Every legal drama has a point at which it is impossible to ignore the paper trail. For the Trump administration’s Justice Department, that moment arrived in a Minneapolis courtroom, where a federal judge looked at six grand jury subpoenas targeting Minnesota’s top Democratic officials — and said, plainly, that the evidence of political retaliation was overwhelming.
The subpoenas served against Governor Tim Walz, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, the Minnesota attorney general’s office, two county boards, and the mayor of St. Paul were quashed by Chief U.S. District Judge Patrick Schiltz, who was appointed by George W. Bush. There was little room for interpretation in his decision. It is a damning statement that the DOJ “struggled — without success — to identify a single plausible investigatory justification for the subpoenas.” When you consider the series of events that led to this, it becomes even more damning.
The backstory begins with Operation Metro Surge, a federal immigration enforcement push that flooded Minnesota with ICE agents earlier this year. Protests were triggered by the aggressive operation. During that turbulence, two people were killed — Renee Good, a U.S. citizen and mother of three, shot by an ICE officer, and Alex Pretti. Minnesota officials, already at odds with the administration over sanctuary policies, filed suit to challenge the surge. What happened next is the part that raised eyebrows even among people accustomed to watching Washington political fights play out.

Trump took to social media. He complained about Minnesota’s lack of cooperation. He issued a warning: “THE DAY OF RECKONING & RETRIBUTION IS COMING!” About a week later, the subpoenas arrived. It’s the kind of sequence a novelist might use — almost too on the nose. But it happened, and the judge took note of every piece of it.
Schiltz wrote that using grand jury proceedings to pressure political opponents into taking official actions — particularly ones the federal government has no direct authority to mandate — is “a blatantly unlawful and unethical use of the grand-jury process.” The Tenth Amendment issue runs through the ruling too. States and localities have long been protected from being conscripted into federal enforcement programs, a principle with deep legal roots. The court found the subpoenas crossed that line clearly.
Walz called the ruling “a victory for the rule of law.” Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said it should disturb every American that the criminal justice system was being used against people the president disagrees with. These are the kinds of statements politicians often make, but here, a federal judge had already said something similar in a formal ruling — which gives the rhetoric more grounding than usual.
The DOJ, for its part, issued a statement saying it takes “unlawful obstruction of federal law enforcement operations extremely seriously.” It’s a curious response to a ruling that found no obstruction — just officials exercising their legal authority and then getting subpoenaed for it.
What’s harder to measure is what this kind of legal pressure does to the daily functioning of state and local government. Officials who receive grand jury subpoenas don’t just file them away. They hire lawyers, they redirect staff, they spend weeks or months in legal limbo. Whether or not the subpoenas survive a court challenge, they cost something. There’s a sense that this was understood by whoever signed off on them.
Subpoenas are occasionally quashed by federal judges. It’s not unheard of. However, Schiltz’s use of words like “risible,” “overwhelming,” and “no doubt” is noteworthy. Courts typically use moderation when writing. A judge’s attempt at such directness indicates something more than a simple procedural disagreement. This was not close, and the court’s decision indicates that it was not close.
It remains to be seen if the administration explores alternative options. According to the DOJ’s statement, the issue may not be resolved. However, for the time being, the subpoenas are no longer in effect, and the justification for them—written in great detail by a judge who determined that they were indefensible—is part of the public record.

