No-knock raid misuse
No-knock warrants — those authorizing entry without announcement — are constitutionally permissible only in narrowly defined circumstances. Their misuse takes the form of routinized use outside those narrow circumstances, deployment based on stale or unreliable information, use against innocent third parties whose addresses appear by error or association, and tactical execution patterns (pre-dawn, heavily armed) that escalate the predictable risk of fatal mistake.
Documented entries (2)
2026
DOJ rescinds 2021 no-knock entry limits, broadening when agents can enter homes unannounced
On March 2, 2026, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche issued a Justice Department memo rescinding the 2021 policy that restricted federal agents' use of "no-knock" entries to situations where they feared imminent physical danger. Under the new memo, no-knock entries are also permissible whenever there is a risk that evidence could be destroyed — a condition former prosecutors warned can be asserted in nearly any search. The change was made by internal memo without public rulemaking and was reported on the eve of the sixth anniversary of Breonna Taylor's death in a botched no-knock raid.
ICE breaks into St. Paul home in armed warrantless raid, detains six including a 12-year-old flown to Texas
On January 15, 2026, federal immigration agents broke through the door of a home on Nevada Avenue East in St. Paul, Minnesota, entered with assault rifles, and detained six members of a Venezuelan family — including a 12-year-old boy who was transported to an immigration center in San Antonio, Texas. Agents claimed a search warrant but never presented one; a document left on the doorstep the next day was an unfiled Ramsey County (state) court paper with no case number. On January 19, U.S. District Judge John Tunheim granted the family's habeas petition after DHS failed to produce a judicial warrant by his deadline, ordering the detainees returned to Minnesota and released within 72 hours.
