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Bill of Rights put to the test over Trump's immigration crackdown in Minnesota

In and out of court, more than half of the amendments enshrined in the Bill of Rights are being fought over as a direct result of President Donald Trump's immigration enforcement surge in Minnesota.

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In his second term, Trump and his administration have been aggressive in stretching the boundaries of political conventions, resulting ina number of court challenges. Trump's push to eliminate birthright citizenship, freeze federal funds and bypass Congress through executive orders have tested the separation of powers.

The Twin Cities campaign, though, has been a flashpoint, with fights over at least six — the first, second, third, fourth, fifth and 10th — of the first 10 amendments. Conservative-leaning scholars see both lawyers and judges overstepping their bounds in fiery filings and opinions, while liberal-leaning counterparts see a notable disregard by the Trump administration for Bill of Rights provisions.

"You could teach a great constitutional law seminar about the Bill of Rights just through the violations that have taken place in Minneapolis alone," said Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., a former constitutional law professor. "There have been massive violations of the civil rights of minority groups in the past, like Native Americans and African Americans and Asian Americans, but it is hard to sum up any historical analogy to the systematic violation of all of the fundamental constitutional rights of the people in such a comprehensive and indiscriminate way."

Randy Barnett, director of the Georgetown Center for the Constitution, said he saw the battle over the Bill of Rights in Minneapolis as "unprecedented" for how many far-fetched claims he believes advocates have made that have gained traction with district court judges.

"As a Ninth Amendment scholar, I'm a little disappointed that this provision has yet to be thrown against the wall to see if it sticks," joked Barnett, who represented the National Federation of Independent Businesses in its constitutional challenge to the Affordable Care Act.

Abigail Jackson, a White House spokesperson, said the administration "is working to lawfully deliver on President Trump's mandate to enforce federal immigration law and carry out the largest mass deportation campaign of criminal illegal aliens in history."

"The real story should be the unrelenting unlawful rulings issued by lower court judges pushing their own policy agenda," she continued. "President Trump will not waver when implementing the agenda he was elected on."

The Fourth, Fifth and 10th Amendments

In court, the Fourth, Fifth and 10th amendments have been core to legal battles over specific immigration enforcement actions.

John Yoo, who served in President George W. Bush's Justice Department, said many of the constitutional fights are taking place because of how unsettled areas of immigration law are.

"There's very few Supreme Court cases about it, and very few about the responsibility of the federal and state government," said Yoo, a strong advocate for presidential power who helped author the "torture memos" on interrogation after the Sept. 11 attacks. "So whenever you have that kind of uncertainty, that's where people step in — lower courts, litigants — and just start getting creative."

Yoo added that the contests over the Fourth Amendment might be the most significant as the space where individual liberties may most be at stake. That amendment protects individuals from unreasonable searches and seizures and requires the federal government to obtain warrants based on probable cause to enter a person's home. It has been tested under a Trump administration policy that allows Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to enter people's homes with administrative warrants issued by the executive branch, instead of a judge.

The question over the use of administrative warrants has already arisen in court. Fred Biery, a federal judge in Texas who was appointed by President Bill Clinton, accused the Trump administration of ignoring the Fourth Amendmentin a ruling last monthordering the release of 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father, Adrian Conejo Arias, an asylum-seeker from Ecuador, from an immigration detention center in Texas. The two have since returned home to Minneapolis.

Biery said the administration was treating the Fourth Amendment like a "pesky inconvenience."

"Civics lesson to the government: Administrative warrants issued by the executive branch to itself do not pass probable cause muster," Biery wrote. "That is called the fox guarding the henhouse. The Constitution requires an independent judicial officer."

In that same opinion,Biery also pointed to the Fifth Amendment, which provides for due process rights. The judge wrote that the father and son "seek nothing more than some modicum of due process and the rule of law."

Another Clinton-appointed federal judge, Michael J. Davis in Minnesota —who has handleda number of petitions stemming from Operation Metro Surge — wrote last month of "an undeniable move by the Government in the past month to defy court orders or at least to stretch the legal process to the breaking point in an attempt to deny noncitizens their due process rights."

Moderate Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., a frequent Trump critic who is not seeking re-election this year, said he's confident the courts will step in to halt unconstitutional activity related to Minneapolis and ICE.

