Feds Drop Hammer After TPUSA Reporter Beaten At National F*ck ICE Day Protest

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Two individuals have been indicted on federal charges stemming from a violent attack on TPUSA reporter Savanah Hernandez outside a federal immigration facility in Minneapolis.

According to Gateway Pundit, Hernandez was assaulted earlier this month while covering an anti-ICE demonstration at the Whipple ICE facility, where left-wing activists had gathered for what they branded National F*ck ICE Day. The event was part of a coordinated series of protests in major cities, including Chicago, Los Angeles, and Minneapolis, reflecting the radical lefts ongoing campaign to delegitimize federal immigration enforcement.

Organizers boasted that more than 600 sex toys were shipped from Minneapolis to Los Angeles for the demonstrations, underscoring the vulgar and unserious tone that often characterizes these protests. At the Whipple facility, anti-ICE activists lined the perimeter fence with these explicit items and waved profane signs reading, Get the F*ck Out ICE, ICE Has no Place Here, F*ck ICE and Dementia Malignant Narcissist President.

Hernandez was broadcasting live from a public street outside the Whipple building when, witnesses say, a leftist protester began punching her and knocked her to the ground. Others eventually intervened to break up the attack, but the incident highlighted the growing physical hostility directed at conservative journalists who dare to report from far-left demonstrations.

I am extremely grateful to the DOJ and FBI for how swiftly they handled this case. I have been assaulted by violent left wing activists multiple times and there has never been a response, so to see the FBI and the justice system utilized to fight back against left wing violence is extremely appreciated, Hernandez said in a statement. Reflecting on the assault, she added, All of this because I was standing outside on a public street filming a protest in the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, a stark reminder that basic press freedom and public order are increasingly under threat from radical activists who reject both law enforcement and civil discourse.