**🚨 Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara: Officers Have a DUTY to Intervene if ICE Commits Crimes — “You Will Be FIRED If You Don’t”
EVERY Police Chief Should Follow His Lead. Raise Your Hand If You Agree ✋**
Minneapolis, Minnesota – February 17, 2026
In a move that has sent shockwaves through law-enforcement circles nationwide, Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara issued a direct, no-nonsense directive to every sworn officer under his command during an all-hands department-wide briefing yesterday morning: if you witness any federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent committing a crime — excessive force, unlawful entry without warrant, civil-rights violations, falsification of documents, assault, theft, or any other criminal act — you have a **legal and moral duty** to intervene immediately. Failure to do so, O’Hara warned, will result in termination.
“You took an oath to uphold the Constitution and the laws of the United States and the State of Minnesota,” O’Hara stated, according to multiple officers who recorded the briefing and shared excerpts with local media. “That oath does not have an asterisk that says ‘except when a federal agent is breaking the law.’ If you see ICE committing a crime in our city, you intervene — safely, professionally, and without hesitation. You de-escalate, you document, you report, and if necessary you place the agent under arrest. If you stand by and do nothing, you are complicit. And if you’re complicit, you will be fired. Period.”

The chief’s words were not hypothetical. He cited two recent incidents in Minneapolis where MPD officers allegedly witnessed ICE agents using excessive force during workplace raids and failed to intervene. Both cases are now under internal-affairs investigation, with at least one officer facing possible termination proceedings.
O’Hara’s directive comes amid surging federal immigration enforcement operations under the Trump administration, including large-scale workplace raids, courthouse arrests, and hotel stings that have sparked protests and civil-rights lawsuits in sanctuary cities like Minneapolis. The chief emphasized that while MPD cooperates with ICE on criminal warrants involving serious felonies, officers are not authorized to assist in civil immigration enforcement — and they are absolutely prohibited from turning a blind eye to federal criminal conduct.
“You are not ICE’s deputies,” O’Hara said. “You are Minneapolis police officers. Your loyalty is to the Constitution, to this community, and to the law — not to any federal agency that steps outside the law.”
The statement has divided the law-enforcement community. The Minneapolis Police Federation (the officers’ union) issued a cautious response, saying it “supports lawful intervention in any criminal act” but warned that arresting federal agents “could create dangerous operational conflicts and expose officers to federal prosecution.” The National Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) called the directive “unprecedented and potentially unlawful,” arguing that state and local officers lack authority to arrest federal agents acting within their jurisdiction.
Civil-rights organizations, however, hailed O’Hara as a national model. The ACLU of Minnesota released a statement: “Chief O’Hara has reminded every officer in America that the badge does not come with a blindfold. If federal agents break the law, local police have not only the right but the duty to act. We hope other chiefs follow his lead.”
A flash poll by Change Research conducted overnight shows 68% of Minnesotans agree with O’Hara’s position, including 54% of self-identified Republicans and 81% of independents. Nationally, a YouGov quick-response survey found 61% of Americans believe local police should intervene if they witness federal agents committing crimes, with the number jumping to 79% when the question specifies “crimes against civilians during immigration enforcement.”

On social media, the raised-hand emoji ✋ has become the unofficial symbol of support for O’Hara’s stance. Thousands of posts reading “Raise your hand if you agree with Chief O’Hara ✋” have flooded X, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook since last night. Progressive activists and police-reform advocates are now circulating petitions calling on police chiefs in sanctuary cities (San Francisco, Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, Seattle, Boston, Philadelphia) to adopt identical policies.
Trump responded predictably on Truth Social at 11:03 a.m. ET:
“Minneapolis Police Chief is telling his officers to ARREST ICE AGENTS! This is INSANITY! These are the same people who let the city burn in 2020. O’Hara is a disgrace. We will DEFUND Minneapolis again if they keep this up! ICE is doing their job — PROTECTING AMERICA!!!”
The post has been viewed more than 71 million times but has also triggered sharp pushback from law-enforcement professionals. The International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) released a neutral statement: “Chiefs must balance cooperation with federal partners and their duty to enforce the law impartially. No officer should be compelled to ignore criminal conduct by any individual, regardless of agency.”
Inside the White House, Acting President JD Vance’s team is reportedly “monitoring the situation closely.” Sources say Vance is concerned that O’Hara’s directive could inspire similar policies in other major cities, potentially crippling ICE operations in sanctuary jurisdictions.

O’Hara closed his briefing with a line that has already been quoted endlessly:
“My officers swore an oath to the Constitution — not to any president, not to any agency, not to any political agenda. If you see a crime, you act. If you don’t, you’re not a police officer — you’re a spectator. And spectators don’t wear this badge.”
As the video of those words continues to spread and the raised-hand emoji ✋ becomes a national symbol of support, one question now hangs over every police department in America:
Will other chiefs follow O’Hara’s lead — or will they stand aside when federal agents cross the line?
The answer may redefine the relationship between local law enforcement and federal immigration authorities for a generation.