February 12, 2026 — Trump administration news, Epstein files under scrutiny | CNN Politics

February 12, 2026 — Trump administration news, Epstein files under scrutiny

White House border czar Tom Homan holds a news conference at the Bishop Whipple Federal building on Thursday, Feb. 4, 2026 in Minneapolis.  (AP Photo/Scott McFetridge)
Homan announces end to immigration operation in Minnesota
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What we covered

DHS shutdown: A shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security is all but certain this weekend, after senators left town for a planned recess with no funding deal in place. Republican congressional leaders have blamed Democrats, saying the White House made reasonable concessions in negotiations over changes to ICE protocols.

• Minnesota surge over: Border czar Tom Homan said the monthslong immigration enforcement crackdown was coming to an end. Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey expressed “cautious relief” at the end of the operation, which sparked mass protests, thousands of arrests and two deaths.

• Heated hearing in DC: Top Minnesota officials denounced the crackdown at a Senate hearing, saying it has driven down business and left residents in fear. At one point, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison and Republican Sen. Ron Johnson had a heated exchange after Johnson accused Ellison of contributing to the deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretti.

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US heading towards 3rd shutdown in Trump's presidency

The Department of Homeland Security could be ensnared by a partial government shutdown if Congress does not fund the agency by the end of Friday. CNN’s Manu Raju reports.

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US heading towards third shutdown in Trump's presidency

The Department of Homeland Security could be ensnared by a partial government shutdown if Congress does not fund the agency by the end of Friday. CNN's Manu Raju reports.

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Frey says he feels "cautious relief" as immigration enforcement surge comes to an end

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey tonight expressed “cautious relief” at the announcement that the monthslong immigration enforcement crackdown in Minnesota is coming to an end.

Frey later added: “I don’t think it would be fair to simply do a victory lap and celebrate the exit of ICE before they actually leave, but again, we are optimistic.”

Frey also reflected positively on his meetings with White House border czar Tom Homan, characterizing them as “productive” and “collegial.” The democratic mayor, however, disputed Homan’s account of there being “some issues” with the operation, calling them “massive and extensive issues.”

Earlier today, Democratic Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said the crackdown did serious economic damage to the state and asked the federal government to “pay for what they broke.”

Asked by Collins if he agrees with the need for federal compensation, the Minneapolis mayor responded, “I do,” but added, “Now, let me be clear, we’re not victims here.”

Trump issues a blitz of pardons to former NFL players

US President Donald Trump makes an announcement at the White House on Thursday.

President Donald Trump issued pardons today to five former professional football players, the White House announced, as he continues to grant clemency at a rapid pace during his second term.

Johnson continued: “As football reminds us, excellence is built on grit, grace, and the courage to rise again. So is our nation.”

Trump’s latest pardons, granted days after the Super Bowl, underscore an emboldened president who has escalated his use of clemency, far outpacing his first term and even his most recent predecessors.

Klecko, once a defensive tackle for the New York Jets, was convicted on insurance fraud in 1993 and sentenced to three months in prison, according to the New York Times.

Newton, who played for the Dallas Cowboys, was sentenced to 30 months in prison in 2002 on federal drug trafficking charges. Cowboys owner Jerry Jones “personally (shared) the news” with Newton, Johnson said.

Lewis, who played for the Baltimore Ravens, was sentenced to four months in prison on drug-related charges in 2004, according to CNN-affiliate WBFF.

Henry, who played for the Denver Broncos, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to traffic cocaine, according to the Associated Press.

And Cannon, who passed away in 2018, spent nearly three years in prison for his role in a counterfeiting scheme in 1983, according to the New York Times.

DOJ moves to drop criminal charges against man shot in leg by federal agent

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Abby Phillip rolls the tape on DHS shifting accounts of three violent interactions
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The US Department of Justice filed a motion Thursday seeking to dismiss criminal charges against two Venezuelan men who officials claimed assaulted a federal agent who then shot one of them in the leg in Minneapolis last month, according to court documents.

The motion to dismiss criminal charges with prejudice, filed in the US District Court of Minnesota, cites “newly discovered evidence” described as “materially inconsistent with the allegations” in the affidavit.

