Five-year-old boy detained by ICE has returned to Minnesota, lawmaker says

By Timothy Gardner

WASHINGTON, Feb 1 (Reuters) - Five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father have returned to their home in a Minneapolis suburb after being detained by U.S. immigration officers and held at ​a detention facility in Texas, a lawmaker said on Sunday.

A federal judge on Saturday ordered the release ‌of Adrian Conejo Arias and his son, whom immigration officers detained during a Minnesota raid. U.S. Representative Joaquin Castro, a Texas Democrat, wrote in ‌a social media post that he picked them up on Saturday night at the detention facility and escorted them back to Minnesota on Sunday.

"Liam is now home. With his hat and his backpack," Castro said. "We won't stop until all children and families are home."

A photo that went viral last month shows Liam wearing a blue bunny hat outside his house ⁠with federal agents standing nearby. He was ‌one of four students detained by immigration officials in a Minneapolis suburb, according to the Columbia Heights Public School District.

The Ecuadorean boy and his father, who entered the United States ‍legally as asylum applicants, had been held in a detention facility in Dilley, Texas.

U.S. District Judge Fred Biery wrote in a ruling on Saturday the case had its genesis in "the ill-conceived and incompetently-implemented government pursuit of daily deportation quotas, apparently even if it ​requires traumatizing children."

Biery, appointed by former President Bill Clinton, cited the Constitution's requirement that an arrest warrant must ‌be based on a judge finding probable cause of a crime. The use of "administrative warrants" issued by immigration officials "is called the fox guarding the henhouse," he wrote.

Democrats have called for reforms after large-scale enforcement operations in Minnesota and other states, and following two deadly shootings of U.S. citizens in Minneapolis involving ICE agents. Those demands by Democratic lawmakers include mandatory body cameras, the end to roving patrols and halting the use of face masks.

Funding for the Homeland ⁠Security Department has been held up as Republicans and Democrats continue ​negotiating over a DHS bill. "We'll be talking about that in the near ​future," President Donald Trump told reporters on Sunday at his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida.

Some Republican mayors also see a need for reforms. "We're generally encouraged that the administration seems to ‍be exploring that pivot," Oklahoma ⁠City Mayor David Holt told CBS's "Face the Nation" on Sunday.

Mayors are "caught in a little bit of an impossible situation" with federal immigration enforcers' presence in cities, Holt said, adding events in Minneapolis threaten to erode ⁠the trust authorities have built over time with residents in cities.

Holt spoke the day after Trump ordered DHS to refrain from dealing with ‌protesters unless federal property is threatened or local officials request help.

(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Additional reporting ‌by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Sergio Non and Chris Reese)

Five-year-old boy detained by ICE has returned to Minnesota, lawmaker says

By Timothy Gardner WASHINGTON, Feb 1 (Reuters) - Five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father have returned to...
Pakistan says it has killed 145 'Indian-backed terrorists' in Balochistan after deadly attacks

QUETTA, Pakistan (AP) — Pakistani police and military forceskilled over a 100 "Indian-backed terrorists" in counterterrorism operations across the restive southwestern province of Balochistan over the past 40 hours, government officials said on Sunday, a day after coordinated suicide and gun attacks killed 33 people, mostly civilians.

Associated Press Police officers examine the site of Saturday's suicide bombing, in Quetta, Pakistan, Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Arshad Butt) People walk past the site of Saturday's suicide bombing, in Quetta, Pakistan, Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Arshad Butt) Relatives of police officers who were killed in a militants attack, mourn outside a hospital in Quetta, Pakistan, Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Arshad Butt) A journalist takes photo with his mobile phone to ambulances carrying the bodies of police officers who were killed in a militants attack, outside a hospital in Quetta, Pakistan, Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Arshad Butt)

Pakistan Militant Attacks

The raids began early Saturday at multiple locations across Balochistan, and left 18 civilians, including five women and three children, and 15 security personnel dead, authorities said.

Sarfraz Bugti, the provincial chief minister, told reporters in Quetta that troops and police officers responded swiftly, killing 145 members of "Fitna al-Hindustan," a phrase the government uses for the allegedly Indian-backed outlawed Baloch Liberation Army, or BLA. The number of militants killed over the past two days was the highest in decades, he said.

