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The Latest: Homeland Security seems certain to shut down tonight

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The Latest: Homeland Security seems certain to shut down tonight
News

News

The Latest: Homeland Security seems certain to shut down tonight

2026-02-14 07:36 Last Updated At:07:51

A shutdown for the Department of Homeland Security at the end of the day Friday appears certain as lawmakers in the House and Senate were set to leave Washington for a 10-day break and negotiations with the White House over Democrats’ demands for new restrictions have stalled.

Democrats and the White House have traded offers in recent days as the Democrats have said they want curbs on President Donald Trump’s broad campaign of immigration enforcement following the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti and Renee Good in Minneapolis last month. They have demanded better identification for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other federal law enforcement officers, a new code of conduct for those agencies and more use of judicial warrants, among other requests.

Unlike the record 43-day shutdown last fall, the closures will be narrowly confined, as only agencies under the DHS umbrella — like Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection — will be affected. Still, depending on how long the shutdown lasts, some federal workers could begin to miss paychecks and services like airport screening could suffer if the shutdown drags on for weeks.

The latest:

Former CNN host turned independent journalist Don Lemon pleaded not guilty to federal civil rights charges following a protest at a Minnesota church where an Immigration and Customs Enforcement official is a pastor. Four others also pleaded not guilty in the case.

Lemon insists he was at the Cities Church in St. Paul to chronicle the Jan. 18 protest but was not a participant. The veteran journalist vowed to fight what he called “baseless charges” and protect his free speech rights.

“For more than 30 years, I’ve been a journalist, and the power and protection of the First Amendment has been the underpinning of my work. The First Amendment, the freedom of the press, are the bedrock of our democracy,” Lemon said outside the courthouse after his arraignment. “And like all of you here in Minnesota, the great people of Minnesota, I will not be intimidated, I will not back down.”

The president, who recently said he wanted to “nationalize” voting, made the assertion in a post on his social media site Truth Social.

It was one of two lengthy posts fuming about the lack of a national voter ID mandate. It comes as a Republican bill to stiffen proof of citizenship requirements passed the House but does not appear to have sufficient support in the Senate.

Only Congress can pass a national voter ID requirement, and 36 states already have one. Trump tried to mandate new election rules with an executive order in the initial weeks of his latest term, but multiple judges put it on hold because the Constitution gives the president no power to regulate voting or elections.

Trump vowed: “There will be Voter I.D. for the Midterm Elections, whether approved by Congress or not!”

But only Congress can make that happen. So without Congress, there probably won’t be national voter ID in November.

Top Democrats overseeing the review of the Department of Justice’s case files on Jeffrey Epstein want a meeting with Attorney General Pam Bondi after it was discovered that her staff was tracking the search histories of lawmakers while they reviewed the files.

In a letter to Bondi, Reps. Jamie Raskin, the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, and Robert Garcia, the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, say that the Justice Department “is spying on Members of Congress. Stop now and give us meaningful access to the fully unredacted Epstein files.”

The lawmakers say that Bondi’s actions were “a flagrant assault on congressional oversight” and demand that she develop a new process for them to review the files, including giving them access at the Capitol and allowing committee staff to review files.

Speaking on a panel at the Munich Security Conference, U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was asked whether the Democratic Party’s next presidential nominee should reconsider the country’s military aid to Israel.

Ocasio-Cortez, a high-profile progressive, said that “the idea of completely unconditional aid no matter what one does, does not make sense.” She added that conditional aid is “appropriate.”

Matt Whitaker, the U.S. ambassador to NATO, declined to directly answer the question, saying Israel is “one of our closest allies.”

“It seems like that would be the best thing that could happen,” Trump said in an exchange with reporters when asked about pressing for the ouster of the Islamic clerical rule in Iran. “For 47 years, they’ve been talking and talking and talking.”

Trump made the comments shortly after visiting with troops in Ft. Bragg, North Carolina, and after he confirmed earlier in the day that he’s deploying a second aircraft carrier group to the Mideast for potential military action against Iran.

Trump said earlier that the USS Gerald R. Ford, the world’s largest aircraft carrier, is being sent from the Caribbean Sea to the Mideast to join other warships and military assets the U.S. has built up in the region.

“Why?” asked Democratic Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, standing at an almost empty Capitol after Congress left for a 10-day recess. “Because Donald Trump and Republicans have decided that they have zero interest in getting ICE under control.”

