Midwest
‘Total lawlessness:’ Journalist influencer says he was stalked, later assaulted at chaotic Dearborn protest
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A conservative influencer and journalist who claims he was stalked and then assaulted while covering a protest in Dearborn, Michigan, described the scene as “total lawlessness” and accused police of refusing to intervene or take his report.
Dearborn, home to one of the largest Muslim populations in the United States, has recently drawn attention from activists who accuse the city of operating under “Sharia law,” according to MLive. On Tuesday, an anti-Islam protest on Michigan Avenue turned chaotic as demonstrators and counter-protesters clashed, prompting allegations of assaults and police inaction that later spilled into a city council meeting.
Cam Higby told the Dearborn City Council that he was pepper-sprayed and robbed while documenting the confrontations.
“I went and told one of your officers … that this had happened. He told me there was nothing that could be done about it unless I went to the station,” Higby said. “I told him, ‘You’re never going to catch the guy if I go into the station later …’ He said, ‘Sir, I can’t leave my post.’ Five minutes later, I caught him in the parking lot on a personal phone call.”
ANTI-ISLAM PROTESTERS, MUSLIMS CLASH IN DEARBORN, MICHIGAN, AFTER MAN ATTEMPTS TO BURN QURAN
Conservative political influencer and commentator Cam Higby, left, films demonstrators outside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) processing facility in Broadview, Illinois, on Friday, Oct. 10, 2025. (Adam Gray/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
In a follow-up interview with Fox News Digital, Higby said he confronted a counter-protester on the “Free Palestine” side who was harassing a man in an “America First” hat. Higby said the man pushed him as he tried to record, and he shoved him back, after which he was pepper-sprayed.
“Sir, why is not he welcome on a public sidewalk?” Higby asks the man, before being told to “get that camera out of my face.” The man turns to tell him this again, adding that he will “take it” from Higby if he does not stop recording. The phone then drops and someone picks it up to record Higby with his eyes tightly shut.
“They picked up my phone, recorded me suffering … and then chucked it across the street,” Higby recalled, adding that roughly $50 and his microphone receiver were taken.
He alleged that officers witnessed several assaults but “did nothing,” describing the scene as “total lawlessness.”
DEARBORN RESIDENTS PUSH CITY TO CURB NOISE LEVELS FROM MOSQUE’S CALL TO PRAYER
Cam Higby says he was pepper-sprayed after confronting a counter-protester at Tuesday’s protest in Detroit, Michigan. (Cam Higby)
Higby said he ultimately left the city without filing a report because he did not feel safe.
“It didn’t seem like any of the police were motivated to enforce any kind of law,” he said. “They wouldn’t take my report [earlier] and I got out of Dearborn as quickly as possible.”
A spokesperson for the Dearborn Police Department told Fox News Digital it “responded quickly” and managed the demonstrations. The spokesperson also said that officers made three arrests from different groups for “disorderly behavior.”
Chief Issa Shahin stated, “I am proud of the disciplined and measured response our officers demonstrated during the November 18 demonstrations. Their actions reflected our department’s core values and our dedication to safeguarding everyone in our city. I also want to thank the Dearborn community for its patience and support throughout the event. Working together, we will continue to ensure that Dearborn remains a safe, respectful, and welcoming place for all.”
Higby, who livestreams political demonstrations on his YouTube channel, said the night before the protest he and his team were followed by cars, people on foot and even a low-flying drone while filming near a local mosque.
“It was very creepy, eerie and unsettling,” he said.
During the same city council meeting, several participants offered sharply different views of the chaos.
Isaac Thomas, who identified himself as one of the anti-Islam protesters, said their peaceful demonstration was “met with violence.” He claimed several people were assaulted and said that police officers were overwhelmed by the size of the crowd.
DEARBORN MAYOR REFUSES TO APOLOGIZE FOR TELLING CHRISTIAN MINISTER HE WAS ‘NOT WELCOME HERE’
Isaac Thomas, a man who came to the anti-Islam Dearborn protest, spoke at the Nov. 18 Dearborn City Council Meeting and said their peaceful protest was met with violence from counter-protesters. (Dearborn City Council via YouTube)
“Multiple people were assaulted. It was caught on video, and we would like to make police reports for the assaults that happened to us. So far, the officers have refused to do that,” Thomas said, warning that “legal action” could follow.
Counter-protesters affiliated with the far-left group, By Any Means Necessary, or BAMN, claimed police were not forceful enough toward the anti-Islam demonstrators.
Detroit-based activist Adrian Lupkiewich, described by local outlets as a transgender activist, told the council that officers “did nothing to really disperse the crowd of fascists.”
“All they did was protect them, and that is wrong,” Lupkiewich said, urging the council to “stand in solidarity with the people here today that are condemning fascism” and to “fight” back against what the activist called a “demagogic fascist movement led by Trump.”
WOMAN CAUGHT ON CAMERA ALLEGEDLY LUNGING AT MAGA ACTIVIST IN VIRAL CONFRONTATION
Detroit-based BAMN activist Liana Mulholland speaks at Dearborn City Council meeting, Nov. 18, 2025. (Dearborn City Council Meeting via YouTube)
Another Detroit-based BAMN activist, Liana Mulholland, praised the counter-protesters for driving away the anti-Islam activists.
“They went from being maybe, I don’t know, around fifty people to like three guys with a banner because they had been scared away,” she said. “And I think that is exactly the kind of action that is needed. And I think Dearborn really set the model for how to deal with these situations.”
Dearborn Mayor Abdullah Hammoud acknowledged the unrest but lauded residents for their composure.
