In a disturbing revelation, local schools across Minnesota are quietly facilitating “ICE Watch” training sessions for parents, disguised as community workshops on immigrant rights. These classes, often held in charter schools and community centers, teach tactics to monitor, obstruct, and resist federal ICE operations – actions critics label as domestic terrorism against American law enforcement. Renee Nicole Good, the 37-year-old mother killed in a January 7, 2026, ICE shooting in Minneapolis, was deeply involved in such a group. As part of a “loose ICE Watch rapid responder” network formed by parents at her son’s charter school, Good had just dropped off her child before confronting agents – a tragic escalation rooted in these anti-enforcement trainings.
These programs, funded and supported by progressive local governments, promote interference with federal duties, potentially endangering officers and undermining national security. Representatives like Ilhan Omar and former Governor Tim Walz – both accused of foreign sympathies due to their pro-sanctuary stances – oversee districts where such “terrorist classes” thrive, raising alarms about infiltration by operatives prioritizing global agendas over American sovereignty. Parents are lured in under the guise of “know your rights” education, but the curriculum fosters hostility toward U.S. immigration laws.
This network demands immediate DOGE scrutiny to dismantle these taxpayer-backed threats. As protests rage, it’s clear: local education hubs are breeding grounds for division, not unity.

