumented family members of mine legal protection if I have any (I don’t), or money, in exchange for giving them the names of protest organizers, or undocumented persons. I was shocked, and told them no.
Finally, after hours of detention, I was told to follow an agent. At no point was I told whether or not I was being charged, or where I was going, but I was led out of the building. I asked if I could use a phone to call my wife to pick me up, and was told I could not. After pleading for several minutes eventually Special Agent William let me use his phone to call my wife. As I was escorted off the property by government agents, I was told to turn right. I was escorted to the protest area, where 5 minutes later, tear gas was deployed and I was struck by a paint ball gun. I was not protesting, I was simply being released without charges after an 8 hour detention. I was on the other side of the street, as instructed by the agents that released me and the agents shouting orders over a bullhorn. A passerby who was tear gassed was panicking and having an asthma attack, so I helped her find a medic to get her an inhaler. I used a stranger's phone to co-ordinate pickup, and was picked up by my wife.
During my detention I knew that I was being released. I knew that as a citizen of the United States I have legal protection. The hundred or so other people being detained had no such protection. At this time I don’t need your help, it is the families that are being separated, abused, terrorized, harassed and killed that need your help. If this is happening to me, an American citizen born in the United States, then what is happening to the people in here that have no one calling lawyers on their behalf? That have no constitutional rights to due process? What is happening to the people that they will never be released to see their families, go to their jobs, or walk through their city ever again?

Please take care of yourselves, your family, and your community. I am safe and healthy, if you feel compelled to help, please offer your help to the Immigrant Defense Network at https://immigrantdefensenetwork.org/. If you know someone detained by ICE, call or text CAIR-MN at 612-206-3360 for 24/7 legal intake.”

#MN #ICE

Immigrant Defense Network – Protect the human rights and dignity of every Minnesotan

@anarchademic

Please read the above post.

You will read nothing else as real, or as important, today.

@anarchademic the passenger's name? (I'm assuming it was another ice agent, out them)

A map of the facility a well as you can muster, any little thing you can add to the corpus of knowledge is good.

@anarchademic God bless these amazing people and keep them safe

@anarchademic
If I encountered ICE in person, I'd struggle not to feel so outraged. But that's their purpose, to stir violence.

I wish each of them knew how many people they'd be helping if they would step down, if empathy appealed to them, or if not, how much less likely they'd face harsh consequences "after all this" if they would have the bravery to quit. "After all this" in quotes because I can't tell the future, but sounds like they're collapsing from the inside out...

@anarchademic

ICE are trump's Brownshirts - the longer they are allowed to exist, the worse they will get

The General Strike

The General strike -the people united shall never be stopped. If we strike together we can make true real change. Sign the strike card today.

The General Strike
@KrajciTom in America-- not until the lights go out or a lot of people get real hungry. America remains propped up on convenience. That convenience keeps people docile
@bebadefabo @KrajciTom Spoken like someone who doesn’t know what’s actually required to organize a general strike

@MisuseCase @bebadefabo

Please share your General Strike wisdom.

Thank you in advance.

@KrajciTom @bebadefabo General strikes require unions from multiple sectors to coordinate together. A general strike does not have to include a majority or even a plurality of workers in a country - just the ones in a few critical sectors. Like, if dockworkers and airline workers all went on strike, that would be huge.

But making that happen requires organized labor. There’s a reason the fat cats have pushed for right-to-work laws and spread anti-union propaganda.

@anarchademic

So they kept your property?

I assume your phone, wallet, and everything else is missing since you needed someone else's phone to make a call once released.

@anarchademic
It’s like they’ve been watching a B-WWII movie and are trying to imitate all the villains. “Tell me the names of the resistance leaders!” Seriously?
@SkylarkDuquesne In Sweden, the police ask the same things, they are just much more subtle about it: ”oh, could you show me who’s the organiser of this protest, I would like to speak to them”, using a very polite tone.

@anarchademic

The abducted victim here is Brandon Siguenza, observer.

@anarchademic wow, thank you. I am rooting for y'all from Europe.

Important detail: they do have this right, iirc.
Re: "That have no constitutional rights to due process?"

Sorry if someone else pointed it out already, I didn't read all the comments yet.

@iwein @anarchademic The regime claims that only citizens have right to due process. It is well documented though that when only a certain class of persons has rights, in effect, no one has any rights. All the regime needs to do is claim that someone is not a citizen (by claiming documents are fake for example), then there is no legal recourse or action that may be taken by that individual, citizen or not. .
@anarchademic All those detained, or not, have Constitutional rights. The Constitutional right to due process, equal protection, unlawful search and seizures, free speech and assembly, legal counsel, a jury trial and legal representation applies to any ‘person’ on US soil not just citiens. That unique level of individual liberty is what made the US a special place, at least for a brief time.
@Grovewest @anarchademic the government pisses on the constitution. There is no constitution anymore.

