The Trump administration will immediately remove 700 federal law enforcement officers from Minnesota, border czar Tom Homan said Wednesday, leaving about 2,000 officers in the state.
Homan announced the withdrawal at a morning news conference, saying federal agencies are communicating with multiple counties, allowing them to operate more efficiently.
“This is smart law enforcement, not less law enforcement,” Homan said.
State officials previously said that 3,000 federal officers had been deployed to Minnesota, an amount that dwarfed local law enforcement’s numbers.
Homan said the number of federal officers remaining in the state as part of Operation Metro Surge stands at approximately 2,000 with Wednesday’s partial withdrawal.
Homan was deployed to Minnesota as part of a de-escalation effort amid the national outrage over the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal officers. He said from the outset that federal officers will conduct targeted enforcement operations, a shift from the more aggressive approach favored by Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino, who had led immigration enforcement operations in the field until last week.
Homan said Wednesday that his goal “is to achieve a complete drawdown and end this surge as soon as we can.” But he appeared to place the responsibility for that on Minnesotans.








