Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz on Wednesday granted a pardon to Jai Vang, a Laotian national who was previously convicted in an armed robbery case and had recently been taken into custody by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
According to reports, Vang was convicted in Hennepin County in 1994 on charges related to aiding and abetting an armed robbery. He was 18 years old at the time of the offense.
After serving his prison sentence, Vang remained in the United States for decades.
Earlier this year, however, he was arrested by ICE during Operation Metro Surge, a federal immigration enforcement operation conducted in the Minneapolis area, according to the Department of Homeland Security.
After learning that Vang had been taken into federal custody and was facing possible deportation, Gov. Tim Walz (D) moved quickly to intervene.
When Vang sought clemency ahead of a scheduled June deportation, Walz convened a special session of Minnesota’s Clemency Review Commission to ensure the case was considered before federal authorities could complete the removal process.
The commission — which included Attorney General Keith Ellison and Minnesota Supreme Court Chief Justice Natalie Hudson — unanimously voted to grant Vang a pardon.
In explaining the decision, commission members pointed to Vang’s record since his release from prison, noting that he had not committed any additional crimes, had built a family, and had established a local painting business, Fox noted.
During the hearing, Walz incorrectly referred to Vang as a “citizen.”
He said Vang has become a “critical member of the community” since his release from prison.
“I can find no reason how Minnesota will be safer or better if Mr. Vang is deported to a country he has not been to since he was a child,” Walz said.
“I do not see how it would serve his family, nor the economic interest where we have a taxpaying citizen who is creating job growth and living a life free from any criminal activity,” Walz said.
Ellison, who participated by phone, said he had reviewed Vang’s case file and agreed with the commission members who supported granting clemency.
The pardon decision comes against the backdrop of Walz’s long-running clashes with federal immigration authorities.
During Operation Metro Surge, the governor sharply criticized the enforcement effort and drew national attention for comparing ICE agents to President Donald Trump’s “modern-day Gestapo.”
The remark sparked immediate backlash from federal officials, including then-Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons, who condemned the comparison as inflammatory and offensive.
Lyons implored Walz to tone down the rhetoric.
“If the governor doesn’t like the laws, he’s free to advocate that Congress change them, but he should refrain from putting ICE officers in danger by likening them to one of the most appalling groups in history,” he said, per Fox.
Walz also mouthed off after FBI agents conducted raids on fraudulent, mostly Somali-owned businesses, in Minneapolis last month.
After previously criticizing fraud investigations as “white supremacy,” Walz reversed course and tried to take credit for ‘rooting out’ corruption, which drew a rebuke from FBI Director Kash Patel.
In a thread on X, Walz, who ended a third bid for the governorship after the fraud scandal broke last fall, said he was putting criminals “on notice.” He added that the FBI was working alongside state officials.
“Today’s raids by state and federal law enforcement happened because our state agencies caught irregular behavior and reported it,” he claimed on X.
“That’s how the system is supposed to work, and our agencies will keep at it as long as there are fraudsters around to put behind bars,” he added.
That led Patel to respond: “Come again? This FBI and DOJ with our DHS partners drafted and executed every search warrant today.
“But go ahead and take credit for our work while we smoke out the fraud plaguing Minnesota under your governorship,” Patel added.