"The bodies of these 145 killed terrorists are in our custody, and some of them are Afghan nationals," he said. Bugti claimed that the "Indian-backed terrorists" wanted to take hostages but failed to make it to the city center.

He spoke alongside senior government official Hamza Shafqat, who often oversees such operations against insurgents in the province, and praised the military, police and paramilitary forces for repelling the assaults.

Militant attacks erupted on Saturday in a resource-rich region where Pakistan is seeking to attract foreign investment in mining and minerals. In September 2025, aU.S. metals company signed a $500 million investment agreementwith Pakistan, a month after the U.S. State Department designated BLA and its armed wing as a foreign terrorist organization.

Residents described scenes of panic after a suicide bombing killed several police officers on Saturday.

"(It) was a very scary day in the history of Quetta," said Khan Muhammad, a local resident. "Armed men were roaming openly on the roads before security forces arrived."

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Bugti repeatedly accused India and Afghanistan of backing the assailants and said senior leaders of the BLA, which claimed responsibility for the latest attacks in Balochistan, were operating from Afghan territory. Both Kabul and New Delhi deny the allegations.

He said on Sunday Afghanistan's Taliban had pledged under the 2020 Doha agreement not to allow Afghan soil to be used as a base for attacking other countries, but "unfortunately, the Afghan soil was still being used against Pakistan."

Tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan have persisted since early October when Pakistan carried out airstrikes on what it described as Pakistani Taliban hideouts inside Afghanistan, killing dozens of alleged insurgents.

Bugti said militants stormed the home of a Baloch laborer in Gwadar and killed five women and three children. He condemned the killings. He said the attackers had planned to seize hostages after storming government offices in Quetta's high-security zone but were thwarted. "We were aware of their plans, and our forces were prepared," he said.

The BLA is banned in Pakistan and has carried out numerous attacks in recent years, often targeting security forces, Chinese interests and infrastructure projects.

Authorities say the group has operated with support from the Pakistani Taliban, known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP. The TTP, a separate group, is allied with Afghanistan's Taliban, who returned to power in August 2021.

Balochistan has long faced a separatist insurgencyby ethnic Baloch groups seeking greater autonomy or independence from Pakistan's central government. The BLA regularly targets Pakistani security forces and has also attacked civilians, including Chinese nationals among the thousands working on various projects in the province.

Ahmed reported from Islamabad.

Pakistan says it has killed 145 'Indian-backed terrorists' in Balochistan after deadly attacks

QUETTA, Pakistan (AP) — Pakistani police and military forceskilled over a 100 "Indian-backed terrorists" in cou...
Leftist and liberal gun groups are seeing a rush of new members

Several niche, left-leaning gun advocacy groups said that since the killing of Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapolis, they can hardly keep up with the surging demand for firearms training.

CNN People light candles at a makeshift memorial for Alex Pretti, who was shot and killed by federal  agents in Minneapolis on January 24. - Octavio Jones/AFP/Getty Images

With President Donald Trump sending armed federal agents into communities around the country, even more once gun-shy liberals and leftists are considering getting armed. And while Americans tend to think of gun owners as leaning more Republican and male, already more women, gay people and people of color havetaken up armsin recent years, particularly after 2020.

Weekend classes at L.A. Progressive Shooters are sold out through March. Registrations for permit-to-carry courses at Pink Pistols Twin Cities, which serves LGBTQ people in Minneapolis and St. Paul, are up from an average of five people per class to 25 — the group recently added seven more courses to accommodate increased interest, and those are filling up, too. To paraphrase a recentmeme: The right is arguing for gun control, and the left is buying guns.

"In the past couple of days, there has been a shift," Lara Smith, national spokesperson for the Liberal Gun Club, says. "This changed views on the left."

Alex Pretti, a beloved ICU nurse who cared for ailing veterans and an outdoorsman who was concerned about the environment, was also, likeone-third of Americans, a gun owner. He was carrying his lawfully owned weapon in a holster before federal agents disarmed him and then fatally shot him.

Jordan Levine, founder of the inclusive gun community A Better Way 2A, says his organization has seen an influx of gun groups and instructors asking to join its resource page in the last few weeks — Ready Rainbow in Chicago, Grassroots Defense in Iowa and Solidarity Defense in Sacramento are a few recent additions. "People are scared and angry and want to equalize the power imbalance that we're seeing on the news, where you've got ICE steamrolling people with no recourse," he adds.

