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Eighth Circuit Suspends Injunction Related to Federal Immigration Enforcement in Minnesota
From the opinion by Judges Bobby Shepherd and David Stras in Tincher v. Noem:
The district court entered a preliminary injunction with respect to federal immigration-enforcement operations in Minnesota. The injunction is unlikely to survive the government's … appeal, so we stay it pending a final decision in this case.
Six individuals who have "observed" and protested Operation Metro Surge, the ongoing immigration-enforcement effort in the Twin Cities, sued on behalf of "[a]ll persons who do or will in the future record, observe, and/or protest against" it. The preliminary injunction covers all of them and limits what federal agents who take part in the operation or respond to the protests can do while carrying out their official duties. Included in the district court's order are prohibitions on "[r]etaliating against" anyone "engag[ed] in peaceful and unobstructive protest activity" and stopping vehicles without "reasonable articulable suspicion that [the occupants] are forcibly obstructing or interfering with" immigration-enforcement activities.
For at least two reasons, the government has made "a strong showing" that its challenge to the injunction "is likely to succeed on the merits." First, the grant of relief to such a broad uncertified class is just a universal injunction by another name. See Trump v. CASA, Inc. (2025) (holding that "federal courts lack authority to issue them"). Even if "courts may issue temporary relief to a putative class," this one has no chance of getting certified. A.A.R.P. v. Trump (2025). And overlooking the difficulties of certification, as the Supreme Court did in A.A.R.P., is not necessary "to preserve our jurisdiction." …
We accessed and viewed the same videos the district court did. What they show is observers and protestors engaging in a wide range of conduct, some of it peaceful but much of it not. They also show federal agents responding in various ways. Even the named plaintiffs' claims involve different conduct, by different officers, at different times, in different places, in response to different behavior. These differences mean that there are no "questions of law or fact common to the class" that would allow the court to decide all their claims in "one stroke."
Second, in addition to being too broad, the injunction is too vague…. [A]n injunction must "state its terms specifically" and "describe in reasonable detail … the act or acts restrained or required" …. Directions not to "[r]etaliat[e] against persons who are engaging in peaceful and unobstructive protest activity" or "[s]top[ ] or detain[ ] drivers … where there is no reasonable articulable suspicion" are simply commands to "obey the law," which are "not specific enough." Daniels v. Woodbury County (8th Cir. 1984) (explaining that such injunctions do not provide "a clear idea of what conduct is prohibited"); see Sessler v. City of Davenport (8th Cir. 2021) (deciding that a prohibition on "restricting and limiting [the plaintiff's] rights to peacefully share his message" would be "an obey-the-law injunction"); Elend v. Basham (11th Cir. 2006) (declining to order an injunction to "ensure there's no violation of the First Amendment" because it would "merely command the [defendant] to obey the law").
Even the provision that singles out the use of "pepper-spray or similar nonlethal munitions and crowd dispersal tools" requires federal agents to predict what the district court would consider "peaceful and unobstructive protest activity." The videos underscore how difficult it would be for them to decide who has crossed the line: they show a fast-changing mix of peaceful and obstructive conduct, with many protestors getting in officers' faces and blocking their vehicles as they conduct their activities, only for some of them to then rejoin the crowd and intermix with others who were merely recording and observing the scene. See Bernini v. City of St. Paul (8th Cir. 2012) (acknowledging "the practical dilemma faced by officers responsible for reacting to large group activity"). A wrong call could end in contempt, yet there is little in the order that constrains the district court's power to impose it. See Schmidt v. Lessard (1974) (warning that "[t]he judicial contempt power is a potent weapon" that should not be "founded upon a decree too vague to be understood"). "[F]ederal courts do not exercise general oversight of the Executive Branch," CASA, and the structural injunction imposed here, given its breadth and vagueness, is too big a step in that direction.
The remaining considerations also favor granting a stay. "[M]ost critical[ly]," to the extent the injunction's breadth and vagueness cause federal agents to hesitate in performing their lawful duties, it threatens to irreparably harm the government and undermine the public interest. On the other side of the scale, the risk of "substantial[ ] injur[y]" from staying the injunction is low when all it says is to follow the law….
Judge Raymond Gruender partly concurred, but dissented as to two items:
First, I do not believe the Government has made a "strong showing" that the district court erred in granting preliminary injunctive relief to plaintiffs' putative class. Although certification of plaintiffs' class under Rule 23 would be unlikely, the Supreme Court explained last term that courts "need not decide whether a [putative] class should be certified" to grant preliminary class-wide relief. See A.A.R.P. v. Trump (2025). I do not read the Court's decision one month later in Trump v. CASA as abrogating that instruction. Although there may be tension between A.A.R.P. and CASA on the issue of putative class relief, we are not the court to resolve it, especially not on an emergency motion for a stay pending appeal. Therefore, I would not grant the Government's motion on that basis.
Second, I would reject the Government's motion and lift the administrative stay as to the portion of the district court's injunction that prohibits Covered Federal Agents from "[u]sing pepper-spray or similar nonlethal munitions and crowd dispersal tools against persons who are engaging in peaceful and unobstructive protest activity."
That directive is not an improperly vague "obey the law" injunction and should not be stayed pending appeal. "Reading the injunction in the context of the facts and circumstance of this case," the Government has not demonstrated that trained federal agents are unlikely to understand how to comply with an order not to "us[e] pepper-spray or similar nonlethal munitions and crowd dispersal tools" against persons "engaging in peaceful and unobstructive protest activity." …
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Not easy to get a Dem majority panel on the 8th.