Julio Sosa-Celis, who was shot in the leg, and his co-defendant Alfredo Alejandro Aljorna were charged with aiding and abetting, forcibly assaulting, resisting, opposing, impeding, intimidating and interfering with a federal law enforcement officer in connection with the January 14 incident.

Videos obtained by CNN from Sosa-Celis’ family members who frantically called 911 for help appeared to contradict at least some of ICE’s claims about events leading up to the shooting. One of them shows a video call made by Sosa-Celis’ partner and reviewed by CNN, in which she seems to say the driver of the car was not Sosa-Celis, but Aljorna.

Aljorna’s mother previously told CNN her son said he was the one being pursued on foot by ICE, and that Sosa-Celis was already inside the home when the agent shot him — not outside, where ICE said the agent fired the shot.

The Department of Homeland Security said it was Sosa-Celis who was driving a vehicle that crashed and who fled on foot before agents struggled with him on the ground.

DHS said Sosa-Celis resisted arrest and started to “violently assault” one of its officers while federal agents were conducting a targeted traffic stop. During the struggle, DHS said, two additional people came out of a nearby apartment and attacked the officer using a snow shovel and a broom handle. The agent, DHS said, then “fired a defensive shot,” which hit Sosa-Celis in the leg.

Frederick J. Goetz, Sosa-Celis’ attorney, told CNN he was “delighted” by the news, adding in a statement, “I commend the United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Minnesota for doing the right thing. It speaks to the continued professionalism and integrity of the lawyers in that office.”

CNN has reached out to DHS and DOJ, as well as an attorney for Aljorna, for comment on the motion.

CNN’s Diego Mendoza, Caroll Alvarado and Alaa Elassar contributed to this report.

Kathy Ruemmler, top Goldman Sachs lawyer, resigning amid Epstein fallout

Kathy Ruemmler, the chief legal officer at Goldman Sachs, said tonight she is resigning amid fallout from the Justice Department’s release of millions of pages of Jeffrey Epstein documents.

Her announcement comes as she has weathered numerous news stories in recent weeks examining her relationship with the disgraced financier.

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Epstein emails show close relationship with top Goldman Sachs lawyer

Newly released email exchanges add fresh details to the relationship between Kathy Ruemmler and Jeffrey Epstein. Ruemmler is a former Obama White House counsel and now one of the highest-paid lawyers in the country as the chief legal officer at Goldman Sachs. CNN's Andrew Kaczynski reports.


Update: After CNN's reporting on this story, Ruemmler said in a statement that she plans to resign from Goldman Sachs.

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Ruemmler and those around her have insisted she had a professional relationship with Epstein.

CNN has reached out to Goldman Sachs for comment.

Read more about Ruemmler’s resignation here.

Homan on Minnesota: "If we need to come back, we'll come back"

Tom Homan, White House border czar, speaks at a press conference at the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building on Thursday in Minneapolis.

White House border czar Tom Homan tonight reiterated that while the federal immigration surge is ending in Minnesota, other investigations will continue.

“This is ending the surge, but we’re not going away,” Homan told Fox News on Thursday. “Let me say this. Over 800 flights a day land in St. Paul, Minnesota. If we need to come back, we’ll come back.”

Earlier today, Homan announced the monthslong immigration enforcement crackdown in Minnesota would be coming to an end.

“I have proposed, and President Trump has concurred, that this surge operation conclude,” Homan said during a press conference earlier in the day.

Meanwhile, Rubio says he believes he will meet Zelensky at Munich Security Conference

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio speaks to reporters before boarding his plane on Thursday, en route to the Munich Security Conference.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said he believes he will meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the Munich Security Conference as the top US diplomat stressed the need to end the war in Ukraine.

Zelensky has said he would attend the high-level gathering if possible, depending on the security situation in Ukraine.

Asked about Russia’s continued bombardment against Ukraine, Rubio called it “terrible.”

“It’s a war. That’s why we want the war to end. People are suffering. It’s the coldest time of year. It’s unimaginable, the suffering. That’s the problem with wars. That’s why wars are bad, and that’s why we worked so hard for over a year now to try to bring this one to an end,” he said.

