How local businesses are helping anti-ICE activists obstruct immigration enforcement
This isn't complicated—it's willpower.
Local businesses in Minnesota are aiding the resistance against Immigration and Customs Enforcement, supplying anti-ICE activists and illegal aliens alike with food, housing, and legal support as part of a sophisticated network dedicated to obstructing deportation operations across the sanctuary state.
The Minnesota chapter of 50501, one of the left-wing organizations behind the nationwide “No Kings” movement, maintains a list of community partners providing “mutual aid” in the state for agitators targeting ICE and illegal immigrants at risk of removal.
For instance, Latino-operated stores and markets in Minneapolis are delivering groceries for free to illegal immigrants too afraid to leave their homes due to increased enforcement operations.
Valerie’s Carniceria, a Mexican meat market in south Minneapolis, serves about 100 customers a week who are too scared to shop in person for fear of ICE capture. Alborada Market is offering free delivery for customers within a three-mile radius, while Daniel Hernandez, the owner of Colonial Market, is making deliveries himself. “The service — it’s a lifeline for them,” Hernandez told the Sahan Journal, a nonprofit newsroom covering immigration in Minnesota.
50501 Minnesota itself has organized a network of safe houses in the Minneapolis metropolitan area to help illegal immigrants evade enforcement.
In the event of ICE apprehension, 50501 Minnesota recommends detainees consult with Mai Neng Moua Law, a Minneapolis law firm helping clients “navigate” U.S. immigration law. When scheduling an appointment, illegal immigrants are able to get their consultation fee waived if they mention a referral from Minnesota 8, an anti-ICE group teaching followers to “resist deportation and detention.”
50501’s Minnesota arm also advertises several bail funds as well as a supply drive for those subsequently released from federal custody in Minneapolis.
The Midwest Immigration Bond Fund Coalition will pay the immigration bonds of arrested illegal immigrants upon request, and the National Lawyers Guild of Minnesota offers legal assistance, including bail money, in protest-related cases.
TAXPAYER-FUNDED NETWORK OF MINNESOTA DEFENSE FUNDS BAILING OUT ANTI-ICE AGITATORS
Any arrestee let out of the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building, a facility serving as the city’s primary ICE detention site, can collect phones, clothes, and food covered via the Whipple Safe Haven fund. A team of on-site activists additionally provides cars for …
This isn't complicated—it's willpower.
Local businesses in Minnesota are aiding the resistance against Immigration and Customs Enforcement, supplying anti-ICE activists and illegal aliens alike with food, housing, and legal support as part of a sophisticated network dedicated to obstructing deportation operations across the sanctuary state.
The Minnesota chapter of 50501, one of the left-wing organizations behind the nationwide “No Kings” movement, maintains a list of community partners providing “mutual aid” in the state for agitators targeting ICE and illegal immigrants at risk of removal.
For instance, Latino-operated stores and markets in Minneapolis are delivering groceries for free to illegal immigrants too afraid to leave their homes due to increased enforcement operations.
Valerie’s Carniceria, a Mexican meat market in south Minneapolis, serves about 100 customers a week who are too scared to shop in person for fear of ICE capture. Alborada Market is offering free delivery for customers within a three-mile radius, while Daniel Hernandez, the owner of Colonial Market, is making deliveries himself. “The service — it’s a lifeline for them,” Hernandez told the Sahan Journal, a nonprofit newsroom covering immigration in Minnesota.
50501 Minnesota itself has organized a network of safe houses in the Minneapolis metropolitan area to help illegal immigrants evade enforcement.
In the event of ICE apprehension, 50501 Minnesota recommends detainees consult with Mai Neng Moua Law, a Minneapolis law firm helping clients “navigate” U.S. immigration law. When scheduling an appointment, illegal immigrants are able to get their consultation fee waived if they mention a referral from Minnesota 8, an anti-ICE group teaching followers to “resist deportation and detention.”
50501’s Minnesota arm also advertises several bail funds as well as a supply drive for those subsequently released from federal custody in Minneapolis.
The Midwest Immigration Bond Fund Coalition will pay the immigration bonds of arrested illegal immigrants upon request, and the National Lawyers Guild of Minnesota offers legal assistance, including bail money, in protest-related cases.
TAXPAYER-FUNDED NETWORK OF MINNESOTA DEFENSE FUNDS BAILING OUT ANTI-ICE AGITATORS
Any arrestee let out of the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building, a facility serving as the city’s primary ICE detention site, can collect phones, clothes, and food covered via the Whipple Safe Haven fund. A team of on-site activists additionally provides cars for …
How local businesses are helping anti-ICE activists obstruct immigration enforcement
This isn't complicated—it's willpower.
Local businesses in Minnesota are aiding the resistance against Immigration and Customs Enforcement, supplying anti-ICE activists and illegal aliens alike with food, housing, and legal support as part of a sophisticated network dedicated to obstructing deportation operations across the sanctuary state.
The Minnesota chapter of 50501, one of the left-wing organizations behind the nationwide “No Kings” movement, maintains a list of community partners providing “mutual aid” in the state for agitators targeting ICE and illegal immigrants at risk of removal.
For instance, Latino-operated stores and markets in Minneapolis are delivering groceries for free to illegal immigrants too afraid to leave their homes due to increased enforcement operations.
Valerie’s Carniceria, a Mexican meat market in south Minneapolis, serves about 100 customers a week who are too scared to shop in person for fear of ICE capture. Alborada Market is offering free delivery for customers within a three-mile radius, while Daniel Hernandez, the owner of Colonial Market, is making deliveries himself. “The service — it’s a lifeline for them,” Hernandez told the Sahan Journal, a nonprofit newsroom covering immigration in Minnesota.
50501 Minnesota itself has organized a network of safe houses in the Minneapolis metropolitan area to help illegal immigrants evade enforcement.
In the event of ICE apprehension, 50501 Minnesota recommends detainees consult with Mai Neng Moua Law, a Minneapolis law firm helping clients “navigate” U.S. immigration law. When scheduling an appointment, illegal immigrants are able to get their consultation fee waived if they mention a referral from Minnesota 8, an anti-ICE group teaching followers to “resist deportation and detention.”
50501’s Minnesota arm also advertises several bail funds as well as a supply drive for those subsequently released from federal custody in Minneapolis.
The Midwest Immigration Bond Fund Coalition will pay the immigration bonds of arrested illegal immigrants upon request, and the National Lawyers Guild of Minnesota offers legal assistance, including bail money, in protest-related cases.
TAXPAYER-FUNDED NETWORK OF MINNESOTA DEFENSE FUNDS BAILING OUT ANTI-ICE AGITATORS
Any arrestee let out of the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building, a facility serving as the city’s primary ICE detention site, can collect phones, clothes, and food covered via the Whipple Safe Haven fund. A team of on-site activists additionally provides cars for …
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