Watch As A Left-Wing Mob Storms A Church During Sunday Mass In St. Paul Led By Don Lemon
21 days ago
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A left-wing mob didn’t just protest in St. Paul on Sunday — they invaded a church service, screaming and disrupting worship as they targeted Immigration and Customs Enforcement over a controversial killing that’s set Minnesota on fire.
The chaos unfolded inside Cities Church, where a crowd of anti-ICE activists burst through the doors mid-service, pounding on pews and chanting “ICE out” while accusing a church leader of cozying up to federal enforcement. Protesters claimed the pastor had ties to the very agency responsible for the controversial tactics that have rocked the Twin Cities — a claim church members angrily reject.
Much of the rage stemmed from the killing of 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good, a Minneapolis mother fatally shot by an ICE agent earlier this month during an intense immigration enforcement operation that has drawn national attention and local fury.
“This will not stand,” activist Nekima Levy-Armstrong yelled into a livestream mic as protesters pressed their case in the sanctuary. “They cannot pretend to be a house of God while harboring someone who is commanding ICE agents to terrorize our communities.”
The disruption was ugly. Sunday services screeched to a halt, and many worshippers walked out in disgust after being harassed and yelled at by the demonstrators.
“These people came into our house and interrupted our worship,” one churchgoer fumed. “I feel violated. I feel interrupted. I feel angry.”
Independent journalist Don Lemon, who followed the marchers as they stormed the church, captured heated exchanges and blunt confrontations between protesters and parishioners.
Cities Church pastors said they tried to engage peacefully, but organizers refused calm dialogue, choosing instead to turn a Sunday sermon into a political battlefield.
The protest comes amid rising tensions after the ICE shooting of Good — part of a larger federal operation that has drawn fierce backlash from locals and leaders alike. Good’s death has ignited demonstrations, intensified scrutiny of immigration enforcement, and fueled a bitter public debate over use of force by federal agents.
As protests spread, the clash between federal power and local anger shows no signs of dying down — and no sanctuary seems safe.
