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Unfortunately, numerous incidents have emerged involving ICE and border patrol agents being refused service at various establishments, including some Hilton Hotels in Minneapolis. This trend, as initially highlighted by RedState, appears to stem from claimed “public safety concerns.”
In another instance, independent journalist Cam Higby reported on a situation at a Minnesota Speedway gas station where Border Patrol Commander Greg Bovino was allegedly refused service by a man who identified himself as an attendant. Speedway has yet to confirm the man’s employment status. The video footage from the incident shows a heated environment with anti-ICE protesters, and the man was observed following Bovino with a cellphone camera both inside the store and at the gas pumps.
While hotels and gas stations are notable, the issue has also extended to hospitals. An incident in New York involved NYPD detectives visiting a Brooklyn hospital after one officer was injured while trying to capture a suspect. Reports suggest that even in such critical settings, service denial is becoming an alarming trend.
Hotels and gas stations are one thing. But hospitals, too? That’s a claim that has surfaced related to an incident in New York involving NYPD detectives who reportedly went to a Brooklyn hospital after one of them sustained an injury while trying to apprehend a suspect.