In a major legal rebuke to the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration crackdown, a federal judge has issued a sweeping court order expressly designed to protect protesters in Minneapolis from indiscriminate arrest and chemical attacks by federal agents. The ruling creates a judicial shield for civilians who have taken to the streets to monitor and challenge Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents whose operations have terrorized the city since the fatal shooting of resident Renee Good earlier this month.
Judge Katherine Menendez ruled late Friday that federal agents cannot arrest, pepper-spray, or use similar crowd-control weapons against “persons who are engaging in peaceful and unobstructive protest activity.” The 83-page order, which also restricts agents from arbitrarily stopping vehicles, is a direct response to a lawsuit filed by protesters who alleged systematic constitutional violations by ICE. The judge affirmed that simply observing and documenting agents from a safe distance is not a crime, but a protected activity.

A Judicial Shield Against Federal Overreach
The order represents a critical check on presidential power, explicitly drawing a legal line that ICE cannot cross. It prohibits agents from using their authority as a blanket weapon against all dissent, forcing them to distinguish between lawful protest and illegal obstruction. “The act of safely following [immigration agents] at an appropriate distance does not, by itself, create reasonable suspicion to justify a vehicle stop,” the ruling states.
This judicial intervention comes as Minneapolis braces for a tense weekend, with major anti-ICE protests and a planned counter-march by conservative groups. The Minnesota National Guard is on alert, and local officials have pleaded for calm. The court order acts as a pre-emptive legal barrier, attempting to prevent a repeat of the violent clashes that have marked the past two weeks, where videos have shown agents firing pepper spray at close range into protesters’ faces.
The White House Response: Condemning the ‘Shield’ as a ‘Dishonest Narrative’
The Trump administration reacted with fury, framing the court’s protection of civil liberties as an endorsement of lawlessness. White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson lambasted the ruling as “absurd” and said it “embraces a dishonest, left-wing narrative,” insisting federal agents have “acted lawfully to protect themselves.”
Simultaneously, the Justice Department escalated its political offensive against state leaders who oppose the ICE surge, announcing investigations into Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey for allegedly attempting to “impede federal immigration operations.” U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi declared, “No one is above the law,” a statement critics labeled as blatantly hypocritical given the court’s finding that ICE agents themselves had likely violated constitutional law.
“Weaponizing the justice system against your opponents is an authoritarian tactic,” Governor Walz fired back, framing the probes as a political attack meant to intimidate local officials and suppress dissent.
Why It Matters
The ruling creates a stark battlefield of definitions. For protesters and the court, “protection” means safeguarding the First Amendment right to assemble and challenge government action without fear of chemical attack or arbitrary arrest. For the Department of Homeland Security, “protection” means defending its officers from what it calls “dangerous rioters,” a term it applies broadly to those who interfere with its operations.
With this court order in place, the stage is set for a volatile weekend test. Will ICE agents, now under the microscope of a federal injunction, change their tactics? Or will the White House’s defiant rhetoric encourage agents to test the limits of the judge’s order, potentially inviting new lawsuits and more severe sanctions?
















