Former CNN Host Don Lemon Taken Into Custody After Intense Minnesota Church Protest
Former CNN anchor Don Lemon was taken into custody on Jan. 29 following his involvement in an AntiโICE protest that had unfolded nearly two weeks earlier at Cities Church in St. Paul. What started as a Jan. 18 demonstration inside a quiet worship service has now escalated into a national flashpoint โ the kind that exposes just how raw and unresolved Americaโs immigration battles really are.
A Quiet Service Disrupted
Cities Church wasnโt expecting a political eruption that Sunday morning. Parishioners were settling into prayer when a group of demonstrators entered the sanctuary, chanting against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and calling attention to deportations and family separations. According to the Associated Press, the protest was part of a coordinated action by immigrantโrights activists.
Lemon, who has been increasingly outspoken on immigration issues since leaving CNN, joined the demonstrators inside the church. AP News reported that โLemon was taken into custody after he and other demonstrators interrupted the service and declined to comply with officersโ instructions.โ
The protest ended with several people detained โ but Lemon was not among those initially taken into custody. That part came later.
Why Lemon Was There in the First Place
Lemon didnโt just show up for spectacle. He has been attending immigrationโrelated events for months, lending his voice to activists who argue that ICEโs enforcement tactics tear families apart. Organizers chose Cities Church specifically to force a moral conversation in a space they felt had been too quiet on the issue.
Witnesses said Lemon stood near the front of the sanctuary on Jan. 18, recording parts of the demonstration and joining the chants. When federal officers entered, the atmosphere shifted instantly โ from determined defiance to the kind of tension that makes your chest tighten.
The January 29 Arrest
Federal authorities took Lemon into custody on Jan. 29, more than a week after the protest. According to NBC News, Lemonโs attorney said the arrest stemmed directly from his participation in the Jan. 18 demonstration. NBC quoted the attorney saying, โThis was a peaceful demonstration, and Mr. Lemon was exercising his First Amendment rights. We expect this matter to be resolved swiftly.โ
Federal officials have not yet announced whether charges will be filed, but the arrest has already ignited debate about the limits of protest โ especially when it intersects with religious spaces.
A Public Reaction Split Down Familiar Lines
Online, the reaction has been predictably polarized. Supporters say Lemonโs arrest highlights the urgency of the immigration crisis and applaud him for stepping into the fray instead of staying behind a news desk. Critics argue that disrupting a church service โ even one nearly two weeks earlier โ crosses a line.
But beneath the noise, something deeper is happening: Lemon is no longer just a commentator. Heโs a participant, someone willing to stand in the middle of the conflict he used to cover from a studio.
A Country Still Wrestling With Itself

The AntiโICE protest at Cities Church wasnโt an isolated moment. Itโs part of a broader national reckoning over immigration enforcement, sanctuary spaces, and the moral weight of civil disobedience. Churches have long been symbolic battlegrounds for social justice movements, and this one was no different.
Lemonโs involvement adds a spotlight that activists say they desperately need. Whether that spotlight helps or complicates their movement remains to be seen.
What Comes Next
Lemon has not yet made a public statement, but his legal team insists he will fight any charges. Activist groups are already planning followโup demonstrations, and Cities Church has said it will review its security procedures.
One thing is certain: this story isnโt fading quietly. Not when Lemon โ a man who once delivered the news โ is now standing in the middle of it.