Philip Smith, founder and president of the National African American Gun Association, says membership in his organization has grown since Trump's second term began and since Pretti was killed. "People join when they're scared," Smith says. "People join when certain people get in office, because it scares them. People join when they see these shootings across the country, and it seems like it's just madness starting to grow more and more."

Federal law enforcement officers face off with Minneapolis residents after an agent shot a man in the leg on January 15. - Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Fear and politics are big motivators for gun sales. Gun purchases go up aftermass shootingsand domestic terror attacks, or when people sense that legislative gun restrictions are on the horizon, as when aDemocrat is elected president. The reverse tends to be true when a Republican is president, says Matt Lacombe, a political scientist who studies gun culture and who is the author of "Firepower: How the NRA Turned Gun Owners into a Political Force" — gun saleswent downafter Trump was first elected in 2016, and they've largely stayed down in his second term (the gun industry calls it the "Trump Slump"). But Lacombe says that national data could be obscuring smaller trends that are underway in parts of the country.

"It doesn't seem to be the case anymore that buying guns and carrying guns in response to perceived threats is a solely conservative thing," he adds.

Federal law enforcement officers in Minneapolis on January 15. - Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg/Getty Images

As the Trump administration continues to wage an immigration crackdown in US cities, people are showing up to anti-ICE protests and neighborhoodwatch patrolsarmed, and some gun groups are encouraging people to become armed observers. In onevideoon X, two armed men could be seen at the back of a vigil for Pretti in Minneapolis last weekend. Speaking to independent journalist Talia Jane, one of them invoked the Cuban revolutionary Che Guevara and said, "Force is not going to be stopped by a lack of force, unfortunately. And I want to see everybody else around us that's on our same side, I wanna see them get armed as well. So right now we're here primarily to keep everybody safe but also to serve as an example that everybody around us can do this too."

In anothervideocirculating on social media, an armed man can be seen standing guard outside his neighborhood in St. Paul. "This is my block," he tells the interviewer. "This is my area. I don't go into other people's neighborhoods and try to intimidate them. I protect my people."

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"This is the thing that gun owners have been talking about forever: the 'tyrannical government,'" Levine says. But the people who usually warn about the dangers of government tyranny, as he sees it, are "somehow taking the side of the tyrannical government."

The administration's assertions that Pretti was in the wrong for carrying a gun have also turned off some Trump supporters. The White House, for its part, referred to recent remarks from press secretary Karoline Leavitt. "While Americans have a constitutional right to bear arms, Americans do not have a constitutional right to impede lawful immigration enforcement operations," Leavittsaidon January 26. "Any gun owner knows that when you are carrying a weapon, when you are bearing arms and you are confronted by law enforcement, you are raising the assumption of risk and the risk of force being used against you."

Maj Toure, founder of Black Guns Matter and a self-identified libertarian who voted for Trump in the last two elections, says he's never considered Trump to be a strong defender of the Second Amendment, citing the bump stock ban during the president's first term (later struck down by the Supreme Court), as well as Trump'sremarksin 2018 that guns should be confiscated from dangerous people even if it violates due process rights. The comments about Pretti, Toure says, are just "par for the course."

"Now this administration is blatantly saying it: If you are in opposition to our political aims and you are armed, we will view you as a criminal," he says, adding that this "1,000% is going to impact how I vote."

Some onlookers also drew comparisons to another gun owner killed by law enforcement in Minnesota: In 2016, Philando Castile was killed by a police officer who opened fire on him during a traffic stop after Castile informed him that he had a firearm in his vehicle. The NRA initially stayed silent on the killing — afterintense pressurefrom its Black members, it issued avague statementthat didn't mention Castile by name.

Federal immigration agents confront observers monitoring their activity in Minneapolis from inside their cars on January 29. - Octavio Jones/AFP/Getty Images

The Trump administration's rhetoric on Pretti is merely the latest example of its inconsistent stance on gun control, notes Patrick Eddington, senior fellow in homeland security and civil liberties at the Cato Institute. This past fall, there werereportsthat the Justice Department was considering proposals to ban trans people from purchasing guns. And just last week, the Washington Postreportedthat the DOJ is planning to change the firearm purchase form to require applicants to list their biological sex at birth, raisingfurther alarmamong trans rights advocates. "When you start telling one group of people they can't have guns, who's going to be the next group?" Eddington says.

