CELEBRITIES
BREAKING: A law firm in Minnesota is now offering free legal services to any woman who divorces her husband because he joined ICE, a move that is already igniting intense backlash and national debate. At the same time, a newly formed activist group calling itself “Moms Against ICE” is actively recruiting the mothers of ICE agents, reportedly paying for their travel to Minneapolis so they can publicly confront and shame their own sons for working with the agency. Now the situation is escalating even further. Gen Z teens are reportedly DOXXING their own fathers on TikTok, identifying them as ICE agents and posting their names and details online, with many of the videos declaring, “You cannot f** with our generation.”* As a result, several of these teens are now being kicked out of their homes after being accused of crossing legal and ethical lines by exposing their ICE-agent parents. And as tensions explode on the streets and online, Donald Trump is now threatening to invoke the Insurrection Act in Minnesota — but according to sources close to the situation, this threat may only be the opening move in something far larger, far more aggressive, and already quietly being prepared behind the scenes…
A volatile situation is unfolding in Minnesota around federal immigration enforcement actions, with nationwide attention and strong reactions from community leaders, activists, politicians and on social media. While some of the claims circulating online have not been verified by reliable news outlets, there are confirmed developments that show the protests and federal state tensions escalating significantly.
🔥 Confirmed: Federal Enforcement and Shootings Spark Outrage
The state has been rocked by aggressive immigration enforcement operations led by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and other Department of Homeland Security (DHS) components. These actions are part of what federal authorities are calling Operation Metro Surge — a large-scale immigration enforcement effort in the Minneapolis-Saint Paul area. �
Wikipedia
On January 7, 2026, 37-year-old American citizen Renée Nicole Good was fatally shot by an ICE agent in Minneapolis. Officials say the agent fired after a vehicle encounter; local authorities and the victim’s family dispute parts of the federal narrative. �
Wikipedia
A second shooting occurred on January 14, when an ICE agent shot a Venezuelan man in the leg during a tense encounter involving a struggle and alleged assault with a shovel. �
Wikipedia
These incidents have triggered protests, sometimes clashing with law enforcement. �
CBS News
🧨 Verified: Political and Legal Backlash
The fallout has extended well beyond the streets:
President Donald Trump has threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act — a rarely used federal statute that allows deployment of the military domestically — to address what the White House describes as an “insurrection” tied to protests and unrest in Minnesota. �
CBS News +1
State and local leaders, including Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and Minneapolis officials, oppose the federal presence, calling it destabilizing and unconstitutional. �
CBS News
Minnesota’s Attorney General and the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul have filed lawsuits against the Trump administration and DHS, seeking to block continued ICE operations due to alleged civil rights violations. �
AP News +1
❗ Unverified Claims: Social Media Reports and Rumors
Various social posts and viral content have claimed dramatic developments — including:
A Minnesota law firm offering free legal services to any woman who divorces her husband for joining ICE.
A grassroots group identifying itself as “Moms Against ICE” organizing travel to Minneapolis to confront ICE agents.
Teenagers doxxing their ICE-agent parents online, with some allegedly being removed from their homes.
At this time, these specific claims do not appear in coverage by major news outlets, and there is no confirmation from credible sources that these groups or programs exist as described. Social media posts making such claims should be treated with caution until verified independently.
🧠 What’s Next?
The situation remains dynamic:
Legal battles over the legitimacy of the federal enforcement actions are underway. �
AP News
Minnesota leaders are debating responses to the federal presence. �
CBS News
Public discourse is increasingly polarized, both online and off.