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Minneapolis software engineers mistaken for ICE agents harassed while eating lunch
Summary
A group of software engineers eating lunch at a Minneapolis deli were mistaken for plainclothes ICE agents after an alert circulated on a local anti‑ICE Signal chat, and were later confronted and insulted by a crowd, the article reports.
Content
A group of men eating lunch at Clancey's Deli in Minneapolis were identified by other diners as suspected U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents after an alert circulated on a local anti‑ICE Signal chat. Dozens of demonstrators arrived, looked into the restaurant and later confronted the group on the street, directing insults and accusations. The men told reporters they work as software engineers and said one of them had received the alert on the chat.
Known details:
- The incident began after a message on a "SW Minneapolis Rapid Response" Signal chat said plainclothes agents were at the restaurant, prompting people to gather.
- Protesters peered into the deli and later confronted the men outside, directing insults and accusing them, including allegations reported in the article of being called pedophiles.
- The article reports the men identified themselves as software engineers and notes that the person who received the alert is aligned with the anti‑ICE cause; the story does not report any official response or arrests.
Summary:
The episode illustrates how a circulated alert led to a public confrontation and verbal harassment of people later described as software engineers. Undetermined at this time.