Conservatives' selective support for gun rights has historic precedent. In the late 1960s, theBlack Panther Partybegan "copwatching," observing police interactions with community members in Oakland while visibly carrying guns — a practice that bears some similarities to today's ICE watch patrols. In response, Ronald Reagan, then the governor of California, enacted the Mulford Act, which repealed a law that allowed people to carry loaded firearms in public. The NRA also supported the law at the time.

"The standards that seem to apply to gun carriers, gun owners who are Black or who are more broadly on the left seem to be different than the standards applied to gun owners on the right," Lacombe says.

In aTruth Socialpost early Friday morning, Trump called Pretti an "agitator and, perhaps, insurrectionist." Gun owners across the spectrum aren't buying it.

"He's a gun guy. He's a guy who carries. He trains," Lara Smith, from the Liberal Gun Club, says. "And when I say one of us, I mean one of the gun community."

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Leftist and liberal gun groups are seeing a rush of new members

Several niche, left-leaning gun advocacy groups said that since the killing of Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapol...
Snoop Dogg's Daughter Cori Broadus Announces Death of Her 10-Month-Old Baby Girl: 'I Lost the Love of My Life'

Christopher Polk/Billboard via Getty;Cori Broadus/Instagram

People Snoop Dogg and Cori Broadus; Cori Broadus holding her daughter Christopher Polk/Billboard via Getty;Cori Broadus/Instagram

NEED TO KNOW

  • Snoop Dogg's daughter, Cori Broadus, announced that her baby daughter has died at 10 months old

  • Cori shared the tragic news in a post on her Instagram Stories on Saturday, Jan. 31

  • The baby, named Codi Dreaux, was born three months premature and was brought home from the NICU earlier this month

Snoop Dogg's daughter, Cori Broadus, announced that her baby daughter, Codi Dreaux, has died.

Cori, 26, shared the tragic news in a post on herInstagram Storieson Saturday, Jan. 31. The post featured a black-and-white photo of herself smiling while holding her baby. She wrote over the photo, "Monday I lost the love of my life. My Codi," along with an emoji of an angel wing.

Cori Broadus holding her baby daughter Cori Broadus/Instagram

Cori Broadus/Instagram

Cori's fiancé, Wayne Deuce, also shared a series of photos on his ownInstagram Stories.

"I been the saddest since u left me Codi Dreaux. But I know u at peace. Daddy will always love you," he wrote over an image of himself holding his daughter.

"My baby," he added.

Wayne Deuce holding his baby daughter, Codi Dreaux Wayne Polk/Instagram

Wayne Polk/Instagram

Cori, who is Snoop's youngest child and only daughter, shared in a February 2025Instagram postthat Codi had beenborn three monthsearly.

"The princess arrived at 6 months," she wrote in the birth announcement, which included a black-and-white photo of the baby's foot.

She added, "I've cried and cried, I've compared and compared, blaming myself that I wasn't able to give her all that she needed. But no matter what God always shows me that I'm His Child!"

"Baby girl came at 25 weeks today and she's perfect as ever!" she continued. "Thank You God for getting me this far no matter the odds that are constantly thrown against me 🙏."

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In an Instagram Stories postshared the same day, Cori revealed that she had delivered the baby via C-section after doctors told her she was developing HELLP syndrome, which stands for Hemolysis (the process of red blood cell destruction), Elevated Liver enzymes and Low Platelets.

Codi ultimately spent 10 months in the NICU, with Cori sharing that she finally was able to bring her baby home in early January.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

"She's home. 🤍," she captioned a Jan. 6Instagram postfeaturing herself and Codi snuggling together on her bed. "Thank you for every prayer, every message, every ounce of love. God heard them all. 🕊️✨."

Cori first announced she was pregnant with a daughter in December 2024.

"I found out Oct. 28," she said while speaking toE! News.

The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now!

"I'm a high-risk pregnancy, and doctors were very concerned for me and the baby, but God has his hands on me," she added at the time.

Read the original article onPeople

Snoop Dogg's Daughter Cori Broadus Announces Death of Her 10-Month-Old Baby Girl: 'I Lost the Love of My Life'

Christopher Polk/Billboard via Getty;Cori Broadus/Instagram NEED TO KNOW Snoop Dogg's daughter, Cori Broa...

 

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