Illustration depicting the assault on reporter Savanah Hernandez by Ostrouchko family members at a Minnesota anti-ICE protest.
Illustration depicting the assault on reporter Savanah Hernandez by Ostrouchko family members at a Minnesota anti-ICE protest.
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Federal grand jury indicts three members of the Ostrouchko family in assault of TPUSA contributor Savanah Hernandez at Minnesota anti-ICE protest

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A federal grand jury has indicted Christopher, DeYanna, and Paige Ostrouchko on federal assault charges tied to an April 11 incident in which Turning Point USA contributor Savanah Hernandez was shoved to the ground while reporting outside the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building at Fort Snelling, Minnesota, according to an unsealed indictment and public statements from the Justice Department.

A federal grand jury has indicted Christopher Ostrouchko, his wife DeYanna Ostrouchko, and their daughter Paige Ostrouchko on charges alleging they assaulted Turning Point USA contributor Savanah Hernandez while she was reporting during an anti-ICE protest outside the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building at Fort Snelling, Minnesota.

The indictment was returned Tuesday and the defendants’ names were made public Wednesday, according to published reports and a statement from Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche. In that statement, Blanche said the three were indicted for allegedly assaulting Hernandez while she was lawfully reporting outside a federal building.

“Hernandez was allegedly surrounded, physically assaulted, and shoved to the ground — simply because she was identified by the defendants as a conservative journalist. That is NOT ‘peaceful protest.’”

Video shared online from the scene shows a confrontation in which Hernandez is pushed and falls back near a fence; subsequent moments show additional heated exchanges involving members of the same family. Hernandez later posted that she woke up with a headache and a stiff neck and said she had scrapes after being shoved to the ground.

FBI Director Kash Patel also posted a warning about the case, saying the bureau would pursue similar allegations.

Local law enforcement had initially arrested three people at the scene — Christopher Ostrouchko, Paige Ostrouchko, and Paige’s boyfriend, Lorenzo Garcia — according to reporting that cited the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office. The federal indictment, however, names Christopher, DeYanna, and Paige Ostrouchko; Garcia was not included.

Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon had said days after the incident that the Justice Department and the FBI would investigate. The three defendants have been summoned to appear in federal court on May 12, according to the Associated Press.

An attorney for the family, James Cook, told the Associated Press that the publicly circulated videos do not show the entire incident and that he believes the family will be able to mount a vigorous defense.

The case has drawn broader attention as confrontations around immigration enforcement protests in the Twin Cities area continue to test how authorities, demonstrators and media figures navigate safety and access on and near federal property.

What people are saying

X discussions overwhelmingly applaud the federal indictment of Christopher, DeYanna, and Paige Ostrouchko for assaulting TPUSA reporter Savanah Hernandez at a Minnesota anti-ICE protest, portraying it as justice against leftist violence toward conservative journalists. Users criticize Minnesota local prosecutors for inaction and highlight video evidence contradicting protesters' self-defense claims. High-engagement posts from conservative influencers and accounts demand maximum penalties and federal accountability, with little representation of opposing views.

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Illustration of Turning Point USA reporter assaulted at Minneapolis anti-ICE protest, with sheriff's deputies making arrests.
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FBI opens probe after Turning Point USA reporter says she was assaulted at Minneapolis anti-ICE protest; four arrested

Reported by AI Image generated by AI Fact checked

Federal authorities say they are investigating an alleged assault on Turning Point USA’s Frontlines reporter Savanah Hernandez during an anti-ICE protest outside Minneapolis’ Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building. The Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office said four people were arrested in connection with incidents involving a journalist and a deputy.

A federal jury in Texas convicted eight defendants on Friday of providing material support to terrorists for their roles in a July 4, 2025, attack on the Prairieland ICE detention center in Alvarado. The incident involved fireworks, vandalism, and gunfire that injured a police officer. Prosecutors described the event as a premeditated terror attack inspired by antifa ideology.

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Federal prosecutors say Carlos Ivan Mendoza Hernandez, 36, was arrested and charged after an April 7 Immigration and Customs Enforcement stop in Patterson, California, during which authorities allege he struck an agent with his car. Mendoza Hernandez was shot multiple times during the encounter and later appeared in federal court in Sacramento on the assault charge, according to court filings and reporting by the Associated Press and other outlets.

Alberto Castañeda Mondragón, a 31-year-old Mexican migrant, suffered severe brain injuries after a violent detention by ICE agents in St. Paul, Minnesota, on January 8. He accuses the officers of beating him with a baton to the head, causing eight skull fractures and five brain hemorrhages, contradicting the official claim that he injured himself by hitting a wall. His case has prompted calls for investigation from local officials and criticism of federal immigration policies.

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