A Minnesota man on Monday said that he felt fear, shame and desperation a day after US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers broke down his door with guns drawn, handcuffed him and dragged him into the snow wearing shorts and Crocs.
ChongLy Thao, 56, a naturalized US citizen who goes by the name Scott, was returned home later on Sunday without explanation or apology, he said.
“I was praying. I was like: ‘God, please help me, I didn’t do anything wrong. Why do they do this to me? Without my clothes on,” Thao, a Hmong man born in Laos, said from his home on Monday, while neighbors were at work fixing the broken door.
Photo: Reuters
Pictures of the incident showing Thao barely clothed and covered in a blanket taken by a Reuters photographer and bystanders spread on social media, further fueling concern that federal law enforcement officers were exceeding their authority as part of US President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown, which has seen about 3,000 officers deployed in the Minneapolis area.
A statement published by the family called the incident “unnecessary, degrading, and deeply traumatizing.”
The highest temperature in Saint Paul on Sunday was minus-10°C.
The US Department of Homeland Security said officers were investigating two convicted sex offenders at the address and that a US citizen living there refused to be fingerprinted or facially identified, so he was detained.
“He matched the description of the targets. As with any law enforcement agency, it is standard protocol to hold all individuals in a house of an operation for safety of the public and law enforcement,” department spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement.
The department published wanted posters for two men targeted in the investigation who were still at large, describing each as a “criminal illegal alien” from Laos who is subject to deportation orders.
One of the men in the wanted posters previously lived at the house, but moved out, according to relatives close to the situation, who described him as the former husband of a member of the Thao family.
A US District Judge in Minnesota on Friday last week issued an injunction blocking the Trump administration from some aggressive tactics that she said would “chill” an ordinary citizen from engaging in constitutionally protected protest.
“That conduct includes the drawing and pointing of weapons; the use of pepper spray and other non-lethal munitions; actual and threatened arrest and detainment of protesters and observers; and other intimidation tactics,” Judge Katherine Menendez wrote.
The Trump administration is appealing her injunction.
Thao said his parents brought him from Laos to the US in 1974 when he was four years old and that he became a US citizen in 1991. During the ordeal, he feared being sent back to Laos, where he has no relatives.
He said he was singing karaoke when there was a loud noise at the door. He and his family hid in a bedroom, where the federal officers found him.
Thao said that he was trying to find his ID as officers escorted him out of the house.
Thao was wearing only boxer shorts and Crocs when officers denied him the chance to put on more clothes, he said. He used a blanket that his four-year-old grandson had been sleeping with on the couch to cover his torso.
After taking his fingerprints and a head shot in the car, officers returned him to his home, Thao said.
“We came here for a purpose, right?... To have a bright future. To have a safe place to live,” he said. “If this is going to turn out to be America, what are we doing here? Why are we here?”
Yemen’s separatist leader has vowed to keep working for an independent state in the country’s south, in his first social media post since he disappeared earlier this month after his group briefly seized swathes of territory. Aidarous al-Zubaidi’s United Arab Emirates (UAE)-backed Southern Transitional Council (STC) forces last month captured two Yemeni provinces in an offensive that was rolled back by Saudi strikes and Riyadh’s allied forces on the ground. Al-Zubaidi then disappeared after he failed to board a flight to Riyadh for talks earlier this month, with Saudi Arabia accusing him of fleeing to Abu Dhabi, while supporters insisted he was
The Chinese Embassy in Manila yesterday said it has filed a diplomatic protest against a Philippine Coast Guard spokesman over a social media post that included cartoonish images of Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平). Philippine Coast Guard spokesman Jay Tarriela and an embassy official had been trading barbs since last week over issues concerning the disputed South China Sea. The crucial waterway, which Beijing claims historic rights to despite an international ruling that its assertion has no legal basis, has been the site of repeated clashes between Chinese and Philippine vessels. Tarriela’s Facebook post on Wednesday included a photo of him giving a
‘MOBILIZED’: While protesters countered ICE agents, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz activated the state’s National Guard to ‘support the rights of Minnesotans’ to assemble Hundreds of counterprotesters drowned out a far-right activist’s attempt to hold a small rally in support of US President Donald Trump’s latest immigration crackdown in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Saturday, as the governor’s office announced that National Guard troops were mobilized and ready to assist law enforcement, although not yet deployed to city streets. There have been protests every day since the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) ramped up immigration enforcement in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and Saint Paul by bringing in more than 2,000 federal officers. Conservative influencer Jake Lang organized an anti-Islam, anti-Somali and pro-US Immigration and Customs Enforcement
NASA on Saturday rolled out its towering Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion spacecraft as it began preparations for its first crewed mission to the Moon in more than 50 years. The maneuver, which takes up to 12 hours, would allow the US space agency to begin a string of tests for the Artemis 2 mission, which could blast off as early as Feb. 6. The immense orange and white SLS rocket, and the Orion vessel were slowly wheeled out of the Vehicle Assembly Building at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, and painstakingly moved 6.5km to Launch Pad 39B. If the