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Trump's promised ICE raids have begun

Noem: "Every single thing I've said has been factual about what's been going on in Minneapolis, in Minnesota ... we've surged HSI there specific to focus on sex trafficking and child trafficking. It's so prevalent in Minnesota. It's horrific ... we're gonna keep hundreds of HSI officers there to continue to protect those children."

Presumably it's horrific to you that the POTUS hasn't been offered a cut of the business?
 
How would double jeopardy work? Does bringing a case through federal courts prevent being tried for the same acts in a state court?
The short answer is no:
The double jeopardy clause does not generally protect a person from being prosecuted by both a state government and the United States federal government for the same act, nor does it protect a person from being prosecuted by multiple states for the same act. Because American law considers each of the state governments to be distinct from the federal government of the United States as a whole, with its own laws, court systems, and sovereignty, these parallel prosecutions are considered to be different "offenses" under the double jeopardy clause, and the decisions of one government on what to prosecute or not prosecute are not considered to be binding upon the other. This is known as the "dual sovereignty" or "separate sovereigns" doctrine.
The long answer is sometimes, but not usually:
Under [the Petite] policy, the Department of Justice presumes that any prosecution at the state level for any fact applicable to any federal charge vindicates any federal interest in those facts, even if the outcome is an acquittal.
 
In the police academy (in 1982) we were taught “There is no offense called “Contempt of Cop’. We had role playing exercises where all sorts of verbal abuse was heaped on us and we were trained to just take it.

Stipulated that not all officers receive this training, nor that it is always effective. The caricature of Cartman yelling “Respect my authority!” Is not without some basis in reality.
Indeed, much of American policing involves officers trying to fool people into believing the officers have more authority than they actually do. Therefore nine times out of ten it is the individual civilian's duty to know their rights and exercise them, which the right wants to recast as defiance of authority and "domestic terrorism." ICE officers do not have plenipotentiary authority. In fact, they have less statutory authority than your typical local police officer. They do not have authority investigate sex crimes or child trafficking, as Sec. Noem wants to believe. (She isn't a lawyer.)

ICE has law enforcement command authority in cases of aliens or suspected aliens. They may arrest, detail, question, and hold in custody aliens and suspected aliens. Absent a judicial warrant or probable cause that you are one or are hiding one, their statutory authority to issue you commands is severely limited. Think about the last time an IRS agent stopped your car and ordered you to get out. Thus the sentiment, "Do what we say or we will shoot you," is in one sense mere bluster, and in another sense bluster backed up by actual bulllets. This is not something Americans have historically had to tolerate to this degree. And they are justifiably mad.
 
Inciting violence.

They all fall in to line as usual

NEWSMAX: Do you think it's long past time for Tim Walz and Jacob Frey to do charged for clearly inciting violence against federal agents? Is there something Congress can do?

REP. SHERI BIGGS: Well, I certainly hope so, and I hope that'll be on the table for discussion this week. It's un-American.

 
REP. SHERI BIGGS: Well, I certainly hope so, and I hope that'll be on the table for discussion this week. It's un-American.

I firmly agree that our opponents are just awful and I hope that there can eventually be some talk about whether someone could do some undefined thing about it in the not too distant future. That'll show them.
 
How would double jeopardy work? Does bringing a case through federal courts prevent being tried for the same acts in a state court?
As @W.D.Clinger has just noted, generally no. Dual sovereignty is not considered a violation of double jeopardy. However, historically this was only rarely ever a problem. Congress has enumerated powers, meaning it is limited in what kinds of laws it can make. Thus historically the federal criminal code was minimal and did not encroach upon state authority. In contrast, states have police power, which political science defines as the essentially unlimited power to regulate conduct. Thus most criminal offenses were historically state charges. This meant that there was only a little overlap between what you could be prosecuted for under state law and what you could be prosecuted for under federal law.

Famously there is no federal criminal law against ordinary murder. By "ordinary" I mean the killing of one person by another without any special circumstances. There are only murder-adjacent crimes, such as murdering a federal officer (i.e., special circumstances regarding the victim) or using a firearm in the commission of a felony (i.e., federally cognizable means or modes).

With regard to the statute of limitations, I'm not sure what the argument is there. Minnesota may bring charges at any time irrespective of who is running the federal government, and it is most likely under state authority forbidding murder that charges would be brought against the officer.

If the officer wishes to escape state charges by arguing that he is immune as a federal officer, he would remove the case to federal court and have to convince a federal judge that the circumstances alleged are within the proper and lawful exercise of his office. If convinced, the judge has the authority to dismiss the state charges. In some cases, this determination requires extensive briefing and testimony, in which case the federal judge presides over a trial involving state law, which is a little weird. The typical defense is via the Supremacy Clause, which nevertheless requires a showing that the officer's actions were authorized by statute, and were necessary and proper to the execution of his duties. This has to be particularly balanced against the specific actus rea requirements of the state law.
 
Rep. Pete Sessions: "This protesting that goes on -- honking of horns, obstructing federal law enforcement -- should not be tolerated ... I stand completely with the administration on this effort."

Bit of an error there. The caption says "Rhetoric against ICE escalates" when it obviously meant to say "Rhetoric against constitutional rights escalates".
 
Rep. Pete Sessions: "This protesting that goes on -- honking of horns, obstructing federal law enforcement -- should not be tolerated ... I stand completely with the administration on this effort."
No federal officer has the right to be liked. The mayor of Minneapolis noted that ICE was responsible for half of the shootings in Minneapolis last week (there were two). Local authorities and local populations are not obliged to agree that the actions of federal officers over which they have no authority necessarily make them safer. And contrary to the Trump regime's threats to arrest them, those local leaders are not without authority.
 
Genuine Presidential Gibberish

Reporter: How do you define absolute immunity? What does that mean?

Trump: Well, everyone's seen it. And the woman was very violent…

Reporter: Absolute immunity. How would you define that?

Trump: Well, I'm going to let the people define it. But immunity, you know what immunity what knows means as well as I do.

Blithering idiot.
 
I'm sorry, but I didn't realize politics was off limits for this issue. So I guess we're not allowed to challenge anything that a politician says and ignore the fact that these are federal officers under control of a government that is under control of a political party. I love how this argument always comes up when it's clear one side of the aisle is WRONG.
Of course politics is off topic, it's only politics when argued by someone on the left, after all. If they're on the right, its just common sense.
 

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