The Democrats are demanding restraints on immigration enforcement operations and preparing a response to the latest offer from the White House. But Jeffries said border czar Tom Homan’s declarations about a wind-down in Minneapolis operations are insufficient.

“ICE needs to be dramatically reformed. Period. Full stop,” he said.

Routine annual funding for the agency runs out at midnight. The bulk of the employees at other Homeland Security divisions — including the Transportation Security Agency and FEMA — are expected to remain on the job as essential employees, though they could miss paychecks.

Jeffries points out that for Trump’s deportation operations, DHS has what he called a massive “slush fund,” including $75 billion for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, under the GOP’s big tax breaks bill that was signed into law

ICE Director Todd Lyons said Friday that his agency had opened a joint probe with the Justice Department after video evidence revealed “sworn testimony provided by two separate officers appears to have made untruthful statements” about the shooting of a Venezuelan man last month.

The announcement came as a federal judge ordered all charges dropped against Julio Cesar Sosa-Celis, who was shot in the leg by an immigration officer, as well as another Venezuelan man, Alfredo Alejandro Aljorna.

The officers, who were not named, have been placed on administrative leave pending the completion of an internal investigation, he said.

“Lying under oath is a serious federal offense,” said Lyons, adding that the U.S. attorney’s office is actively investigating.

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The Homeland Security secretary pitched the Republican voting and elections bill that passed the U.S. House earlier this week.

The legislation would require documented proof of citizenship to register to vote and impose a photo ID requirement to cast a ballot, among other election changes.

Noem called it an opportunity “to show that we’re serious about securing our elections.”

She reiterated the Republican talking point that the bill was needed to prevent noncitizens from deciding elections. Noncitizen voting has been shown to be rare and not occurring in any coordinated way.

Asked if she had any examples of noncitizens voting in Arizona, Noem said she presumed it had happened but couldn’t point to one.

Democrats and other critics say the so-called SAVE America Act, if it becomes law, could disenfranchise millions of U.S. citizens who don’t have ready access to the documents that would prove their citizenship. The bill faces an uncertain future in the Senate, where it does not appear to have the 60 votes needed to overcome the filibuster rules.

Noem made that statement during a press conference near Phoenix, where she was supposed to discuss election security. Instead, as congressional funding for her agency stalled and it ended its controversial immigration sweep in Minnesota, a reporter asked Noem if she still ran the department.

“I am still in charge of the Department of Homeland Security,” Noem replied, moving on to additional questions about elections.

Noem has come in for scathing criticism from not only Democrats, but some Republicans, after federal agents shot and killed two U.S. citizens protesting the Minnesota operation and Noem seemed to misstate the facts of the cases in the initial hours.

Recounting the January military operation to capture Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, Trump once again referred to the “discombobulator,” a secret U.S. weapon he said was used in the operation.

“The Russian equipment didn’t work, the Chinese equipment didn’t work,” Trump told troops at Fort Bragg, Friday. “Everyone’s trying to figure out why it didn’t work. Someday you’re going to find out.”

The president has previously hinted that the military used “a certain expertise” to turn off power in Caracas for the operation but has not provided details. It’s unclear whether he has been referring to a single weapon or several military capabilities.

The president was up for a bit of joshing in a speech to military families at Fort Bragg in North Carolina — though it wasn’t quite clear how his jokes landed.

“It’s a great area, like I’m thinking about moving here some day, maybe,” Trump said, asking his wife, Melania, if she would like to live at Fort Bragg near the city of Fayetteville, which has the 143rd largest metro area population in the U.S., according to the Census Bureau.

Trump also joked that M1 Abrams battle tanks was named after Stacey Abrams, the Democratic politician from Georgia who ran for governor in 2018 and 2022.

The tank, in fact, is named for Gen. Creighton Abrams, one of the top tank commanders during World War II and a former Army chief of staff.

The Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security was addressing a reporter’s question about Customs and Border Protection’s use of an anti-drone laser earlier this week that led the FAA to shut down airspace over El Paso, Texas, for several hours. A source familiar with the situation told AP that the laser was deployed without coordinating with the FAA,

Noem seemed to acknowledge the chaos the event caused.

“This was a joint agency task force mission that was undertaken and we’re continuing to work on the communication through that,” Noem said during an Arizona event.

The abrupt shutdown led to confusion in the city of 700,000 on the Mexican border.

The policy had allowed more than 1,300 nationals of Yemen to live and work in the U.S. for more than a decade.

