Midwest
ICE detains University of Minnesota international graduate student near Twin Cities campus
An international graduate student at the University of Minnesota was detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement last Thursday, according to a statement from university leadership who called the situation “deeply concerning.”
The student was enrolled at the school’s Twin Cities campus in Minneapolis under the Carlson School of Management. The university said the student was arrested at an off-campus residence, but did not name the student nor say why the student was detained.
The Department of Homeland Security told Fox News Digital on Monday that the student was not arrested in relation to the anti-Israel protests that have erupted across various American institutions, which has led the Department of State to revoke many foreign students of their visas.
“This is not related to student protests,” a senior DHS official said. “The individual in question was arrested after a visa revocation by the State Dept. related to a prior criminal history for a DUI.”
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A person walks on campus at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. (Glenn Stubbe/Star Tribune)
While “the University had no prior knowledge of this incident and did not share any information with federal authorities before it occurred,” the institution said it is working to provide the student with legal aid and other support services.
Carlson School of Management Dean Jamie Prenkert said the university remains committed to its international community during “a time of uncertainty regarding changing federal immigration policies.”
“Detentions like these deeply affect our community,” Prenkert said in a statement. “From the very beginning of the University’s business school, our doors have been open to international students. Faculty, staff, and scholars hailing from different countries have strengthened our research and classrooms—shaping us into the Carlson School we are today.”
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Union members representing graduate employees at the University of Minnesota protest in downtown Minneapolis on March 29, 2025, after the university said an international graduate student was detained by ICE last Thursday. (Tim Evans)
Gov. Tim Walz commented on the incident in a post on X on Friday.
“I just spoke with Homeland Security to get more information and I will share when I learn more,” Walz said. “The University of Minnesota is an international destination for education and research. We have any number of students studying here with visas, and we need answers.”
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ICE has detained multiple international students in recent weeks, including Tufts University student Rumeysa Ozturk, who engaged in activities in support of Hamas. (AP)
Sen. Doron Clark also released a statement on X on Friday denouncing the Trump administration’s crackdown on international students.
“I am saddened and angered that ICE is operating around the University of Minnesota,” Clark said. “Our campuses should be a safe place for all students, staff, and visitors… We must stand up against the Trump administration’s senseless demonization of our friends, family and neighbors.”
Clark made the statement at a time when ICE has made multiple arrests in recent weeks at Columbia University and Tufts after students showed engagement in anti-Israel protests.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio also said the state department has revoked visas for about 300 international students due to the protests.
“It might be more than 300 at this point,” Rubio said during a press statement on Friday. “We do it every day. Every time I find one of these lunatics, I take away their visa.”
“We gave you a visa to come and study and get a degree,” Rubio said. “If you come into the United States as a visitor and create a ruckus for us. We don’t want it.”
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North Dakota
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Ohio
Gov. Mike DeWine urges Ohio residents to take advantage of sales tax holiday
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (WTAP) – Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine is encouraging Ohioans to take advantage of this year’s sales tax holiday, which will take place from midnight Friday, Aug. 7, through 11:59 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 9, 2026.
The following items qualify for the sales tax exemption during the three-day holiday: clothing priced at $75 or less per item, school supplies priced at $20 or less per item, and school instructional materials priced at $20 or less per item.
According to the Ohio Department of Taxation, “clothing” includes but is not limited to, aprons, household and shop; athletic supporters; baby receiving blankets; bathing suits and caps; beach capes and coats; belts and suspenders; boots; coats and jackets; costumes; diapers, children and adult, including disposable diapers; earmuffs; footlets; formal wear; garters and garter belts; girdles; gloves and mittens for general use; hats and caps; hosiery; insoles for shoes; lab coats; neckties; overshoes; pantyhose; rainwear; rubber pants; sandals; scarves; shoes and shoe laces; slippers; sneakers; socks and stockings; steel-toed shoes; underwear; uniforms, athletic and nonathletic; and wedding apparel.
“School supplies” only includes binders; book bags; calculators; cellophane tape; blackboard chalk; compasses; composition books; crayons; erasers; folders, expandable, pocket, plastic, and manila; glue, paste, and paste sticks; highlighters; index cards; index card boxes; legal pads; lunch boxes; markers; notebooks; paper, loose-leaf notebook paper, copy paper, graph paper, tracing paper, manila paper, colored paper, poster board, and construction paper; pencil boxes and other school supply boxes; pencil sharpeners; pencils; pens; protractors; rulers; scissors; and writing tablets.