Rubio said he was sure “someone will raise” the issue of Greenland at the conference, but echoed that the administration is working on it and feels good about it.

Rubio, who gives a speech at the conference on Saturday, says he believes his message will be “well-received.”

Last year, Vice President JD Vance raised eyebrows and rankled allies in his speech lambasting European politicians, claiming they are suppressing free speech, losing control of immigration and refusing to work with hard-right parties in government.

“I think they want honesty. They want to know where we’re going, where we’d like to go, where we’d like to go with them. So that’s our hope,” Rubio said, noting the conference is happening “at a defining moment.”

“The old world is gone, frankly, the world I grew up in, and we live in a new era in geopolitics, and it’s going to require all of us to sort of re-examine what that looks like and what our role is going to be,” he said.

Rubio noted “Europe is important to us.”

“We’re deeply tied to Europe, and our futures have always been linked and will continue to be. We just got to talk about what that future looks like,” he said.

Mayors Frey and Mamdani met to discuss federal immigration operations

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, left, and New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey and New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani met today to discuss the federal government’s immigration enforcement operations in cities nationwide.

Mamdani and Frey are “building a coalition of mayors ready to lead,” the statement added.

Big picture: The meeting came on the same day that President Donald Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, announced a monthslong immigration enforcement crackdown in Minnesota is coming to an end.

The surge led to mass protests, thousands of arrests and the deaths of two US citizens, and is now at the center of negotiations over the impending Department of Homeland Security shutdown.

Noem on DHS shutdown: “This is a dangerous situation”

Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem attends a press conference in Otay Mesa, San Diego, California, on Thursday.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said today that shutting down her department would leave the country vulnerable to terrorist attacks and other threats.

“This is a dangerous situation that we’re in,” Noem said during a news briefing in California, “that the Democrat Party has chosen to shut down the department that was created after 9/11.”

“This department was created recognizing that we are vulnerable to terrorist attacks, and that (the) American homeland needs to be funded and focused on keeping us safe within our own borders,” she added.

Noem said that, while Democrats have centered funding negotiations on desired reforms to immigration enforcement operations, that would count for a very small portion of the agency’s impacted funding.

She also noted that the Coast Guard, which is helping keep key shipping lanes open with icebreaking operations, would be impacted.

Some context: Lawmakers left Washington today for a scheduled recess without a deal to keep the department open, and funding is set to expire tomorrow night.

GOP leaders sent their members home after the two parties made no concrete progress toward a deal that Democrats are demanding must rein in US Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations.

CNN broke down what will be impacted by a DHS shutdown here.

From Iran talks to Venezuela: Today’s top foreign affairs headlines

As we follow the Department of Homeland Security funding fight and other domestic policy news, we’re also keeping a close eye on developments abroad, including the latest on US-Iran talks and the interim government in Venezuela.

Middle East diplomacy:

  • Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said US-Iran negotiations should expand beyond the nuclear issue to include Tehran’s ballistic missile program and regional proxy networks, following yesterday’s talks in Washington with President Donald Trump.
  • Addressing his meeting at the White House with Netanyahu, Trump said today that the two leaders did not discuss ending talks with Iran, and that the decision is ultimately his to make. “I’ll talk to them as long as I like, and we’ll see if we can get a deal with them,” Trump said.
  • The US president came to Netanyahu’s defense when asked about the prime minister’s ongoing corruption trial, calling Israel’s president “disgraceful” for not granting Netanyahu a pardon.
  • Trump plans to provide details about a stabilization force and multibillion-dollar reconstruction plan in Gaza during the inaugural meeting of his Board of Peace, according to a White House official, who said at least 20 countries are expected to attend the gathering next Thursday.

Venezuela:

  • Acting Venezuelan President Delcy Rodríguez told NBC News that she has been invited to visit the US. She did not provide a specific date for the invite. Rodríguez also insisted that ousted leader Nicolás Maduro remains the legitimate head of the South American country.
  • Trump today described relations between the US and Venezuela as “extraordinary” — pointing to developments in Venezuela’s critical oil industry one day after Energy Secretary Chris Wright visited Caracas.
  • Wright has defended the US’ involvement in the Venezuelan oil sector, despite the country’s unclear roadmap toward democracy. The Trump administration couldn’t wait until elections were held in the country to start its work there, because the US believes allowing oil income to flow in Venezuela is the best way to improve conditions for ordinary citizens, Wright told CNN’s Boris Sanchez today. The energy secretary said growing US investment gives Washington “leverage” to steer reforms there.

