Federal immigration authorities say they arrested Jesus Saucedo‑Portillo on the Augsburg University campus in Minneapolis during an operation earlier this month and accused a university administrator and campus security of attempting to obstruct the arrest. Augsburg officials, in turn, have condemned the agents’ conduct as dangerous and disturbing and dispute parts of the government’s account.
On a recent weekend, Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers took Jesus Saucedo‑Portillo into custody as he was getting into his vehicle on the Augsburg University campus in Minneapolis, according to a statement from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Federal officials described Saucedo‑Portillo as an undocumented immigrant whom they called a "criminal illegal alien," and said he is a registered sex offender with a prior arrest for driving while intoxicated.
DHS said an Augsburg administrator and campus security personnel intervened shortly after officers approached Saucedo‑Portillo. In a statement released through a DHS spokesperson and reported by multiple outlets, the agency said the administrator and security staff "attempted to obstruct the arrest" and tried to block the ICE vehicle from leaving campus with the detainee.
According to DHS, officers told the administrator and security officers that they had a warrant for Saucedo‑Portillo’s arrest and warned that if campus security continued to block the vehicle, they could be obstructing justice. DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the administrator continued to direct campus security to stand in front of the vehicle, and that ICE officers "followed their training to use the minimum amount of force necessary to clear the area" and complete the arrest.
Augsburg University has offered a starkly different account of what unfolded outside a residence hall. In a statement circulated to media outlets, a university spokesperson said masked ICE agents "targeted an undergraduate student" and confronted people near a dormitory. "They aimed weapons at witnesses that included staff and students while many more students watched from their windows," the spokesperson wrote, calling the tactics "unacceptable, dangerous and profoundly disturbing."
The university has also disputed DHS’s description of the legal authority for the operation. Augsburg spokesperson Rachel Farris told local media that when the school asked ICE agents to provide a judicial warrant, the officers said they did not have one despite being on private property. DHS, by contrast, has said that ICE officers had a warrant for Saucedo‑Portillo’s arrest, without clarifying whether it was an administrative or judicial warrant.
Public records have raised further questions about parts of the federal account. The Minneapolis Star Tribune reported that a search of Minnesota court records found no record of a DWI case under Saucedo‑Portillo’s name, and that he does not appear in the national sex‑offender registry, even as DHS maintains that he is a registered sex offender with a prior drunk‑driving arrest.
Local law enforcement became aware of the incident after 911 calls reported armed individuals on or near campus. Minneapolis police have said officers arrived after ICE agents had already left the scene. The episode has added to tensions in the city over federal immigration enforcement and the role of local institutions, with DHS officials citing a broader pattern of activists and others attempting to interfere with ICE operations and Augsburg officials insisting they acted to protect their campus community.
The arrest also comes amid heightened scrutiny of immigration enforcement in Minnesota under the Trump administration, as federal agents carry out targeted operations in the Twin Cities and state lawmakers and local leaders debate how closely police and other public agencies should cooperate with ICE.