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Trump threatens Insurrection Act use to end Minneapolis protests
Summary
President Trump said he would invoke the Insurrection Act after federal officers clashed with demonstrators in Minneapolis; officials reported a federal officer shot a man with non-life-threatening injuries and a judge gave the Justice Department until Monday to respond to a request for a restraining order.
Content
President Trump publicly warned he would invoke the Insurrection Act to deploy federal forces in Minnesota after clashes between federal officers and protesters in Minneapolis. The statement came as a federal officer fired a defensive shot that wounded a man, and a week after a separate encounter on Jan. 7 in which a federal agent shot and killed a woman during an immigration operation. City and state leaders have described the presence of a large federal force as unsustainable, and federal agencies say arrests have been made during the enforcement effort.
Known developments:
- The president said he would institute the Insurrection Act to end what he described as attacks on federal officers in Minneapolis.
- Homeland Security and Minneapolis police officials said a federal officer fired one defensive shot after being attacked; the person hit was reported to have non-life-threatening injuries and two others were taken into custody.
- Demonstrations around the recent incident involved tear gas and clashes between protesters and federal officers; activity at the scene later decreased.
- A U.S. district judge gave the Justice Department time to respond to a request to suspend the federal immigration operations in Minnesota, with a filing deadline set for Monday, and the court is considering related legal challenges this week.
Summary:
Tensions between federal law enforcement and Minneapolis residents have continued after recent shootings and ongoing immigration enforcement operations, and local officials say the city's situation is difficult to manage. Legal proceedings are underway, including a judge's deadline for the Justice Department to respond to a request for immediate relief, and additional court decisions on enforcement tactics could follow this week.
