Freshness note: This analysis was last updated 29 days ago. Fast-moving policy claims can change quickly, so check for newer official updates before relying on this verdict.

Supported by EvidenceImmigration

More than 1,000 immigration agents have left Minnesota's Twin Cities area as part of the Trump administration's drawdown of its immigration enforcement

Published February 16, 2026Updated February 16, 2026

Summary

Tom Homan, the Trump administration's border czar, announced in early 2025 that over 1,000 immigration enforcement agents would be withdrawn from Minnesota's Twin Cities area as part of a broader policy shift. Homan stated these agents would be redeployed to border enforcement, with only a small security force remaining in Minnesota for targeted operations.

Primary Sources

Reports Tom Homan's announcement of withdrawing over 1,000 immigration enforcement agents from Minnesota's Twin Cities area, with only a small security force remaining

Reports on Tom Homan's announcement about the withdrawal of immigration enforcement agents from Minnesota

Local coverage of Tom Homan's announcement regarding the drawdown of federal immigration agents in Minnesota

Evidence Supporting the Claim

  • Tom Homan announced publicly that more than 1,000 immigration enforcement agents would be withdrawn from the Twin Cities area
  • Homan stated the agents would be redeployed from Minnesota to the southern border as part of Trump administration immigration enforcement policy
  • Multiple news organizations including NPR and the Associated Press reported the same figure of over 1,000 agents

Evidence Against / Context

  • Homan indicated a small security force would remain in Minnesota for targeted enforcement operations
  • The announcement represents a policy intention rather than a completed action at the time of the statements

Timeline

  • Trump administration implemented broader policy changes redirecting immigration enforcement resources to border security

  • Tom Homan announced the withdrawal of more than 1,000 immigration enforcement agents from Minnesota's Twin Cities area

What This Means

Structured interpretation — not opinion

  • Key takeaway 1

    The withdrawal represents a significant reduction in interior immigration enforcement capacity in Minnesota, shifting resources to border enforcement priorities

  • Key takeaway 2

    The policy change reflects the Trump administration's emphasis on border security over interior enforcement in certain jurisdictions

  • Key takeaway 3

    A small remaining force indicates some level of immigration enforcement will continue in Minnesota, focused on targeted operations rather than broad enforcement activities

Related Claims in Immigration

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