Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said Wednesday that he was suspending his office’s Conviction Review Unit, which examined potential wrongful convictions, after the Trump administration declined to renew federal grant funding.
“Following the Trump Administration’s refusal to renew federal grant funding that supported the program, my Office is suspending our Conviction Review Unit,” Ellison said in a statement.
“Current budget constraints do not allow the program’s costs to be absorbed without compromising other core responsibilities.”
The unit was created in 2020 and began accepting applications in 2021. Ellison said it received a $300,000 grant for its first two years to fund an attorney’s work, and that the grant was renewed for another two years at $500,000.
Trump has sought to freeze some federal funding to Minnesota and other Democratic-led states, as well as to universities, colleges, and school districts, over issues including transgender policies, climate initiatives, pro-Palestinian protests against U.S. ally Israel’s assault on Gaza, and diversity initiatives.
Trump has also expanded immigration enforcement in Minnesota. He said the effort was intended to improve domestic security and curb illegal immigration.
Rights groups criticized the crackdown, saying it violated free speech and due process rights and raised concerns about racial profiling, particularly among ethnic minorities.
Large protests followed an earlier federal immigration operation in Minnesota in which federal agents shot and killed two U.S. citizens.