With all the discussion above, all you got is ‘Dems bad.’
Via a counterfactual, natch.
Law enforcement has been allowed to treat an attacking suspect with a gun as a higher threat regardless of whether some armchair quarterbacker in the leisure of his computer could by going through multiple angles in video playback could tell it was/wasn't directly in their hand since forever ago. Law enforcement has been allowed to fire on a rampaging vehicle even if it hits someone 'just a little bit' according to the opinion of a crazed far left social media poster. This isn't a new or particularly shocking novel concept regardless of how the Dims try to rewrite history.
Propaganda and brainwashing in real time. Also a little fascist.
There's no evidence, at all, not even a little bit, that Pretti either was "attacking", or that agents knew he had a gun until after they wrestled him to the ground and took the gun off of him.
You are an example of why MAGA are widely considered to be unreasoning sociopaths.
WRONG the video which anyone can watch shows him clearly striding into combat with the officers after being an ass and obstructing ice in the middle of the street. This ain't no innocent bystander.
I think you've failed to get the message that even the President and his Administration have abandoned this ridiculous claim.
Pretti CHOSE to carry his weapon to a violent anti-cop protest.
Pretti CHOSE to get between cops and a protestor whom the cops had knocked down for interfering with their operation.
Pretti CHOSE to violently resist arrest.
Intentionally choosing to fight police while legally armed is dumb, dumb, dumb, no matter how legal it is.
He certainly had the Constitutional right to be armed throughout all this. But it was stupid. Imagine a criminal suspect showing up at a police station to turn himself in, carrying a gun. He may have that right, but it's just as pointless and stupid.
For someone whose username is about hating the government, you're basically a fascist, eh?
"interfering with their operation."
"He certainly had the Constitutional right...but."
Amazing how many supposed government haters drop their whole deal and get a boner for law enforcement shooting people.
Oh boy, another "fascist" flinger. Way to improve your credibility, clown. Way to be taken seriously.
Still too embarrassed to answer, I see. What a farce you are.
Apparently you didn't even read what you quoted. I said he had the right to carry (which you don't believe in, which probably explains why you didn't read what you quoted) but exercising that right in a dangerous situation was stupid (which you did not quote, probably because it spoiled your "fascist" narrative). It's like the old saying about having the right to walk down a dark alley with money hanging out of your pocket, or insisting on crossing an intersection when you have the right of way; better to forgo that right temporarily than be dead right.
I wonder. Did you call Biden apologists fascists when Biden played games with student loans? Did you object when Obama murdered an American citizen who was in the wrong place at the wrong time with the wrong people? Did you object when Bill Clinton raped interns, as both governor and president, or when his wife Hillary blamed the victims for lying?
F-a-s-c-i-s-t. I doubt you have any definition of it, let alone a consistent one. It's just another handy slur for people you don't like.
You are a coward, and there is a consistent definition of that.
Yeah, fascists do love to cry oppression based on minor shit that never effected them.
You're really living up to the name!
I laid out my issue with your 'I hate government unless they're wearing boots then nom nom nom.'
You've had some reasonable posts, but this is a truly shitty inconsistency.
Not sure where my courage enters into my criticism of your posting.
1. There was no "violent anti-cop protest," and he chose to carry his weapon when he left his house. I don't know whether that was something unusual or something he — like many CCW holders — does as a matter of routine.
2. I suppose "get between cops and a protester" is one way to spin "tried to help a woman who had been shoved to the ground."
3. He did not "violently resist arrest." He was attacked. Not immediately going limp — which, ironically, cops also consider to be resisting arrest — when one is pepper sprayed in the face is not resisting arrest.
More evidence where none is needed of the hopelessly partisan political corruption driving the American judicial system.
It's funny; I'd think that an "obey the law" injunction would issue almost automatically, since it can't actually be said to have any risk of irreparable harm; It bars nothing they'd be entitled to do anyway.
Or is it that it compromises procedural rights?
One problem with an "obey the law" injunction is that the laws at issue typically have very specific penalties and procedures associated with them. For example, if a Judge ordered you to "obey the law" and you get pulled over for speeding, you not only need to pay the traffic fine, but you are also now in contempt of court and can be doubly punished far beyond the intent of the Legislature. In essence, it creates a judiciacrocy - the Judge becomes the prosecutor, Judge and jury on contempt issues.
See also Orin Kerr's post on the difficulty of getting injunctions: Supreme Court Lifts Injunction in Los Angeles Immigration Enforcement Case.
I clicked to see if inunction was a legal word I was unfamiliar with. Perhaps a new word humorously based on inaction + injunction. Apparently not!
Due dilligence just in case:
AI Overview
Inunction is the medical, therapeutic process of applying an ointment, oil, or salve to the skin, specifically by rubbing it in to facilitate absorption of the medication. It acts as a topical or transdermal delivery method, often used to treat skin conditions, achieve local effects, or deliver systemic medication, such as nystatin.
Unction is a perfectly good word, you could form inunction directly from it, and it would kind of sort of fit the facts here.
Suspension of the inunction does seem cruel and petty. After all these people are going through, the 8th Circuit won't even let them have ointment to heal their wounds
According to Wikipedia David Stras was on the Minnesota Supreme Court. The other panel members are from Arkansas and Missouri.
You know that the government is just itching to use water cannons. They probably have a memo that supports it.