A convicted sex offender walked free in Minneapolis for years. Now federal agents are openly accusing
Minnesota’s governor and Minneapolis’ mayor of helping keep him there.
Behind one arrest lies a stunning clash over sanctuary policies,
public safety, and political power. As ICE details failed raids,
blocked doors, and a predator still on the stre… Continues…
Federal agents say Mahad Abdulkadir Yusuf’s case is exactly what they’ve been warning about:
a man who once held a green card, now a convicted sex offender with an assault arrest and an active warrant,
living freely in a city whose leaders champion sanctuary-style protections
ICE frames the story bluntly — a dangerous criminal “roaming”
Minneapolis while local policies limited cooperation and even,
they allege, emboldened a building
manager to block their entry and shield him from arrest.
Gov. Tim Walz and Mayor Jacob Frey insist their approach is about trust,
not defiance — arguing that immigrants must feel
safe reporting crimes without fearing deportation.
But Yusuf’s arrest crystallizes the most explosive
question in the sanctuary debate: when the suspect is a violent felon,
where does “community trust”
end and public endangerment begin?
ICE promises more targeted operations.
Minneapolis may now be
the test case for how far this fight will go.