The decision announced Friday by the Department of Homeland Security comes as the White House moves to put more immigrants in the U.S. eligible for deportation. It represents another step to not only reverse the Biden administration’s expansion of TPS but to end it to countries that have long had it.

Yemen is the latest in a string of countries to lose Temporary Protection Status, including Venezuela, Honduras, Haiti, Nicaragua, Ukraine, Syria, Afghanistan, Nepal, Cameroon and Ethiopia.

During the Biden administration, more than 1 million people were protected by TPS.

DHS said that conditions in Yemen have improved and no longer pose a serious threat to the safety of returning Yemeni nationals. Yemen was initially designated for TPS in 2015 based on an ongoing armed conflict.

Yemen nationals in the U.S. with no other lawful status have 60 days to voluntarily leave the country after the TPS termination notice is published in the Federal Register, said DHS.

Trump’s trip to one of the largest military bases in the world by population was intended to honor members of the special forces who stormed into Venezuela last month, but U.S. campaign politics quickly came into view.

A few minutes into his remarks, Trump called to the stage Michael Whatley, the North Carolinian who served as Republican National Committee chair during Trump’s 2024 campaign and is now seeking an open U.S. Senate seat in the state.

“I am thrilled that he has asked me to run for Senate in North Carolina and is giving me an opportunity to represent you and to fight for you,” Whatley told the crowd, of Trump.

North Carolina’s primary elections are March 3.

Trump renewed his pressure on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to reach an agreement with Russia to end the nearly four-year war as the U.S. readies to hold another round of talks next week with envoys from the two countries.

“Russia wants to make a deal and Zelenskyy is going to have to get moving, otherwise he’s going to miss a great opportunity,” Trump told reporters. “He has to move.”

Trump has, at times, shown impatience with Russian President Vladimir Putin about the war, but has more frequently complained that Zelenskyy is standing in the way of finding an endgame to the conflict.

The new round of talks will be held on Tuesday and Wednesday in Geneva, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said in a statement carried by Russian news agencies. Zelenskyy’s communications adviser, Dmytro Lytvyn, confirmed the new round of negotiations.

The president told reporters he’s decided to shift a second aircraft carrier to the Mideast as he continues to press Iran to make a deal to scale back its nuclear program.

“In case we don’t make a deal, we’ll need it,” Trump said of his decision to make the move.

In his exchange with reporters, Trump added that the carrier group will “be leaving very soon.”

Trump on Friday reiterated his warnings against Iraq if its former prime minister Nouri al-Maliki returns to the job.

Al-Maliki has been nominated by Iraq’s dominant political bloc for the premiership. Once that happened last month, Trump said in a social media post that if he’s elected, the U.S. will no longer help Iraq, arguing that al-Maliki’s last tenure led Iraq into “poverty and total chaos.”

Trump, in response to a question Friday, said that “we’re looking at a prime minister.”

“We’re going to see what’s going to happen,” he told reporters. “We’ve got some ideas on it, but in the end, everybody needs the U.S.”

As the 4th largest economy in the world by itself, California markets help drive the global market away from fossil fuels, California Gov. Gavin Newsom says.

He said California’s “regulation in this space” helped spur innovation, including developments that have helped make Elon Musk the world’s wealthiest person.

“Tesla exists for one reason — California’s regulatory market,” Newsom said of the EV automaker that Musk runs.

His argument is that such a populous state can drive the broader market with regulations on fossil fuels, tax policy and investments in infrastructure like EV charges.

Anything California does economically, Newsom said, it does “at scale.”

The AP has reached out to Tesla’s corporate communications for a response.

Newsom also said reversing climate change isn’t simply a moral issue, but an economic one.

He alluded to California wildfires — exacerbated by climate change — that have raised insurance rates and even made some properties uninsurable.

FILE - A Danish serviceman walks in front of Joint Arctic Command center in Nuuk, Greenland, Jan. 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka, File)

FILE - A Danish serviceman walks in front of Joint Arctic Command center in Nuuk, Greenland, Jan. 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka, File)

President Donald Trump speaks during an event with Environmental Protection Agency director Lee Zeldin to announce the EPA will no longer regulate greenhouse gases, in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, Thursday, Feb. 12, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

President Donald Trump speaks during an event with Environmental Protection Agency director Lee Zeldin to announce the EPA will no longer regulate greenhouse gases, in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, Thursday, Feb. 12, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Multiple residents of an affordable housing complex in Portland, Oregon, have bought gas masks to wear in their own homes, to protect themselves from tear gas fired by federal agents outside the immigration building across the street. Others have taped their windows or stuffed wet towels under their doors, while children have sought security by sleeping in closets.

