The threats started almost immediately. Within minutes of stepping into Minneapolis’s so‑called “autonomous zone,” James O’Keefe says the crowd turned from suspicious to openly hostile. Texted warnings. People tailing his team. Objects thrown. A city already scarred by federal shootings now felt like a battlefield, where activists tracked movements, claimed control of streets, and journalists became targ… Continues…
James O’Keefe’s Minneapolis reporting trip unfolded like a case study in what happens when public trust collapses. On one side, federal agents operating under Operation Metro Surge, already under fire after two fatal shootings. On the other, increasingly militant activists who see themselves as guardians against what they view as state violence, building networks to track, film, and obstruct enforcement in real time.
Caught between them, O’Keefe walked into a neighborhood where many believe law no longer protects them, only threatens them. His account of being followed, surrounded, and physically targeted shows how quickly protest zones can morph into places ruled by fear and informal power. Minneapolis now reflects a national fracture: a country arguing not just over immigration, but over who is allowed to watch, question, and report when the government and its fiercest critics collide in the streets.