(MINNESOTA, MINNEAPOLIS, ST. PAUL) The U.S. Department of Justice has filed a DOJ lawsuit against Minnesota, Minneapolis, and St. Paul over their sanctuary city rules that limit local cooperation with federal immigration enforcement. Filed as of September 30, 2025, the case challenges parts of state law, city codes, and Hennepin County directives that restrict compliance with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) requests. Local leaders say they will defend current policies, arguing the measures protect public safety by building trust with immigrant communities.
Federal lawyers claim the policies are unconstitutional because they interfere with federal authority over immigration. They argue the restrictions let people avoid lawful detention by blocking information-sharing or transfer requests from ICE. According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, similar legal clashes in other states have shaped how cities interact with federal agencies, often affecting whether local jails honor ICE “detainers” and whether officers share release dates with federal agents.

What the DOJ is challenging
The complaint targets three layers of government action at once:
- State-level provisions in Minnesota law or constitutional interpretations that limit cooperation with federal immigration agencies.
- City codes in Minneapolis and St. Paul that bar local staff from using city resources for civil immigration enforcement.
- Hennepin County administrative orders that restrict jail transfers or data-sharing with ICE.
The Justice Department says these measures endanger public safety and conflict with federal law. City and state officials counter that local policies focus on criminal law, not civil immigration actions, and help police solve crimes by encouraging victims and witnesses to come forward without fear.
- Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey and St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter have both pledged to defend their ordinances, describing the lawsuit as politically driven rather than rooted in public safety outcomes.
The federal-state tension is not new. Across the United States, courts have reviewed whether the federal government can force cities to help with civil immigration arrests. The Supreme Court has allowed federal primacy over immigration but has also limited the federal government’s ability to “commandeer” state resources. How those doctrines apply in Minnesota will likely be central to this case.
Key legal tension: whether local policies “stand as an obstacle” to federal immigration law or whether they simply reflect local priorities in using limited resources.
Potential impact on Minnesota families and police
If the DOJ lawsuit succeeds, Minnesota and its two largest cities could face court orders requiring broader cooperation with ICE. That might include more responses to detainer requests, more transfers from local jails to federal custody, and more data-sharing. Officials say any shift could change how police work with immigrant neighborhoods, where trust built over years can break down quickly if local officers are seen as tied to civil immigration actions.
Key changes Minnesota could see if the DOJ prevails:
- Closer jail cooperation
- More holds and transfers to ICE custody after local charges are resolved.
- Increased deportations
- A likely rise in removals if ICE gains faster access to people leaving local custody.
- New training and procedures
- Police and jail staff may need updated guidance, affecting operations and budgets.
- Community trust concerns
- Victims and witnesses may hesitate to report crimes if they fear contact with immigration agents.
Advocates for immigrant families say the policies at issue were designed to keep lines open between communities and police. They point to research suggesting that when local police focus on local crime, communities share more information, which can reduce violence.
Supporters of the DOJ position argue that uniform cooperation is needed to remove people with serious criminal histories and to ensure consistent federal law enforcement.
State policy context and related measures
Minnesota’s broader policy choices add context to the dispute:
- The state expanded MinnesotaCare in 2023 to include undocumented immigrants, though lawmakers later moved to limit eligibility for undocumented adults aged 18 and older starting January 1, 2026.
- In October 2023, Minnesota began issuing driver’s licenses regardless of immigration status.
These measures reflect a broader state approach that separates state services and road safety from federal civil immigration processes. While the lawsuit focuses on cooperation rules—not healthcare or licensing—a court win for the Justice Department could embolden new challenges or legislative changes. Conversely, a defense win could reinforce local autonomy and influence policies in other states.
Legal timeline and procedural steps
Lawyers expect a long path with several possible stages:
- Preliminary injunctions
- Fact discovery
- Motions and hearings
- Appeals
During that process, current local policies remain in place unless a judge issues a temporary order. City leaders say officers will keep focusing on local crime while the state prepares legal arguments defending its authority to set limits on the use of state and local resources for federal tasks.
Important: policies remain active now unless and until a court issues an injunction changing them.
Practical concerns for residents and employers
Residents and employers are watching for immediate effects on daily life.
- Parents worry about school visits or clinic appointments increasing exposure to immigration checks.
- Advocates emphasize that public schools and hospitals are not immigration enforcement hubs, and the lawsuit doesn’t change federal rules on sensitive locations.
- Employers fear workforce disruption if more employees face detention after traffic stops or minor offenses.
- Others support stronger federal coordination to reduce uncertainty and protect workplaces.
Police chiefs across the Twin Cities stress that solving robberies, assaults, and burglaries often depends on cooperation from immigrant neighbors. They fear that if victims believe a 911 call might lead to immigration questions, they may not call. DOJ supporters say clear policies can protect victims while still honoring lawful federal requests.
Resources and community response
Residents who want to learn how ICE detainers work can review federal guidance from ICE, which explains voluntary requests, timing, and transfer protocols. See: https://www.ice.gov/detainers
Understanding the difference between civil immigration holds and criminal warrants matters here:
- A detainer is a civil request.
- A judge-signed warrant is a criminal order.
Community groups plan legal clinics and “know your rights” sessions. Attorneys remind residents that criminal defense and immigration advice often intersect. People with questions about jail transfers, detainers, or plea deals should seek qualified counsel early. City officials say they’ll keep community outreach steady to reduce fear and explain what the lawsuit does—and does not—change right now.
Broader implications
The court’s decision will ripple far beyond Minneapolis and St. Paul:
- Other cities will study the ruling to adjust their ordinances.
- State lawmakers may revisit funding, training, and data systems.
- Families across the Twin Cities will continue weighing daily choices—calling police, driving to work, visiting clinics—against headlines about federal courtrooms and the future of local control.
VisaVerge.com reports that previous fights over federal grant conditions tied to immigration cooperation taught cities to draft policies with careful legal language. Minnesota’s defense will likely point to that history, arguing its rules avoid direct conflicts while promoting public safety, health access, and road safety through driver’s licenses.
Takeaway: the case will test the balance between federal immigration authority and local choices about resource use and public-safety strategy—outcomes that could shape policy across the country.
This Article in a Nutshell
On September 30, 2025, the U.S. Department of Justice sued Minnesota, Minneapolis, and St. Paul, alleging that state laws, municipal codes, and Hennepin County orders unlawfully restrict cooperation with federal immigration enforcement. The complaint argues these policies interfere with federal immigration authority by blocking ICE detainers, transfer requests, and information-sharing. City and state officials counter that the measures protect public safety by encouraging community cooperation with police. If the DOJ succeeds, Minnesota could face court orders requiring greater jail cooperation, more transfers to ICE custody, and increased deportations, potentially undermining trust between immigrant communities and local law enforcement. The case will test the balance between federal primacy in immigration and limits on federal commandeering of local resources, with implications for other jurisdictions.