Upcoming summit:

  • Trump will host a group of Latin American and Caribbean leaders in Miami on March 7 for a high-profile summit, a White House official told CNN.

This post has been updated to include news about the Board of Peace and additional comments from Wright.

CNN’s Kevin Liptak, Alejandra Jaramillo, Dana Karni, Mohammed Tawfeeq, Jennifer Hansler, Samantha Waldenberg, Gonzalo Zegarra and Michael Rios contributed to this report.

Democrats expected to make counterproposal on DHS funding over the weekend, Thune says

Senate Majority Leader John Thune speaks with reporters on Thursday.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune indicated that future Department of Homeland Security funding negotiations largely depend on a counterproposal he expects Democrats to offer over the weekend.

Pressed on whether there is an effort to make these negotiations happen face-to-face between Democrats and the White House, or at least over the phone, rather than simply trading papers, Thune indicated there has been some outreach beyond trading proposals.

“There have been and there, there are conversations that are ongoing. But I think that obviously the Democrats want it all reduced to paper, because they’ve said that, ‘We’re not interested in anything that isn’t legislative language.’”

Thune argued that the White House is “giving more and more ground on some of these key issues” that Democrats are demanding be addressed, though he would not get into the specifics of the White House’s latest proposal.

Thune said he was “encouraged” that Democrats are putting together another offer.

These are the agencies that fall under DHS, as department faces funding lapse

Transportation Security Administration agents screen travelers at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia, on January 26.

The Department of Homeland Security could be ensnared by a partial government shutdown if Congress does not fund the agency by end-of-day tomorrow.

A large number of agencies fall under the Department of Homeland Security, including:

  • US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)
  • US Coast Guard (USCG)
  • US Customs and Border Protection (CBP)
  • Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA)
  • Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
  • US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
  • Transportation Security Agency (TSA)
  • US Secret Service (USSS)

But overall, more than 90% of DHS’ 272,000 employees would continue working during a lapse, according to the agency’s September shutdown plan covering the first five days of an impasse. More than 93% of ICE and CBP workers would remain on the job.

Only about 44,500 staffers would continue to be paid through other appropriations, according to the shutdown plan. However, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said last fall that 70,000 law enforcement personnel — including in CBP, ICE and other divisions — would receive their paychecks.

Trump says he has not disciplined a staffer for sharing racist video depicting Obamas as apes

President Donald Trump told reporters Thursday that he has not disciplined a staffer for sharing on social media the since-deleted racist video depicting former President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama as apes in a jungle.

President Trump And EPA Administrator Zeldin Make An Announcement From The White House
Trump says no staffer was fired for sharing racist video of Obamas

President Trump says he did not fire any staffer over a racist video of the Obamas that was posted on his Truth social account.

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The president has refused to apologize for posting and then deleting the racist video. Instead, Trump has insisted that he hadn’t seen the final frames containing the offensive content and blamed a staffer for the mistake.

The video was posted late last week and remained online for nearly 12 hours before the White House took it down amid bipartisan outrage, including from close Trump allies.

Johnson blames Democrats for imminent DHS shutdown

House Speaker Mike Johnson on Thursday.

Speaker Mike Johnson called the White House proposal in the negotiations for Department of Homeland Security funding “eminently reasonable” and criticized some Democrats for wanting “to impose pain.”

“I saw the last proposal sent over from the White House. It is eminently reasonable and gives on us on some very meaningful provisions that were part of the discussions,” he told CNN, adding “It seems to me, the appearance here is that some Democrats, House and Senate, want a government shutdown. They want to impose more pain on the American people. For what? I have no idea.”

Johnson maintained his hardline stance against requiring judicial warrants, saying it would “shut down the deportation of virtually all illegal immigrants.”

