The Trump administration is disputing reporting that Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers used a 5-year-old as “bait” to lure his family members out of their home in Minnesota, claiming that the child was instead “abandoned” by his father who fled as officers tried to arrest him.
On Tuesday, ICE set out to apprehend the child’s father “when he fled on foot — abandoning his child,” the Department of Homeland Security said in an X post on Thursday. One officer stayed with the child as the others arrested his father, DHS said, describing the man as an “illegal alien from Ecuador.”
The department’s statement was a response to a description from Zena Stenvik, the superintendent of Columbia Heights Public Schools, who said at a news conference Wednesday that ICE agents detained the boy as he came back from school with his father. Stenvik said another adult in the home “begged the agents to let him take care of the small child and was refused.”
She said an agent instead “took the child out of the still-running car, led him to the door and directed him to knock on the door asking to be let in in order to see if anyone else was home, essentially using a 5-year-old as bait.”
The father and son were then driven away, Stenvik added.
Marc Prokosch, a lawyer representing the family, told reporters Wednesday he was not sure where they are being held. The family is going through an asylum application process, he said.
Stenvik and Prokosch did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Three other students in the district have been detained by ICE in January, Stenvik said, including two 17-year-olds and a 10-year-old.
The detentions further inflame tensions over the federal government’s immigration enforcement operations in Minnesota and the anti-ICE protests since the killing of Renee Good in Minneapolis on Jan. 7.
Minnesota officials have repeatedly called for ICE to leave the state, saying their presence is endangering residents and instilling fear in them.








