type: timeline_event By February 23, 2026, Operation Metro Surge was winding down with fewer than 1,000 federal agents remaining in Minnesota, down from a peak deployment of approximately 3,000—described by officials as the "largest DHS operation ever" conducted on domestic soil. Federal officials claimed roughly 4,000 total arrests over the course of the operation. However, independent analysis conducted by community rapid-response networks, legal observers, and civil liberties organizations documented only 578 confirmed arrests, approximately 14 percent of the official total. The vast discrepancy raised serious questions about the accuracy and integrity of government reporting on the operation.
When pressed on the numbers, Border Czar Tom Homan could not state how many of those arrested were targeted public safety threats—the stated justification for the massive deployment. The operation had been sold to the public as a precision effort to remove dangerous criminals, but the data gap suggested either dramatic overcounting by federal officials or a deliberate inflation of arrest figures for political purposes. Agents had employed covert tactics during the operation, including posing as environmental workers and utility employees to gain access to homes and workplaces, tactics that generated widespread distrust and fear in immigrant communities.
The operation generated more than 400 lawsuits in Minnesota federal courts alone, an unprecedented volume of legal challenges to a single enforcement action. Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons defended the operation as a model for future nationwide enforcement efforts, while Governor Tim Walz called for a full independent accounting of what had actually occurred. The gap between the administration's triumphant narrative and the documented reality of Metro Surge illustrated a broader pattern in which immigration enforcement spectacles prioritized political messaging over transparent governance and actual public safety outcomes.