‘Where Were You Born?’ ‘Show-Me-Your-Papers’ Stops: ICE’s New Tactic

Written by Parriva — January 14, 2026
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Videos and lawsuits allege immigration agents stopped U.S. citizens of color and demanded proof of citizenship

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other federal agents deployed to Minnesota are pulling many nonwhite residents aside and asking them to prove their citizenship, according to several reports and multiple videos posted to social media this week amid the Trump administration’s surge of immigration agents to Minneapolis.

There is no federal law requiring US citizens to carry proof of their citizenship, and immigration agents are barred from carrying out indiscriminate searches unless they have suspicion to believe that someone is in the country without reasonable authorization.
And yet, one video, posted on Sunday by a Somali resident of Minneapolis, a US citizen named Nimco Omar, shows a group of agents accosting her and asking her to show her identification as part of what they said was a “citizen check.”

Omar said she was on a walk when masked agents who “looked like soldiers” approached her and began questioning her.

The video shows one of the agents asking Omar, “Do you have an ID on you, ma’am?”

She replied: “I don’t need an ID to walk around in my city. This is my city.”

“OK, do you have some ID, then, please?” the officer asked. “If not, we’re going to put you in the vehicle, and we’re going to ID you.”

Omar responded: “I am a US citizen. I don’t need to carry around an ID in my home. This is my home.”

After being repeatedly asked, “Where were you born?” Omar replied simply, “Minneapolis is my home.”

The agent then told her: “We’re doing an immigration check. We’re doing a citizen check.”

Another agent then pulled out his cellphone and, without asking, appeared to snap a picture of Omar, likely to run through a facial recognition application that ICE has used to verify the status of people he detains—including citizens.

Omar continued to hold her ground, telling the agents: “I’m a US citizen. I don’t have to identify myself. I belong here—and it doesn’t matter where I was born.” After failing to get an answer, the agents then walked away.

“I was scared. I was devastated. I never imagined that something like this could happen to me in the United States,” Omar wrote in a social media post documenting the encounter. “As a community member who grew up here, who built a life here, and who calls Minnesota home, I want to be clear: This is not acceptable. This is not something we should ever normalize. This is not what the United States of America is supposed to look like.”

The scene was just the latest report of immigration agents conducting what Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said was “unlawful racial profiling by DHS agents” in a lawsuit against the agency filed Monday by the state of Minnesota. Illinois filed a similar but separate suit Monday. Since last week, when ICE agent Jonathan Ross was filmed fatally shooting 37-year-old Renee Good in a Minneapolis neighborhood—which Vice President JD Vance said in a press conference occurred during “door-to-door” sweeps by ICE in search of undocumented migrants—several other similar cases have been documented in which immigration agents have approached nonwhite US citizens demanding they prove their citizenship.

In another case, on the same day of Good’s shooting, a Somali Uber driver was pulled over outside the Minneapolis airport and asked to prove his citizenship. One of the agents told the driver he did not believe the driver’s claim to be a citizen because “I can hear you don’t have the same accent as me,” and asked the man where he was born repeatedly.

It mirrored another case from December in which another Somali man, a US citizen identified only as Mubashir, was tackled to the ground by immigration agents who refused to accept his government-issued Real ID as proof of citizenship.

Outcry over that case prompted Gregory Bovino, the commander at large of the US Border Patrol, who has taken part in several stops and raids as part of the Trump administration’s operation in Minneapolis, to falsely claim that US citizens “must carry immigration documents” under the Immigration and Nationality Act.

 

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