“School instructional materials” only includes reference books, reference maps and globes, textbooks, and workbooks.
In 2026, the sales tax holiday only applies to the above back to school items. It does not apply to items that are $500 or less, food in restaurants, boats/watercrafts, titled outboard motors, motor vehicles, alcohol, tobacco, vape products, or items with marijuana. It also does not apply to taxable services and items purchased for use in business.
For more information about this year’s sales tax holiday in Ohio, you can visit the Ohio Department of Taxation’s website.
Copyright 2026 WTAP. All rights reserved.
South Dakota
Tribes sue to halt exploratory drilling in Black Hills near sacred ceremonial site
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) — Nine Native American tribes in South Dakota, North Dakota and Nebraska are suing the federal government in a bid to stop exploratory drilling for graphite near a sacred site in the Black Hills.
A small group of demonstrators has been protesting at the drilling location and at the mining company’s headquarters since they learned ground was broken on the drilling project in late April.
The tribes filed their federal lawsuit Thursday in South Dakota against the U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Department of Agriculture, alleging that the agencies violated federal law by greenlighting a project near a site called Pe’Sla, a meadow in the central Black Hills used for tribal ceremonies, prayer and youth camps year-round.
The project is the latest point of tension between tribes and mining interests in the lush pine-covered Black Hills, which encompass over 1.2 million acres (485,000 hectares), rising from the Great Plains in southwest South Dakota and extending into Wyoming.
The region is a yearly destination for millions of tourists boasting such attractions as Mount Rushmore and wildlife-filled state parks. Yet for even longer, it has been sacred to Sioux tribes who call the area He Sapa and consider it “the heart of everything that is,” according to the complaint.
Some of the landscape has already been altered by the gold rush of the 1870s that developed the region and displaced Native Americans. And in recent years, a new crop of miners driven by rising gold prices have sought to return to the landscape.
The complaint said the project by Rapid City-based mining company Pete Lien & Sons would impact the use of Pe’Sla for traditional, cultural and religious purposes by the tribes, and that the Forest Service did not consult with the tribes before approving the project.
Parts of Pe’Sla are owned by Sioux tribes after they bought the land in 2012, 2015 and 2018, and an agreement between the tribes and the Forest Service established a two-mile (three kilometer) buffer zone on public lands around the site, according to the complaint.
Because Pe’Sla was not included as an affected area and no environmental review was conducted, the approval violates the National Historic Preservation Act and National Environmental Policy Act, the lawsuit alleges.
Pete Lien & Sons, which supplies materials like limestone, sand and gravel, did not return email requests or voicemails for comment Thursday and Sunday.
Frank Star Comes Out, president of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, said in a statement that the lawsuit is “a historic demonstration of unity” between the nine tribes. The tribes are separate, distinct federally recognized tribes sharing cultural and linguistic roots, but each with its own government and land base.
“We as Lakota people have been coming and praying and holding ceremony at these places for over 2,000 years,” said Wizipan Garriott, president of Indigenous advocacy group NDN Collective and a member of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe. “And so us being here is a continuation of countless generations before us. And it’s important that these sacred places be protected for future generations to come.”
The project was granted a permit from the Forest Service in February without conducting an environmental review because the agency said it met the requirements for a categorical exclusion, like having a duration of less than a year and not posing impacts to environmental and cultural sites.
But tribal opponents disagree that those requirements were met and said drilling projects are often a first step leading to future mines.
Besides the lawsuit from the tribes, NDN Collective and other environmental groups filed a request for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction to halt the project.
Some of the drilling pads are in the buffer zone around the site, according to NDN Collective. The project calls for the company to drill up to 18 holes down some 1,000 feet (300 meters) into the Earth to collect samples.
On Thursday, opponents demonstrated with signs reading “Protect Pe’Sla” and “Sacred ground not mining bound” near two drilling pads to block access. NDN Collective said the Forest Service told them drilling was paused for the rest of the day and the contractors were sent home.
The Forest Service said in a statement that it had no comment on the project when asked for a response.
“The Forest Service does not comment on the specifics of the case or on issues that are part of ongoing legal proceedings,” the statement said.
It is unclear when drilling began, but NDN Collective said it noticed drilling pads in operation last week. The group said protest actions will continue as needed to protect Pe’Sla.
“As Lakota, we pray as long as we need to,” Garriott said.
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Tribes sue to halt exploratory drilling in Black Hills near sacred ceremonial site