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UPDATE:Pres. Donald Trump Set to Sign Unprecedented Executive Order Banning Civilian Gun Ownership and Public Display of Firearms after Minnesota Shooting Incident with Federal Agents relating to ICE protest, Setting Up Historic Clash With the Second Amendment and the Bill of Rights Full details ⤵️
UPDATE:Pres. Donald Trump Set to Sign Unprecedented Executive Order Banning Civilian Gun Ownership and Public Display of Firearms after Minnesota Shooting Incident with Federal Agents relating to ICE protest, Setting Up Historic Clash With the Second Amendment and the Bill of Rights
Full details ⤵️
In the wake of two fatal shootings by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis, Minnesota, over the past month, tensions between local communities, state officials and the federal government have soared — but there is **no credible indication** that President Donald Trump is preparing an “unprecedented executive order banning civilian gun ownership” or the public display of firearms across the United States.
The controversy stems from a deeply polarizing situation in Minnesota, where federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Border Patrol agents deployed under “Operation Metro Surge” have been met with protests, civil unrest and intense political debate. ([Wikipedia][1])
On January 7, 2026, 37-year-old Renée Nicole Good was shot and killed by an ICE officer during a federal enforcement action in Minneapolis — an incident the Department of Homeland Security characterized as defensive but which critics have disputed. ([Wikipedia][2]) Weeks later, on January 24, ICU nurse Alex Jeffrey Pretti — a licensed gun owner according to local records — was fatally shot by Border Patrol agents after a confrontation at a protest site. Video footage contested some official accounts of the encounter.
Those shootings ignited large protests and legal challenges. Thousands participated in demonstrations demanding accountability, the withdrawal of ICE agents from Minnesota, and broader changes to federal enforcement policy. ([Wikipedia][3])
The Trump administration has defended the operation while facing sharp criticism from Minnesota officials. Governor Tim Walz has demanded an end to the federal operation, calling the shootings and tactics “sickening” and a threat to civil liberties. Federal judges have also stepped in to limit some aggressive enforcement tactics against peaceful demonstrators.
Amid the unrest, President Trump made statements urging “de-escalation” and noted that firearms should not be used at protests — comments that some interpreted as a rebuke of guns at demonstrations. However, there is *no verified reporting* that he is poised to sign an executive order that broadly abolishes civilian gun ownership or overrides the Second Amendment. Such a sweeping ban would face enormous constitutional hurdles and, as of now, remains unsupported by factual evidence from reputable news outlets.
Legal scholars and rights advocates have underscored that any federal attempt to outlaw civilian guns would trigger intense judicial scrutiny, given the strong constitutional protections enshrined in the Second Amendment. Journalists and fact-checkers have also advised caution about misinformation circulating online linking the Minneapolis events to a nationwide firearms ban.