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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsICE's No. 1 Ally - The Atlantic
On Saturday, the same day that federal agents shot and killed Alex Pretti on a Minneapolis street, the Justice Department sent a letter to Minnesota Governor Tim Walz. The letter did not have anything to say about the violence caused by the Department of Homeland Securitys presence in the state. Nor did it offer Minnesota any assistance in the investigation of Prettis death or that of Renee Goods just more than two weeks earlier. Instead, Attorney General Pam Bondi complained that Walz had refused to support DHS, insisted that the state cooperate more fully with ICE, and demanded that the governor hand over its voter rolls and records on Medicaid and food-stamp recipients. Walz had better support President Trump, Bondi declared on Fox News.
This abusive behavior by DHS has stood out in the chaos of Operation Metro Surge. But the Justice Department has done its part, too. It has shielded federal agents from accountability, launched needless criminal investigations into Minnesota officials and residents, and pumped out propaganda to aid the far-right press in justifying ICEs tactics. The president has always treated DOJ like his own personal law firm. Now the department is acting like DHSs law firm as well.
DOJ first undertook the role of ICE defender in Minneapolis in the days after Goods death, on January 7. Video captured by the phones of both bystanders and the ICE agent Jonathan Ross showed Ross firing into Goods car repeatedly, killing her and sending her car barreling down the icy street. In prior administrations, a death at the hands of a federal officer would have been cause for the Justice Department to begin a probe into potential wrongdoing by law enforcement. But this time, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche announced, There is currently no basis for a criminal civil rights investigation. Though federal and local investigators typically collaborate in the aftermath of shootings by law enforcement, the FBI blocked state and local governments from accessing evidence. When a journalist asked Trump about this development, he explained that Minnesota officials should not be allowed to look at evidence, because they are crooked.
Most galling, instead of probing Rosss actions, the Justice Department decided to investigate the woman he killed. According to MS NOW, FBI agents in Minnesota drafted a search warrant for Goods car to examine the path of the bullets fired by Ross, intending to carry out a civil-rights probe. But Blanches office demanded that they alter the warrant for use in an investigation of whether Good had assaulted Ross. (A magistrate judge denied the request on the grounds that Good was dead.) The New York Times reported that DOJ also considered launching a criminal probe into Goods widow, Becca Good, who was with Renee that morning. Six prosecutors in the U.S. Attorneys Office for the District of Minnesota resigned in protest of the departments handling of the case, along with an FBI agent whod sought to open a civil-rights investigation but was rebuffed. Several attorneys in the Justice Departments Civil Rights Division have since resigned as well.
This abusive behavior by DHS has stood out in the chaos of Operation Metro Surge. But the Justice Department has done its part, too. It has shielded federal agents from accountability, launched needless criminal investigations into Minnesota officials and residents, and pumped out propaganda to aid the far-right press in justifying ICEs tactics. The president has always treated DOJ like his own personal law firm. Now the department is acting like DHSs law firm as well.
DOJ first undertook the role of ICE defender in Minneapolis in the days after Goods death, on January 7. Video captured by the phones of both bystanders and the ICE agent Jonathan Ross showed Ross firing into Goods car repeatedly, killing her and sending her car barreling down the icy street. In prior administrations, a death at the hands of a federal officer would have been cause for the Justice Department to begin a probe into potential wrongdoing by law enforcement. But this time, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche announced, There is currently no basis for a criminal civil rights investigation. Though federal and local investigators typically collaborate in the aftermath of shootings by law enforcement, the FBI blocked state and local governments from accessing evidence. When a journalist asked Trump about this development, he explained that Minnesota officials should not be allowed to look at evidence, because they are crooked.
Most galling, instead of probing Rosss actions, the Justice Department decided to investigate the woman he killed. According to MS NOW, FBI agents in Minnesota drafted a search warrant for Goods car to examine the path of the bullets fired by Ross, intending to carry out a civil-rights probe. But Blanches office demanded that they alter the warrant for use in an investigation of whether Good had assaulted Ross. (A magistrate judge denied the request on the grounds that Good was dead.) The New York Times reported that DOJ also considered launching a criminal probe into Goods widow, Becca Good, who was with Renee that morning. Six prosecutors in the U.S. Attorneys Office for the District of Minnesota resigned in protest of the departments handling of the case, along with an FBI agent whod sought to open a civil-rights investigation but was rebuffed. Several attorneys in the Justice Departments Civil Rights Division have since resigned as well.
Gift Link
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/01/ice-trump-minnesota-justice-department/685788/?gift=mTq34Ny-ZVr996jdTJS9TvzRmBocVP69WUVJpNdI0Z0&utm_source=copy-link&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=share
Since we published this, Pam Bondi's X account has started posting mugshots of Minnesotans arrested for impeding ICE/CBP. Sharing a defendant's photo publicly in this way is forbidden under DOJ rules
— Quinta Jurecic (@qjurecic.bsky.social) 2026-01-28T20:23:25.547Z
Absolutely this. This whole collection of photos does the exact opposite of what Bondi thinks this is doing.
— Mike Masnick (@mmasnick.bsky.social) 2026-01-28T22:31:44.859Z
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ICE's No. 1 Ally - The Atlantic (Original Post)
In It to Win It
4 hrs ago
OP
The article is saying DOJ is "ICE's No. 1 Ally", sheilding ICE agents from any accountability
In It to Win It
1 hr ago
#4
msongs
(73,168 posts)1. atlantic links are almost always log in required. not usually worth the time nt
GusBob
(8,180 posts)5. It's a gift link
Good grief
The usual response is; thanks for posting
And my comment is
Bondi needs this mayhem she is neck deep in Epstein crimes
2naSalit
(100,594 posts)2. I hope they sue the shit out her.
marked50
(1,564 posts)3. I am confused by the OP Title.
The Atlantic article does not seem to me to be in anyway an ally of ICE. It is a summary of all that has been happening with a context that it is pretty rotten what DOJ and ICE have been doing. Am I missing something?
In It to Win It
(12,458 posts)4. The article is saying DOJ is "ICE's No. 1 Ally", sheilding ICE agents from any accountability
travelingthrulife
(4,699 posts)6. Isn't that true?
In It to Win It
(12,458 posts)7. Yes IMO. They're giving ICE all the possible legal cover they could.
marked50
(1,564 posts)8. Thanks for the clarification