The chief federal judge in Minnesota threatened to pursue criminal contempt charges against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the state’s top federal prosecutor if they don’t comply with court orders in scores of immigration cases.
On Thursday, Chief Judge Patrick Schiltz of the U.S. District Court in Minnesota accused ICE of failing to follow dozens of court directives. At least 97 violations involving 66 different cases had been documented, according to the judge’s order, along with an additional 113 alleged breaches of court orders in other matters.
“One way or another, ICE will comply with this court’s orders,” Schiltz wrote in his filing. He warned that repeated noncompliance could force the court to move beyond civil enforcement measures to criminal contempt, which could carry fines or even imprisonment for responsible officials.
Schiltz’s rebuke comes amid heightened scrutiny of federal immigration enforcement in Minnesota. ICE detained thousands of people during Operation Metro Surge, an immigration crackdown that drew widespread protests. Border czar Tom Homan announced the end of the operation earlier this month.

Schiltz previously released a list of court orders that ICE allegedly violated in January, prompting the court to threaten civil contempt proceedings.
“The Court is not aware of another occasion in the history of the United States in which a federal court has had to threaten contempt — again and again and again — to force the United States government to comply with court orders,” Schiltz wrote on Thursday.
Schiltz highlighted in his order a Feb. 9 email from Minnesota’s U.S. attorney, Daniel Rosen, in which Rosen disputed the court’s accounting of ICE’s violations and accused the court of “wildly overstating the extent of ICE’s noncompliance with orders.”