“You can’t do that. You can’t have an Immigration and Customs Enforcement program if you have to get a judicial warrant every time you go to arrest someone. That’s not how it works. It’s not how it can work. It’s not workable.”

Trump says he hasn't spoken with Lutnick about the Commerce secretary's newly revealed Epstein visits

Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick testifies before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies on Capitol Hill on February 10.

President Donald Trump said Thursday that he hasn’t yet spoken with Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick about the revelations that the Cabinet official visited Jeffrey Epstein’s private island — and hadn’t been aware of the extent of the contact between Lutnick and the convicted sex offender.

“I wasn’t aware of it,” Trump said during an event at the White House. “I actually haven’t spoken about it.”

Lutnick acknowledged this week that he and his family visited Epstein, the disgraced financier and sex offender, for lunch on his island in 2012. Documents released by the Justice Department had indicated hat Lutnick had more contact with Epstein than he’d previously acknowledged.

But Trump on Thursday offered little indication he was troubled by the new information.

“From what I hear, he was there with his wife and children, and I guess in some cases some people were,” Trump said. “I wasn’t. I was never there.”

DHS shutdown all but certain after Senate Democrats block funding bill

Democratic senators voted to block a funding bill for the Department of Homeland Security ahead of Friday night’s funding deadline, making a shutdown of the agency that handles FEMA, TSA and the Coast Guard all but certain.

The vote was 52 to 47. It needed 60 to advance.

Senators are leaving town after the vote for a pre-planned week-long recess, with GOP Leader John Thune saying he’ll call them back to Washington if there is a deal between Democrats and the White House on changes to federal immigration enforcement tactics.

Democrats later blocked a two-week funding extension. GOP Sen. Katie Britt, the lead GOP Senate negotiator, offered the stopgap bill on the floor, but Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy objected, just after Senate Democrats voted to block the earlier DHS funding package.

This post has been updated to note that Democrats blocked the two-week extension.

Senators leaving town now with DHS set to shut down

After each casts a final vote of the week, senators are leaving town for their Presidents Day recess.

The funding vote – which is not expected to pass – is not yet final, but the Department of Homeland Security is on track to shut down on Saturday after funding lapses Friday at midnight.

Both chambers could return next week to cast votes if a deal is reached.

ICE has opened more than 3 dozen investigations into excessive use of force over past year

Todd Lyons, acting director ICE, attends a Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee hearing on Thursday.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement has opened more than three dozen internal investigations into allegations of excessive use of force by its agents from January 2025 to January 2026, the agency’s acting director, Todd Lyons, said during a hearing today.

“We look at every incidence, no matter what it is,” he said in front of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.

Lyons said that 18 of those investigations have been closed, 19 remain pending and one has been “referred for further action.” He did not specify which incident has been referred for further action.

“We do hold our individuals accountable,” he said.

Lyons has faced tough questioning from senators over the tactics of his agents during their operations in Minnesota and other states across the country, especially the killing of Renee Good by an ICE agent in Minneapolis last month.

Meanwhile, Trump praises Bondi after heated House hearing on Epstein files

President Donald Trump showered Attorney General Pam Bondi with praise, after she sparred with House Judiciary members yesterday over the Justice Department’s release of its Jeffrey Epstein files.

Bondi had a notable exchange during the hearing with Rep. Tom Massie, a Trump foe and one of the Republicans who led the charge for the full release of Epstein files.

Trump said Massie “made a total fool of himself yesterday, fighting aimlessly against a hopeless agenda of Hate and Stupidity.”

There was no mention of the victims of Epstein’s crimes in Trump’s lengthy post, some of whom were seated in the hearing room. Bondi did not acknowledge them during the hearing, either.

Victims of Epstein’s crimes have called for transparency for years across several administrations. As CNN reported, they have also criticized the Trump administration for its rollout of the files, including releasing sensitive information regarding victims and over-redacting certain names.

Watch key moments from Bondi’s hearing below:

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Takeaways from Pam Bondi's fiery testimony on Capitol Hill

Attorney General Pam Bondi’s testimony in front of the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday was some of the tensest and most combative testimony we’ve seen to date from a Trump Cabinet official. CNN's Paula Reid breaks down some of the critical moments.

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