The Department of Homeland Security decided that ICE agents were exempt from the Fourth Amendment, which prevents police from entering homes without a warrant signed by a judge.
U.S. District Court judge Jeffrey Bryan ruled last Saturday in Minneapolis that ICE had to abide by the Fourth Amendment.
The Fourth Amendment says:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
This means that law officers can’t burst into your home without a judge’s warrant.
The Fourth Amendment underpins the phrase that “a man’s home is his castle.”
Recently, ICE decided that its agents did not need a judge’s warrant and that an “administrative warrant” would suffice. The administrative warrant would be signed by an ICE employee.
ICE decided that with an “administrative warrant,” it could batter down doors and enter homes to seize suspects.
Federal Judge Bryan said they could not.
Wired magazine summarized the situation:
A FEDERAL JUDGE in Minnesota ruled last Saturday that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents violated the Fourth Amendment after they forcibly entered a Minnesota man’s home without a judicial warrant. The conduct of the agents closely mirrors a previously undisclosed ICE directive that claims agents are permitted to enter people’s homes using an administrative warrant, rather than a warrant signed by a judge.
The ruling, issued by US District Court judge Jeffrey Bryan in response to a petition for a writ of habeas corpus on January 17, did not assess the legality of ICE’s internal guidance itself. But it squarely holds that federal agents violated the United States Constitution when they entered a residence without consent and without a judge-signed warrant—the same conditions ICE leadership has privately told officers is sufficient for home arrests, according to a complaint filed by Whistleblower Aid, a nonprofit legal group representing whistleblowers from the public and private sector.
In a sworn declaration, Garrison Gibson, a Liberian national who has lived in Minnesota for years under an ICE order of supervision, says agents arrived at his home in the early morning on January 11 while his family slept inside. He says he refused to open the door and repeatedly demanded to see a judicial warrant. According to the declaration, the agents initially left, then returned with a larger group, deployed pepper spray toward neighbors who had gathered outside, and used a battering ram to force the door open.
The declaration was filed as part of a January 12 Minnesota lawsuit against Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem challenging federal immigration enforcement operations in the Twin Cities, which state officials characterize as an unconstitutional “invasion” by ICE and other agents that has roiled Minneapolis and Saint Paul.
Federal officials did not contest Gibson’s habeas petition.
Gibson, who reportedly fled the Liberian civil war as a child, says agents entered his home without showing a warrant. His wife, who was filming at the time, warned that children were inside, he says, and that agents holding rifles stood in their doorway. “One agent repeatedly claimed ‘We’re getting the papers’ in response to her demand to see the warrant,” he says. “But without showing a warrant, and apparently without having one, five to six agents moved in as if they were entering a war zone.”
Only after he was handcuffed, Gibson says, did the agents show his wife an administrative warrant.
One day after the judge ordered Gibson’s immediate release, ICE agents took him back into custody when he appeared for a routine immigration check-in at a Minnesota immigration office, according to his attorney, Marc Prokosch, who said Gibson arrived believing the court order had resolved the matter.
“We were there for a check-in, and the original officer said, ‘This looks good, I’ll be right back,’” Prokosch told the Associated Press. “And then there was a lot of chaos, and about five officers came out and then they said, ‘We’re going to be taking him back into custody.’ I was like, ‘Really, you want to do this again?’”
The re-arrest did not reverse the court’s finding that ICE violated the Fourth Amendment during the warrantless home entry, but underscores how the agency retains civil detention authority even if a judge rules that a specific arrest was unconstitutional.

The headline of the post is misleading: The Order portion of Judge Bryan’s ruling found that ICE violated the 4th Amendment in the Plaintiff’s case, but the Order portion of Judge Bryan’s ruling didn’t order ICE to obey the 4th Amendment. The ruling only ordered ICE to release the Plaintiff and to not re-arrest him.
Given ICE’s demonstrated disregard for law and the Constitution, it’s likely that ICE will continue its unconstitutional break-ins and arrests, claiming that Judge Bryan’s ruling only applies to the case of Garrison G., and in actual fact since Judge Bryan’s January 17 ruling ICE has clearly continued to use its tactics — and ICE will continue to do so because no “blanket” ruling has been issued that explicitly ordered ICE to always obey the 4th Amendment. Court rulings can be tricky and law is convoluted.
What’s needed is a case that results in a federal District Court issuing a blanket Order that prohibits ICE from violating the 4th Amendment. Otherwise, ICE will continue to use its unconstitutional tactics and is prepared to let the courts deal with that on a case-by-case after-the-fact basis in which people have their doors kicked down and sit in ICE detention until their case is ruled on.
It doesn’t matter to ICE how many individual cases there are because ICE is defended in all of them by YOUR TAX MONEY spent by HHS and the DOJ. Remember, Congress has already approved an $85 BILLION budget for ICE that can’t be rescinded.
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Give me a better headline and I will change it.
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“ICE IGNORES CONSTITUTION”
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How about “Here Are All the Democrats Who Voted to Keep Funding ICE: Seven Democratic lawmakers are apparently fine with what ICE has been doing.”
https://newrepublic.com/post/205604/seven-democrats-voted-keep-funding-ice
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Modern American Nazis of the xtian nationalist theofascist ilk don’t give a damn about the Constitution. The only thing that matters to them is ridding this country of the darker colored vermin that live in AmuriKKKa. Cain’t be havin no non-whites running around. . . unless they is someone’s slave.
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Since the population is only 51% Caucasian, the Xtian nationalists are placing a bad bet
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I hope that you are right, but these theofascists think they now have all the cards in the deck.
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