
ICE at Private Businesses: Public Areas Open, Private Rooms Require Warrants
The CBS Minnesota piece explains that ICE can conduct enforcement in the public areas of private businesses (like stores and parking lots) without permission, but entering private spaces (e.g., back rooms labeled “employees only”) typically requires permission or a judicial warrant. An administrative warrant from DHS/ICE is weaker and may not be enforceable for private spaces. Managers can deny entry to private areas, though ICE can stay in public areas to investigate, and staff can ask them to leave. If actions seem unlawful, they can be challenged in court. The article notes a January policy change that removed protections for sensitive locations.

