The editors of the Washington Post and Wall Street Journal have reacted to the killing of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis by a Border Patrol agent:
Washington Post
It’s essential that federal immigration officers don’t think they can act with impunity, because that will only encourage more fatal encounters. An independent probe of this shooting is an important step. On Saturday night, a federal judge ordered DHS not to destroy evidence related to Pretti’s killing in response to a lawsuit filed by Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison (D).
Democrats will prevail if they focus on a narrow set of reasonable demands. The president will gain the upper hand if the left clamors for abolishing ICE. They already tried that during Trump’s first term, and it backfired. At the same time, that agency needs to be bound by laws, oversight and accountability. Most of all, U.S. citizens need to be secure in exercising their First and Second Amendment rights without worrying they’ll get gunned down.
Most Americans want a secure border, and they think violent criminals should be deported. That’s a large part of why Trump returned to the White House. The overreach of the past year, however, could consume his presidency and lead to more tragedy. If Trump won’t change course on his own, can Republicans in Congress save him from himself?
Wall Street Journal
Pretti made a tragic mistake by interfering with ICE agents, but that warranted arrest, not a death sentence. The agents may say they felt threatened, but it’s worth noting the comments over the weekend by police around the country who say that this isn’t how they conduct law enforcement.
Either many ICE agents aren’t properly trained, or they are so on edge as they face opposition in the streets that they are on a hair trigger. Either way, this calls for rethinking how ICE conducts itself, especially in Minneapolis as tensions build.
I materially agree with both of those statements with a few provisos.
The context of the killings in Minneapolis includes:
The initiating policy signal
Candidate Biden literally urged those seeking to enter the United States to “surge to the border”. They did. That signal functioned as an invitation in practice.
This was not metaphorical language. In every domain where the word “surge” is used whether logistics, medicine, military operations it denotes a deliberate increase in volume designed to stress a system’s capacity. The predictable result was a mass inflow that overwhelmed border processing and shifted the enforcement problem into the interior of the country.
Statements by mayors
The mayors of Portland, Minneapolis, and Chicago, all “sanctuary” cities, have made the following statements:
Enforcement of civil immigration laws by militarized forces has no legitimate role in our community, no support from local elected leaders, and little public support
and
Local and state law enforcement must remain the jurisdiction of local law enforcement authorities…
We are demanding that ICE leave the city and state immediately.
and
We stand by our immigrant and refugee communities — know that you have our full support
…we remain opposed to militarized immigration enforcement that runs afoul of the Constitution in our city.
If you think that the key word in the statements above is “militarized”, please provide evidence that the mayors support federal enforcement actions within their jurisdictions so long as they are not militarized. I have searched and found no such statements. They do not oppose tactics; they oppose jurisdiction.
Note that a) the federal government’s role in the enforcement of immigration laws has been fully litigated and is unchallenged; b) all three mayors reject it. The mayors’ position is functionally indistinguishable from nullification: the claim that federal law is valid everywhere except where local officials disapprove of it.
While I recognize that neither the mayors nor the editors have any legal responsibility to do so, I think that under the circumstances they have an ethical responsibility to propose a workable method for enforcing immigration law within those jurisdictions without deploying federal law enforcement agents within them. Otherwise, their position is not reform but abdication.






