How a 5-year-old boy got caught up in the ICE crackdown

五岁男孩如何卷入ICE的打击行动

Apple News Today

2026-01-23

16 分钟
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ICE detained a 5-year-old boy at a school in suburban Minneapolis, prompting outrage from the community. Minnesota Public Radio’s Elizabeth Shockman joins to talk about the apprehension, and how the Trump administration is defending it. Crime across the country seems to be dropping at fast pace. Henry Grabar of The Atlantic discusses why. On Oscar-nomination day, the vampire film ‘Sinners’ broke the record for most nominations by a single movie. Variety’s Clayton Davis breaks down this year’s nominees. Plus, former special counsel Jack Smith testified before Congress about his two indictments of President Trump, TikTok finalized a deal to keep operating in the U.S., and how one reporter captured the beauty of nature and an unsettling truth about what humans are doing to it. Today’s episode was hosted by Shumita Basu.
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  • Good morning.

  • ICE draws condemnation for detaining a preschooler in Minneapolis.

  • Local officials and federal government are at odds again.

  • The onslaught of ICE activity in our community is inducing trauma and is taking a toll on our children.

  • What are they supposed to do?

  • Are they supposed to let a five-year-old child freeze to death?

  • Crime is down across cities big and small, red and blue,

  • the Atlantic tries to untangle why,

  • and the gothic Southern Vampire flick Sinners sets a new Oscars record.

  • It's Friday, January 23rd.

  • I'm Shimi Tabasu.

  • This is Apple News Today.

  • As the immigration enforcement surge continues in Minneapolis,

  • there's been fresh outrage over the detention of several children,

  • including one five-year-old boy on Tuesday.

  • You might have seen by now the image of Liam Conejo-Ramos wearing a winter blue hat and a Spider-Man backpack as agents escort him to a vehicle.

  • He appears to have been taken as part of an arrest of his father,

  • but federal and local officials differ in their accounts of what exactly happened.

  • Speaking alongside their lawyers,

  • the board chair for Columbia Heights Public Schools, Mary Grandland,