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Bovino is expected to leave Minneapolis as Trump reshuffles immigration leadership
Summary
U.S. Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino is expected to leave Minneapolis as the administration named Tom Homan to lead federal immigration operations and report directly to the White House; the change follows a second fatal shooting by federal officers and a legal challenge to the enforcement surge.
Content
U.S. Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino is expected to leave Minneapolis on Tuesday, according to a person familiar with the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity. The White House announced that Tom Homan will be placed in charge of federal immigration operations in Minnesota and will report directly to the president. The leadership change comes after a second fatal shooting involving federal officers and amid criticism and protests of the federal presence. A federal lawsuit seeking to reduce the number and scope of federal officers in Minnesota is already before a judge.
Key developments:
- A person familiar with the operation said Gregory Bovino is expected to leave Minneapolis on Tuesday; the person was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.
- President Donald Trump named Tom Homan to lead the mission in Minnesota, and the White House said Homan will report directly to the president and serve as the main on-the-ground contact.
- The reshuffle follows a second fatal shooting by federal officers and coincides with a court case that asks a judge to limit the size and scope of the federal enforcement surge in Minnesota.
Summary:
The administration has moved to reshuffle leadership of its Minnesota immigration enforcement operation and reduce the federal profile after a second fatal shooting and public criticism. Tom Homan is being positioned as the primary federal contact on the ground, and local officials have scheduled meetings with him; a federal court is also considering a lawsuit that seeks limits on the enforcement surge, with further legal developments pending.
