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Body cameras to be immediately issued to ICE agents in Minneapolis
Summary
Secretary Kristi Noem announced that every Department of Homeland Security officer deployed in Minneapolis, including ICE agents, will be immediately issued body cameras, and she said the program could be expanded nationwide as funding becomes available.
Content
Secretary Kristi Noem said that every Department of Homeland Security officer deployed in Minneapolis, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers, will be immediately issued body cameras. Noem posted the announcement on the social platform X and added that the body camera program would be expanded nationwide as funding becomes available. The announcement comes after intense scrutiny of immigration enforcement in Minneapolis following the fatal shootings of Alex Pretti and Renee Nicole Good. The president last week ordered his top border adviser to oversee operations in Minneapolis amid those incidents.
Reported details:
- Every DHS officer deployed in Minneapolis, including ICE officers, will be immediately issued body cameras, according to Noem.
- Noem said the program could be expanded across the country as funding allows.
- Minneapolis has drawn scrutiny after the fatal shootings of Alex Pretti and Renee Nicole Good and subsequent nationwide protests.
- President Joe Biden had ordered federal officers to wear body cameras in 2022; President Donald Trump rescinded that directive after beginning his second term.
- Border adviser Tom Homan said mistakes have been made but that agents would continue to enforce federal law; President Trump commented that body cameras are "generally tend to be good for law enforcement."
Summary:
The announcement responds to heightened attention on immigration enforcement in Minneapolis following recent fatal shootings and public protests. Officials said expansion beyond Minneapolis would depend on available funding, and a broader rollout timeline is undetermined at this time.