Some are now telling their stories to a federal judge Friday, as they testify in a lawsuit seeking to limit federal officers' use of tear gas during protests at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement building following months of repeated exposure.

The property manager of the apartment building and several tenants filed the suit against the federal government in December, arguing that the use of chemical munitions has violated residents' rights to life, liberty and property by sickening them, contaminating their apartments and confining them inside. They have asked the court to limit federal agents' use of such munitions unless needed to respond to an imminent threat.

“They’re simply trying to live their lives in peace in their homes," Daniel Jacobson, an attorney representing the plaintiffs, said during the hearing. "Yet our federal government is knowingly putting them through hell, and for no good reason at all.”

The defendants, which include ICE and the Department of Homeland Security and their respective heads, say officers have deployed crowd-control devices in response to violent protests at the building, which has been the site of demonstrations for months.

”The conduct at issue, law enforcement’s use of crowd control tactics to disperse unlawful crowds, does not even come close to shocking the conscience," Samuel Holt, an attorney for the federal government, said during the hearing.

The case comes amid growing concern over federal officers using aggressive crowd-control tactics, as cities across the country have seen demonstrations against the immigration enforcement surge spearheaded by President Donald Trump's administration.

In testimony, tenants of the Gray's Landing apartment complex described experiencing difficulty breathing, coughing, dizziness and other symptoms following exposure to chemicals from tear gas, smoke grenades and pepper balls.

“I have a gas mask in my bedroom. I have one in my living room. And I have one in my backpack,” said a plaintiff using a pseudonym due to being a domestic violence survivor. “I’ve slept with it on.”

She described how the chemical munitions triggered her post-traumatic stress and entered into her apartment. ”I could feel it, I could see it, I could taste it, I could smell it,” she said of the gas.

Gas canisters have hit apartments and been found in the building's courtyard and parking garage, according to the complaint.

Another plaintiff, Susan Dooley, a 72-year-old Air Force veteran with diabetes and high blood pressure, was sent by a doctor to the emergency room, where she was diagnosed with shortness of breath and mild heart failure, the complaint said. Whitfield Taylor, who has placed wet towels around his window air conditioning unit in a bid to block the gas from entering his home, had to take his two daughters, 7 and 9, to urgent care for respiratory symptoms. The girls sometimes sleep in his closet to feel safe, according to the complaint.

Of the affordable housing complex’s 237 residents, nearly a third are age 63 or older, according to court filings. Twenty percent of units are reserved for low-income veterans and 16% of tenants identify as disabled.

The plaintiffs filed an updated request for a preliminary injunction limiting federal officers' use of tear gas late last month, after agents launched gas at a crowd of demonstrators including young children that local officials described as peaceful.

“As this brief is being filed, tear gas is once again inside the homes of Plaintiffs and other residents of Gray’s Landing,” the filing says, adding that it was launched by officers “despite facing no violence or imminent threats at all.”

The government said in court filings that federal officers have at times used crowd control devices in response to crowds that are “violent, obstructive or trespassing" or do not comply with dispersal orders.

It has also pushed back against the claims of tenants' constitutional rights being violated, saying that under such an argument, “federal and state law enforcement officers would violate the Constitution whenever they deploy airborne crowd-control devices that inadvertently drift into someone's home or business, even if the use of such devices is otherwise entirely lawful.”

The hearing comes after a federal judge in a separate Oregon lawsuit temporarily restricted agents' use of tear gas during protests at the building. The temporary restraining order in that case, filed by the ACLU of Oregon on behalf of protesters and freelance journalists, is set to expire next week.

FILE - Law enforcement officers stand in the street to allow vehicles to leave a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility during a protest in Portland, Ore., Oct. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File)

FILE - Law enforcement officers stand in the street to allow vehicles to leave a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility during a protest in Portland, Ore., Oct. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File)

FILE - A view of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility, top left, in Portland, Ore., Oct. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File)

FILE - A view of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility, top left, in Portland, Ore., Oct. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File)

Federal agents lobbed tear gas and flash bangs at protesters in front of the ICE building on Jan. 31, 2026, in Portland, Ore. (Allison Barr/The Oregonian via AP)

Federal agents lobbed tear gas and flash bangs at protesters in front of the ICE building on Jan. 31, 2026, in Portland, Ore. (Allison Barr/The Oregonian via AP)

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