"I think the warrants will lose in court," Bacon said. "In the end, I think the courts will be an effective backstop. But I don't know why they want to push the envelope. I wouldn't do it, but in the end I think our Constitution will be secured and we got a good court that will do it. The problem is it just takes awhile to make that happen."

The 10th Amendment, meanwhile, was the basis for Minnesota officials to argue for a temporary restraining order to block the administration from carrying out Operation Metro Surge. That amendment reserves powers not explicitly delegated to the federal government — or prohibited to the states — to the states or citizens at large. Minnesota officials alleged that the operation was aimed at forcing change to state immigration policies, running afoul of the amendment.

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Katherine Menendez, a federal judge in Minnesota appointed by President Joe Biden, rejected the request from Minnesota officials,writing last month that their argumentswere not strong enough to justify blocking the administration.

The First Amendment

First Amendment rights have most notablyarisen in the charging of journalist Don Lemon. The former CNN anchor last month followed protesters into a Minnesota church and livestreamed a demonstration against a pastor who protesters claimed worked for ICE. Lemon, who has pleaded not guilty to all charges he faces, was arrested last month and charged alongside eight co-defendants involved in the church protest.

Lemon and free speech advocates have argued his conduct is protected by the First Amendment. He was charged with conspiracy against the rights of religious freedom at a place of worship and injuring, intimidating and interfering with the exercise of the right of religious freedom at a place of worship.

"I wanted to say this isn't just about me. This is about all journalists, especially in the United States," Lemon said outside court in Minnesota last week. "For more than 30 years, I've been a journalist, and the power and protection of the First Amendment has been the underpinning of my work."

Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., said he's considered Lemon's case but hasn't arrived at a conclusion about whether his arrest and prosecution were justified.

"If there is a disruption of a church service and you have someone who is aware of it, comes in with it, and then actually is in the middle of asking questions of individuals while their church service is being disrupted, are they exercising First Amendment rights? Or are they violating somebody else's First Amendment rights to freedom of religion?" Rounds asked. "I don't know the answer to that, but once again, a question of fact but also a question for the courts."

Separately,a class action lawsuitfiled by the American Civil Liberties Union against the Department of Homeland Security alleges that DHS agents violated the First Amendment rights of protesters in Minnesota. (It isincredibly difficultto win damages by suing individual federal agents for constitutional violations.)

The Second Amendment

Tom Homan, the Trump administration official who took over leadership of the immigration crackdown in Minnesota, dubbed Operation Metro Surge,announced earlier this monththat it would be winding down. DHS said this month that 4,000 people had been arrested since the operation began in November. Immigration authorities shot and killed two U.S. citizens, Renee Good and Alex Pretti, both 37 years old, in separate confrontations.

Those killings, particularly Pretti's, have had Second Amendment implications. After Pretti's death last month, the president and administration officials criticized the ICU nurse for carrying a concealed handgun — which he was legally permitted to do — when he approached federal law enforcement before being shot.Eyewitness videos showedfederal agents apparently discovering and removing the gun during that altercation, and they did not appear to show Pretti holding the weapon during the altercation.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said she didn't "know of any peaceful protester that shows up with a gun and ammunition rather than a sign."

The sentiment, shared by other administration officials, sparked a riftwith some gun-rights advocates. At the time, the White House pointed to comments made by Border Patrol official Gregory Bovino in an interview with CNN where he said: "We respect Second Amendment rights, but those rights don't count when you riot and assault, delay, obstruct and impede law enforcement officers."

Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., whose family has posed with guns in its Christmas photo, said he has major objections to top Trump officials' comments about restricting gun rights.

"The administration is just bungling all of the statements on the Second Amendment," said Massie, who has clashed with Trump and has drawn a Trump-endorsed primary opponent. "Carrying a firearm to a protest is not a death sentence — it's a constitutional right."

Other conservatives took issue with the remarks following Pretti's shooting, too.

"Yes, you absolutely can carry at a protest. Anyone who tells you otherwise is an anti-2A [Second Amendment] statist," Dana Loesch, a conservative radio and TV host,wrote on X, adding, however, that people "cannot interrupt a federal op while armed."