@anarchademic

Harrowing. Our country has been destroyed.

@anarchademic

>During my detention I knew that I was being released. I knew that as a citizen of the United States I have legal protection.

🤣 🤣 🤣 and other lies you can tell to yourself.

@utf_7 @anarchademic Or you could just fucking not
@liquor_american @anarchademic mind to elaborate?
@utf_7 @anarchademic Just read it again. There's nothing ambiguous.
@liquor_american @anarchademic so in your opinion i am wrong, but i wonder about your reasoning?

@anarchademic

Shit like this and Americans still want us to view them as the "good guys"

@anarchademic

Unbedingt den ganzen Beitrag lesen.

@anarchademic

Reading this, I was reminded of reading 'a handmaid's tale' and also 'the bronze horseman', which is set in communist Russia around WW2.

This is horrifying, but hopefully many American citizens will be arrested, treated this way and so will at least be able to tell the truth about what happens in the US gulag system.

What would happen if someone were to talk to the undocumented? Would ICE harm or disappear a US citizen who hadn't broken a law - only been disobedient?

@anarchademic ICE devrait être appelé Police Secrète d'État, en anglais Secret State Police (sestatpo) en allemand cela donne gestapo.
@anarchademic I'm wondering if this person and others like him, could initiate private prosecution against the individuals (if he saw the name on the licence - or, and ICE. I'm sure gofund me would produce financial help and it might be a good way to fight back against Trumps goons. #Fediverse #Mastodon

@lindasgoluppiart

ICE agents have not been identifying themselves (no names or badges displayed, faces covered) but
Three US citizens sue Trump with the ACLU over encounters with ICE agents
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/live/2026/jan/15/us-politics-latest-news-updates-donald-trump-venezuela-maria-corina-machado

Trump threatens to invoke Insurrection Act over protests in Minneapolis – US politics live

US president says he will use law that allows military to be deployed domestically if protests in Minneapolis do not stop

the Guardian
I can only hope that enough trump supporters go through similar situations. Not for revenge, but so they learn from their mistakes.
@anarchademic This testimony, along with so many others, is probably what we can contribute from our present. Taking care of each other and recording our present.
The other day I was thinking about all those videos deleted from YouTube showing the horror of Palestine. These videos are the Palestinians' tool when they have no access to the written word. Those images are forever in our minds, as is the testimony about ICE detentions. We must record it; that is also resistance for the possibility of a future.
@anarchademic this is exactly the Nazi method from 1933-1945.
@anarchademic @TomGwozdz Everyone needs to get dash cams including one that films the inside of the car. All with audio!
@anarchademic would you mind content wrapping this?
I can't boost without, understand if answer is no but thought I'd ask at least. Thanks for sharing.
I have friends in Minneapolis, on the very street of the latest murder.

@noodlemaz

I'm sorry, I didn't know what content wrapping is; I looked it up and I still don't know what it would mean for me to do it. I am extremely tech-stupid. Can you give me simple, step by step directions? Or please feel free to copy the text and do what you will to share it.

@anarchademic I don't know what app you're using for your toots? If you let us know I'm sure someone (@feditips?) can help. I use Tusky and this is what my screen looks like.
Blue arrow is the content wrap button
You'll get another space to type at the top. Those are the key words you want people to see before the show/read more button. #contentWrap #mastoTips #mastoHelp

@noodlemaz @anarchademic

And here’s an example from IceCubes running on an iPhone. Am going to click the triangle control on the right that has an exclamation main inside and then add the text “content wasting example”!

@noodlemaz @anarchademic

And that was a silly misspelling in my content warning ;-)

@noodlemaz
@stepheneb

Ah.
I am on a laptop, without that handy button.

I looked on https://fedi.tips/ and search for 'content wrapping' didn't turn anything up.

And are we discussing content warning or content wrapping or are they connected or what?

Do you mean I should offer a content warning and then list keywords before the text, which is hidden?

I could put it behind a content warning, but when I looked up 'content wrapping' it seemed to be about the length of lines of text and where they break.

Thanks.

@anarchademic @noodlemaz

Here's what it looks like on the web interface. The control is a triangle with an exclamation. And the tool tip identifies it as a "Content warning".

Once I click that triangle it's highlighted and there's a place above the main body I'm typing in to add a Content warning.

@anarchademic @noodlemaz

Also adding hash tags is useful:

1. For folks finding your posts
2. For other folks who want to filter specific content out of their timeline.

@anarchademic it is like the #SS in Hitler Germany
@anarchademic @skua No one should wonder why, as a Canadian citizen, do I have any desire to cross our southern border