A federal judge on Saturday denied Minnesota's request to block the Trump administration's surge of 3,000 federal immigration agents in Minneapolis. District Court Judge Katherine Menendez said the operation "has had, and will likely continue to have, profound and even heartbreaking, consequences on the State of Minnesota." However, she ruled that state officials failed to prove the deployment was illegal. Thousands protested across the US on Friday and gathered again in Minneapolis on Saturday following the shooting deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal immigration officers. The US Justice Department opened a civil rights investigation into Pretti's death. Good was killed on January 7, making Pretti the second fatality since the agents arrived. Judge Menendez acknowledged evidence that ICE and CBP agents engaged in racial profiling and excessive force but said the state did not prove when lawful enforcement crosses into unlawful action. Minnesota officials argued the deployment violated state sovereignty. Protesters called for a "National Shutdown" on January 30 to "stop funding ICE," urging no work, school, or shopping. Demonstrators formed "SOS" on a frozen lake in Minneapolis and carried a large copy of the US Constitution's preamble. Bruce Springsteen honored the victims with his song "Streets of Minneapolis." Border tsar Tom Homan said federal forces might reduce their presence if local officials cooperate, while President Trump said, "We will keep our country safe." The Department of Homeland Security claims it targets "the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens," but critics say many non-criminal migrants and US citizens are caught in the sweep. Minnesota leaders, including Governor Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, have called for federal agents to leave the state amid ongoing public outcry.