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Immigration

A Protester Threw a Snowball. Federal Agents Responded With Tear Gas and Pepper Balls.

In the Minneapolis neighborhood where Renee Good was killed, tensions were running high between residents and federal immigration agents. Then came what one former DOJ official later called ‘use of excessive force after use of excessive force.’

By

Patrice Taddonio

April 15, 2026

In partnership with:

https://www.propublica.org/

Five days after an ICE agent fatally shot activist Renee Good, tensions were running high in the Minneapolis neighborhood where she was killed.

As federal immigration agents surrounded and questioned a man whose car they had stopped, people emerged from their homes onto the snow-lined sidewalks and street. They shouted obscenities, told the agents to leave and filmed what was happening on their phones.

A crew from FRONTLINE and ProPublica was filming, too.

The man being questioned, a U.S. citizen named Christian Molina, told correspondent A.C. Thompson that federal agents had followed him and rammed his car: “They looked at me and they decided to pull me over for no reason,” Molina said.

What happened next unfolds in the above footage from FRONTLINE and ProPublica’s new documentary Caught in the Crackdown

Someone threw a snowball in the direction of the agents — and one of them responded by tossing a tear gas canister into the crowd.

“You’re tear-gassing a f***ing neighborhood,” a protester yelled. “People live here.”

As the toxic haze rose, an agent pepper-sprayed protesters and a news photographer up close. Another agent fired pepper balls into the crowd, hitting Thompson three times. One shot struck him above the right eye. Federal use of force guidelines generally instruct agents not to target people’s heads and faces with these weapons.

Then, as the agents drove away, one of them shot pepper spray from a car window, hitting others on the film team, including director Gabrielle Schonder and director of photography Tim Grucza, who was sprayed in the face.

Related Content

The Jan. 12, 2026 confrontation is one of many chaotic clashes documented in Caught in the Crackdown. Released April 14 and available to stream now, the joint investigation examines how federal agents handled protesters and bystanders during the Trump administration’s immigration sweeps in major cities across the U.S. from Los Angeles to Chicago to Minneapolis — including by using tactics that experts say violated officers’ own rules.

As the documentary explores, the Trump administration said its immigration crackdown was protecting U.S. citizens by targeting criminals and people who had entered the country illegally. Through on-the-ground reporting and interviews with officials, experts, insiders and eyewitnesses, Caught in the Crackdown traces how federal forces arrested hundreds of U.S. citizens who were protesting or observing the raids, routinely portrayed those citizens as domestic terrorists or extremists, and repeatedly deployed weaponry like tear gas and pepper balls.

The man heading the enforcement operations was unapologetic about his agents’ approach.

“We’re here to conduct that Title 8 mission,” Greg Bovino, then-commander-at-large for Border Patrol, told a local TV station, referring to immigration enforcement. “It won’t stop despite rioters, agitators, and vast amounts of violence against federal officers. We’re not going to stop.”

But when Thompson shared the footage from Jan. 12 with former law enforcement officials, they expressed concern.

“We see just use of excessive force after use of excess force,” Christy Lopez, who spent years investigating law enforcement misconduct for the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, said in the above video. “In no scenario is it okay to be pepper-spraying people as you’re leaving the scene.”

“It’s pretty awful,” said Chris Magnus, a former head of Customs and Border Protection who once oversaw Bovino. Magnus, who served as a police chief in multiple cities, pointed to the principle of proportionality when using force in law enforcement: “People may well get under your skin under a lot of circumstances,” he said. “You don’t like it, but professionals don’t react to it.”

As the documentary reports, ProPublica and FRONTLINE found that cases against many protesters have been falling apart, as the accusations have been contradicted by video evidence and witness testimony.

“Even if Gregory Bovino is gone, I wonder if his imprint will last through all the federal agencies that are continuing to go out on the street,” journalist Sergio Olmos, who reported on Bovino for the nonprofit news outlets CalMatters and Evident Media, says in the documentary. “I wonder if anything will change, really. He was the one who was the tip of the spear for this new type of immigration enforcement across the country.”

Watch the Documentary

Caught in the Crackdown

Tracing the violence, protests and arrests stemming from federal immigration sweeps across the United States

Learn More

For the full story, watch Caught in the Crackdown. The documentary premiered April 14, 2026, on PBS stations and is now available to stream at pbs.org/frontline, propublica.org, on FRONTLINE’s YouTube channel and on PBS Documentaries on Prime Video. Caught in the Crackdown is a FRONTLINE Production with Schonder Productions in association with ProPublica. The correspondent, producer and writer is A.C. Thompson. The producer, writer and director is Gabrielle Schonder. The senior editor is Frank Koughan. The managing editor of FRONTLINE is Andrew Metz. The editor-in-chief and executive producer of FRONTLINE is Raney Aronson-Rath.

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Immigration
Patrice Taddonio.
Patrice Taddonio

Senior Digital Writer, FRONTLINE

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Correspondent A.C. Thompson stands in the foreground wearing a bulletproof vest that says "press" on it, while federal agents stand in the background.

Caught in the Crackdown

54m

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