World January 27, 2026

White House Installs New Lead for Minneapolis Immigration Sweep as Outrage Mounts

Administration shifts strategy and personnel after fatal Border Patrol shooting; judges and local officials press for answers

By Hana Yamamoto
White House Installs New Lead for Minneapolis Immigration Sweep as Outrage Mounts

The White House moved to replace a senior Border Patrol official overseeing a high-profile immigration operation in Minneapolis as the administration responded to national anger over the fatal shooting of a U.S. citizen by federal agents. The change, which names Tom Homan to lead the effort in place of Gregory Bovino, accompanies a broader reassessment of tactics after video and public reaction undercut initial official accounts. The administration weighed reducing the federal footprint, narrowing ICE priorities, and enabling state-level investigations while facing judicial scrutiny and political fallout.

Key Points

  • Tom Homan was designated to take over the federal immigration operation in Minneapolis, replacing Border Patrol official Gregory Bovino as the White House reassesses its approach following a fatal shooting.
  • The administration considered reducing federal personnel in Minnesota, narrowing ICE operations to deportation-focused activity, improving coordination with state authorities, and requiring body-worn cameras for immigration officers.
  • Judicial pressure increased as a federal judge ordered acting ICE head Todd Lyons to appear for a contempt hearing over alleged noncompliance with orders on bond hearings; political fallout included resignations from a gubernatorial campaign and concern among Republicans about midterm implications. Sectors affected include government law enforcement and state and local public safety operations, as well as the political sector.

The White House announced a change in leadership of the federal immigration effort in Minneapolis as officials scrambled to contain public outrage over the death of a man shot by federal agents. Tom Homan, a Trump-appointed border czar, was slated to assume command of the broad immigration operation in the city on Tuesday, replacing Border Patrol official Gregory Bovino, according to people briefed on the move.

The personnel shift is part of a wider recalibration by the president and senior aides after the killing of 37-year-old Alex Pretti during protests, an episode that critics say threatens to derail core elements of the administration's immigration agenda. The administration's discussions over the weekend focused on operational and public-relations changes rather than expanding enforcement, people familiar with the talks said.

Among the options weighed by the White House were reducing the number of federal agents in Minnesota, tightening the scope of Immigration and Customs Enforcement's presence in the state to prioritize deportations over broad street-level enforcement, and seeking more coordination with state authorities. Officials also examined whether immigration officers should be equipped with body-worn cameras, a standard increasingly common in many police forces.

The incident that prompted the deliberations occurred on Saturday when Border Patrol agents shot Pretti, an intensive care nurse. Video recorded by bystanders circulated widely and contradicted early official accounts, showing Pretti holding a phone while agents wrestled him to the ground and then officers removing a firearm from his waistband after he had been subdued. While Pretti was a licensed gun owner, witnesses and footage indicate he did not touch the weapon prior to being shot.

The shooting has become a political crisis for the administration, compounding earlier controversy this month when ICE officials were accused in the fatal shooting of 37-year-old Renee Good. The pair of deaths intensified scrutiny of a roughly 3,000-strong federal contingent that had been patrolling Minneapolis streets for weeks as part of a nationwide campaign of enforcement actions in Democratic-led cities.


Court pressure and legal consequences

Federal courts added to the administration's challenges. Late Monday, a federal judge in Minnesota ordered Todd Lyons, the acting head of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, to appear for a contempt hearing on Friday. Judge Patrick Schiltz wrote that the agency had failed to comply with court orders requiring that certain detainees be afforded bond hearings, and cautioned that "The court's patience is at an end." The contempt proceeding signals mounting judicial impatience with agency compliance even as DHS leadership defends enforcement operations.


Public reaction and political fallout

Public reaction to the Pretti shooting, amplified by widely shared video, undercut initial agency narratives that framed the incident as an attack on officers. That shift in the public record contributed to an erosion of support for the administration's immigration approach, according to public-opinion data cited by officials. Some Republican lawmakers privately expressed concern that the administration's aggressive tactics, if continued, could jeopardize the party's hold on congressional majorities ahead of the November midterm elections.

The political reverberations inside Minnesota were evident as well. A leading Republican candidate for governor, Chris Madel, announced he was ending his campaign, saying in a video statement that the federal crackdown had gone too far: "I cannot support the national Republicans' stated retribution on the citizens of our state, nor can I count myself a member of a party that would do so."


White House response and internal dynamics

Facing the fallout, the president spent the weekend consulting senior advisers to reassess the federal posture in Minneapolis. He convened a two-hour meeting on Monday evening with the head of the Department of Homeland Security, Kristi Noem, after she requested the session. A senior source indicated Noem's position was not at risk.

In public remarks the president adopted a noticeably more conciliatory tone than earlier statements from some aides. He described private conversations with Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey as productive, and both state and city leaders offered similarly positive public comments following those calls. Walz's office said the president agreed to direct the Department of Homeland Security to ensure that state authorities could conduct their own investigation into the shooting. Mayor Frey posted on the social platform X that he understood some federal agents would begin leaving the city on Tuesday.

Behind the scenes, senior White House officials urged a change in rhetoric toward the victim. The president made clear he did not want to publicly defend the agents' actions nor to attack Pretti, after a series of sharp comments from administration figures. Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller had labeled Pretti an "assassin," and Bovino returned public comments suggesting Pretti intended to "massacre" officers. Video verified by independent review undermined those characterizations. Senior aides were directed not to launch public attacks on Pretti, and the president discussed distancing himself from inflammatory remarks made by some staff.


Leadership signals and disputed accounts

Bovino, who publicly framed the officers who fired on Pretti as victims of the incident, is expected to leave Minneapolis, along with some of the Border Patrol agents who had deployed with him, a senior administration official said. A separate account asserted Bovino had been stripped of the specially created title of "commander at large" and would resume duties as a chief patrol agent along California's El Centro sector before retiring, though that path was described as pending.

The Department of Homeland Security's public messaging did not mirror every report circulating internally. DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin posted on X on Monday: "Chief Gregory Bovino has NOT been relieved of his duties." The dispute over Bovino's status reflects the larger tension between the administration's internal decisions and the public record.


Evidence and conflicting official descriptions

Initial agency descriptions portrayed the episode as an assault on officers, asserting that Pretti approached agents with a handgun and that they fired in self-defense. Bystander footage that spread widely presented a different sequence. It showed Pretti holding a phone as officers engaged him and then depicted officers removing a firearm from his waistband after he had been subdued. The footage undercut early claims that he had posed an immediate threat while unrestrained.

The unfolding controversy has prompted the White House to contemplate operational changes and to encourage state-level oversight of the shooting, even as the federal agencies involved confront mounting judicial and public scrutiny. The administration's moves to change command and revise enforcement priorities in Minnesota reflect an effort to manage the political and legal fallout while preserving core immigration objectives.


Risks

  • Political backlash and eroding public support for federal enforcement tactics could have electoral consequences, with some Republicans warning the approach may jeopardize congressional majorities - impacting political stability and public-sector policymaking.
  • Court-ordered scrutiny of immigration detention practices and a pending contempt hearing for acting ICE leadership create legal and operational uncertainty that could constrain enforcement activities - affecting federal immigration agencies and local justice systems.
  • Widespread dissemination of bystander video that contradicts initial official accounts raises reputational and oversight risks for federal law enforcement, potentially prompting operational changes and increased oversight that alter enforcement effectiveness - affecting departmental planning and resource deployment.

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