“While children were singing on their way to school, dozens of protesters were marching through our streets shouting about Muslims in America,” he said. “Some of them were misled. Others came with hate in their hearts … And yet even then, Dearborn showed who we truly were … a place where neighbors show up for one another, where hurt is met with compassion.”
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Dearborn Mayor Abdullah Hammoud condemned the “hate” at the protests, saying it was not reflective of the city’s values, in comments during the Nov. 18, 2025 city council meeting. (Dearborn City Council Meeting via YouTube)
According to MLive, the confrontations began when Jake Lang, who participated in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot, arrived on Michigan Avenue and attempted to burn a Quran. Lang held up a lighter attempting to light the religious text on fire, but counter-protesters knocked it from his hands.
Later, Lang slapped the Quran with a slab of bacon before a counter-protester grabbed the book and ran off with it.
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Fox News’ Landon Mion contributed to this report.
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Minneapolis, MN
Fishers vigil honors woman shot by ICE in Minneapolis
Fishers vigil attendees gather to remember Renee Nicole Good
Renee Nicole Good, 37, was shot and killed by an ICE officer in Minneapolis on Jan. 7, 2026.
Hundreds of people gathered for a candlelight vigil in Roy G Holland Memorial Park in Fishers to honor a woman killed by a federal immigration officer.
The crowd, bundled in coats, scarves and hats, chanted between singing songs and listening to speakers.
The vigil, hosted Jan. 11 by the local group Fishers Resist, is one of more than 1,000 protests and events that happened nationwide this weekend after an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer shot and killed Renee Nicole Good, 37, in Minneapolis on Jan. 7.
Good joins at least nine other people who have been shot by ICE in the past four months. Federal officials have said Good struck ICE officer Jonathan Ross with her vehicle, prompting Ross to fire in self-defense. Local officials have called that narrative “propaganda,” and video analyses conducted by media outlets have failed to reach a consensus on what happened.
Ross, 43, once served in the Indiana National Guard from 2002 to 2008.
Organizers at the vigil estimated the crowd was at least 150 — that’s how many glow sticks were handed out — and potentially as many as 500.
One attendee, Lorena Lane from Carmel, donned a black dress with a red, white and blue “liberty” sash. Her hat, black and feathered, was adorned with an Indiana cardinal.”I’m here to personify the concept of liberty,” Lane said through tears, “which is at risk right now in our country.”
Many attendees shared a sense that American principles were at risk, something they felt was demonstrated by Good’s death. Paintings, photos and signs with her name were sprinkled throughout the crowd.
“We have to take a stance against the harm that’s coming into our cities from ICE,” Melinda Humbert, who attended the vigil with her husband and daughter, said.
The Fishers event followed a brief anti-ICE protest along East 86th Street in Indianapolis that took place the day before. It’s part of a growing backlash against President Donald Trump’s promise to conduct the largest mass deportation campaign in the country’s history, where Indiana has been a key player.
Since Trump took office and Gov. Mike Braun issued an executive order urging law enforcement agencies comply with ICE, the state’s partnership with ICE has grown. Indiana has expanded its capacity for detainees, including at the controversy-plagued Miami Correctional Facility. Indianapolis, along with cities in Texas and Florida, is now a major hub for ICE arrests at jails and prisons.
Contact breaking politics reporter Marissa Meador at mmeador@gannett.com or find her on X at @marissa_meador.
Indianapolis, IN
More big temperature swings this week
Our Monday brings clouds, but we’re also expecting many hours of sunshine to brighten things up. Winds turn more out of the west, which will allow us to warm temperatures back above average. Afternoon highs reach into the lower 40s.
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The “warm-up” doesn’t last too long. A midweek system brings the chance for rain and snow showers followed by more typical January temperatures.
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Indianapolis Weather Forecast:
Monday: Sun and clouds. High: 42°
Tuesday: Mostly cloudy. Showers possible. High: 50°
Wednesday: Mostly cloudy. Scattered rain/snow showers. High: 42°
Indianapolis 7-Day Weather Forecast
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Cleveland, OH
’27 TE D’Angelo White Commits to Louisville
LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Another blue chip Class of 2027 prospect has picked the Louisville football program.
Cleveland (Oh.) Villa Angela-St. Joseph tight end D’Angelo White, a four-star prospect in the 2027 cycle, announced Sunday that he has given his verbal pledge to the Cardinals.
White chose Louisville over several blue blood programs. He held offers from Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio State, Penn State, Tennessee and others, and had made multiple unofficial visits to OSU, UM and PSU.
There’s a reason why so many elite schools were after White. The 6-foot-4, 215-pound prospect ranks as high as the No. 3 tight end and No. 159 overall prospect in the Class of 2027 in ESPN’s rankings, and comes in as the 288th-ranked recruit in the nation by the 247Sports Composite.
White was an impact player on both sides of the ball for Cleveland (Oh.) Villa Angelo-St. Joseph. Not only was he a difference maker from his tight end spot, he earned D-III Second-Team honors from OHSAA as a defensive lineman. Stats for White were not provided by MaxPreps.
White is the fourth Class of 2027 prospect to the commit to the Cardinals, joining Lizton (Ind.) Tri-West quarterback Jack Sorgi, Cincinnati (Oh.) wide receiver Chuck Alexander and Louisville (Ky.) Trinity cornerback Allen Evans. All four are top-300 prospects according to the 247Sports Composite., which has helped UofL sport the No. 17 overall class up to this point.
In the more immediate 2026 cycle, Louisville signed 19 prospect during the early signing period last night, with 15 of them being early enrollees. It’s a class that ranks 32nd in the nation, per 247Sports.
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(Photo of D’Angelo White vis Twitter/X)
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