The Third Amendment

Then, there's the rarely cited Third Amendment, which was briefly the subject of debate in Minneapolis, too. That amendment prohibits the government from forcing Americans to house soldiers without their consent.It arosewhen staff at aMinneapolis hotel apparentlycanceled room reservations for ICE agents — an episode DHShighlighted.

Beth Colgan, a law professor at UCLA, acknowledged this amendment comes up so rarely that it's essentially become "a trivia question as 'What is the Third Amendment?'"

Looking at the constitutional fights stemming from the Twin Cities in totality, Colgan said it's unclear what the long-term impact will be.

"I think that's something people should be very worried about," she said.

As for whether the battles were anything out of the ordinary, Erwin Chemerinsky, the dean of the University of California, Berkeley, law school, said they assuredly were.

"It is unusual," said Chemerinsky, who worked in the Department of Justice during the Carter administration, "for one set of government actions to clearly violate so many provisions of the Constitution."

Bill of Rights put to the test over Trump's immigration crackdown in Minnesota

In and out of court, more than half of the amendments enshrined in the Bill of Rights are being fought over as a direct r...
German bobsledders close dominant Games with four-man gold, silver

CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy -- Germany's Johannes Lochner collected his second bobsled gold of the Milan Cortina Olympics in the four-man event on Sunday, completing a hugely dominant week for the sliding superpower.

Field Level Media

Compatriot and double-defending champion Francesco Friedrich took silver but Germany's hopes of a first-ever clean sweep in the event were spoiled when Michael Vogt snatched bronze for Switzerland on the final run.

Lochner has spent much of his career in the shadow of Friedrich and won two Olympic silvers behind him, but he has been the main man this season.

He sustained that form to complete a memorable double, this time helped by teammates Thorsten Margis -- winning his fifth gold -- Jorn Wenzel and Georg Fleischhauer, who was his brakeman in the two-man victory.

"It's unbelievable that my plan worked out so perfectly with my last run," Lochner said. "I still can't believe it, and it will take forever for it to sink in."

"It's simply a dream that's been playing out in my head for two years. That it's now true -- indescribable. This is a moment for eternity," he said. "This is the most perfect ending ever."

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Lochner, who started the final day 0.43 seconds ahead of Friedrich, was first out and improved that lead on his third run.

Having sat back and watched his rivals avoid any major mistakes but also fail to apply any real pressure, he duly completed the final run of the Cortina track without drama to win by a huge 0.57 seconds in what he says will be his final race in the sport.

Friedrich was safely clear in second and his four golds and two silvers took him past Andre Lange to make him the most successful pilot in Olympic history.

Adam Ammour, the third German pilot who climbed to third on Saturday after finishing fifth in his opening run, had only a tiny cushion heading into the last run. He paid the price for some early mistakes as Vogt, by four hundredths of a second, took Switzerland's first medal in the event since they also won bronze in 2006.

In these Games, Germany's bobsledders produced a triumphant finale with a third successive sweep of the three team golds, having missed a fourth title in the monobob by a whisker.

--Reuters, special to Field Level Media

German bobsledders close dominant Games with four-man gold, silver

CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy -- Germany's Johannes Lochner collected his second bobsled gold of the Milan Cortina ...
Furious Lionel Messi enters referee locker room after Inter Miami loss at LAFC

Footage shows a furious Lionel Messi entering the referees' locker room afterInter Miami's season-opening defeat to LAFCon Saturday, Feb. 23.

USA TODAY Sports

The defending MLS champions fell 3-0 at the L.A. Memorial Coliseum onSaturday, Feb. 21, with David Martinez, Denis Bouanga and Nathan Ordaz scoring for LAFC.

LAFC kept Messi and Co. in check for much of the game, making a major statement in its first game under new manager Marc Dos Santos.

After the game, a video taken by Síntesis Deportes shows players and officials walking through the tunnel after the game. The match referees enter their locker room, with a visibly angry Messi following them.

Messi's teammate Luis Suárez attempts to restrain him but to no avail, with the Argentine legend continuing on past the camera's viewpoint.

Suárez does eventually succeed as Messi exits the referee locker room after only a handful of seconds.

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Will Lionel Messi be suspended?

There is recent precedent for a MLS player being suspended for behavior similar to Messi's.

FC Cincinnati defender Matt Miazga was suspended three matches for entering the referees' locker room after his side's playoff defeat against the New York Red Bulls in November 2023.

Miazga's suspension was eventuallyreduced by one gamefollowing a successful petition.

The MLS Disciplinary Committee will likely now examine Messi's behavior to see if a suspension could be warranted.

Inter Miami is next in action against rival Orlando City on March 1.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Lionel Messi confronts refs after Inter Miami loss at LAFC

Furious Lionel Messi enters referee locker room after Inter Miami loss at LAFC

Footage shows a furious Lionel Messi entering the referees' locker room afterInter Miami's season-opening defeat ...
Lakers ticket prices reportedly set to spike next season under new owner Mark Walter

It will cost a lot to buy Los Angeles Lakers season tickets next season. The Lakers' ticket prices will reportedly skyrocket next season, according toESPN's Dave McMenamin.

Yahoo Sports

Online basketball personality Rob Perez revealed a 2026–2027 season-ticket invoice with a 14% price increase and a 3% "Admin Fee" if the price was not paid in full. Perez posted that the five-month and nine-month payment plans were available for the previous season without a percentage penalty.

ESPN reported that a season ticket in the 300 level has increased from $5,494 in 2024-25 to $6,192 in 2025-26 to $9,035 for 2026-27. This is reportedly a 45.9% hike going into next season, compared with a 12.7% hike in the last renewal cycle.

The Lakers' most notable change between now and last season wasOctober's approved sale of the team to new owner Mark Walter. The Lakers reportedly sent a statement saying the prices reflect today's market and the demand to see the team.

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The Lakers are also banking on the legacy of the franchise and its current players to justify the prices.

Walter, who also owns the Los Angeles Dodgers, saw that team set a franchise record in attendance during its second straight title run. The Lakers last won a championship in the 2020 bubble season.

Right now, it is uncertain if LeBron James will still be with the Lakers next season. James will be an unrestricted free agent after this season, and next season will be his 24th if he decides to play. Austin Reaves has a player option and isreportedly expected to opt out of his $14.9 million player optionfor 2026-27 to pursue a long-term extension.

Currently, the Lakers have a record of 34-21 and are fifth in the Western Conference standings.

Lakers ticket prices reportedly set to spike next season under new owner Mark Walter

It will cost a lot to buy Los Angeles Lakers season tickets next season. The Lakers' ticket prices will reportedly sk...
Greenland prime minister says 'no thanks' to Trump's hospital ship

(Fixes formatting of advisory line; adds detail and quote from PM statement in paragraphs 3-7)

Reuters

COPENHAGEN, Feb 22 (Reuters) - ‌Greenland's Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen said on Sunday "no ‌thanks" to U.S. President Donald Trump's idea of sending a hospital ship ​to Greenland, a territory that Trump has repeatedly said he wishes to take over.

Trump said on Saturday on social media he was working with Louisiana Governor and special envoy to Greenland, ‌Jeff Landry, to send ⁠a hospital boat to Greenland.

"President Trump's idea of sending an American hospital ship here to Greenland ⁠has been noted. But we have a public healthcare system where treatment is free for citizens. It is a deliberate choice," ​Nielsen ​said in a post on ​Facebook.

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Nielsen said Greenland remained open ‌to dialogue and cooperation, also with the U.S.

"But talk to us instead of just making more or less random outbursts on social media," he said.

Greenland, Denmark and the U.S. late last month launched diplomatic talks to resolve the crisis between ‌the parties, following months of tension ​within the NATO defence alliance over ​Trump's threats against ​the Arctic territory.

Trump's post on the ship came ‌hours after Denmark's Joint Arctic ​Command said it ​had evacuated a crew member who required urgent medical treatment from a U.S. submarine in Greenlandic waters, seven ​nautical miles outside ‌of Greenland's capital, Nuuk. It was unclear if the ​post had any connection to the evacuation.

(Reporting by Stine ​Jacobsen, editing by Louise Rasmussen)

Greenland prime minister says 'no thanks' to Trump's hospital ship

(Fixes formatting of advisory line; adds detail and quote from PM statement in paragraphs 3-7) COPENHAGEN, Feb...

 

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