DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

What We Know About the ICE Shooting in Maine

July 14, 2026
in News
What We Know About the ICE Shooting in Maine

An Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot and killed a man in a vehicle on Monday morning in Biddeford, Maine. It was the second fatal episode in a week, as the Trump administration continues its immigration crackdown, and the latest in a string of encounters between agents and people in cars.

The man was identified as Joan Sebastian Guerrero, according to Matthew Felling, a spokesman for Senator Angus King of Maine.

The Homeland Security Department said in a statement on Monday that ICE agents had been monitoring what they believed to be the residence of someone who was in the country illegally and for whom they had a removal order.

It was unclear from the department’s statement whether Mr. Guerrero was the person agents had been seeking.

Video recorded early on Monday and posted to social media showed agents surrounding a body next to a car with bullet holes in the windshield.

“I heard agony,” said Mary Hayes, a local resident, who said she saw a screaming woman on her knees, next to a young girl. “I heard a howl that came from your soul, that your whole life had just changed and it was never going to be the same.”

Here’s what we know:

Witnesses heard gunfire early Monday morning.

On Monday morning, agents tried to stop a vehicle that had departed from the residence they were monitoring, D.H.S. said in its statement, which came nearly 12 hours after the shooting.

“The vehicle attempted to flee the scene and, fearing for public safety, an officer discharged his weapon,” the statement continued. The driver was struck and died from his injuries.

In a separate communication received by some members of Congress, the department used more pointed language, saying the driver had “weaponized his vehicle toward law enforcement.”

As of Monday evening, no video evidence confirming the government’s version of events had emerged.

People who live nearby reported hearing gunfire at an intersection at around 7:15 a.m. Several reported seeing a body on the ground next to a car.

Biddeford’s congresswoman, Chellie Pingree, a Democrat, said in a phone interview on Monday that “we have gotten reports that ICE officers shot through a car window, and the individual in the car was killed.”

Immigration officials have said little about the victim.

Though Mr. King’s office named Mr. Guerrero as the victim, the D.H.S. statement did not.

Three advocacy groups released information about the victim in the shooting but did not name Mr. Guerrero. In a joint statement, the Maine Immigrants’ Rights Coalition and Presente! Maine, identified him as a 26-year-old Colombian man. A third group said he had a partner and a young child. The source of the advocates’ information was unclear, and could not be immediately confirmed with the authorities.

The embassy of Colombia said in a statement on Monday that it was assisting the family of a Colombian national who had died in Biddeford. The embassy said it was also requesting information from D.H.S. “regarding the circumstances surrounding this lamentable death.”

Mr. King, an independent, said on Monday that he had spoken with Markwayne Mullin, the homeland security secretary. Mr. King said that Mr. Mullin had told him that the man had been the target of an arrest warrant “based upon his immigration status.”

But Mr. Felling, the senator’s spokesman, said later that Mr. Mullin called the senator again and told him the driver had not been the target of any warrant. “He said they were looking for someone, essentially, and the person they shot was not the person they were looking for,” Mr. Felling said.

Officials are demanding a full investigation.

Gov. Janet Mills, a Democrat, said in a statement that the State Police and other agencies were consulting with federal officials to “determine the facts of what occurred this morning.”

Senator Susan Collins, a Republican, called for a “full and impartial investigation.”

“We will get answers, but we do not have them yet,” said Liam LaFountain, the mayor of Biddeford, who also pushed for an investigation.

This is the second death in a week involving an ICE agent firing into a vehicle.

Amid a national surge in immigration enforcement, a federal agent last week shot and killed another individual in a vehicle: Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, a Mexican man who died after a traffic stop in Houston.

Mr. Salgado Araujo, a construction worker and father of three who had lived in the country for more than 30 years without legal status, was not the initial target of the officers who pursued his vehicle, according to immigration officials.

The Houston and Maine killings add to a growing list of encounters between immigration agents and people in vehicles.

About 20 people have been shot at in their cars, some of them fatally. Federal officials have in several cases claimed that the agents’ actions were justified because their lives had been endangered by “weaponized” vehicles. Witnesses of the Houston shooting said that Mr. Salgado Araujo had not used his vehicle as a weapon.

As in the shooting of Mr. Salgado Araujo, it appeared that federal agents were not wearing body cameras on Monday, Mr. King said. So “we have no video evidence of what occurred in this case,” he added.

Immigration arrests are on the rise nationwide.

Daily arrests of immigrants in the United States doubled in the last week of June and have continued to increase, signaling a reinvigoration of the president’s crackdown after a spring slowdown.

Immigrants make up about 5 percent of Maine’s population and have helped prop up the state’s economy, hampered by its aging population. Over the years, Maine has welcomed waves of refugees fleeing conflict in the Middle East and several African countries.

In January, ICE detained hundreds of immigrants in the state during an enforcement surge the agency called “Operation Catch of the Day” — a reference to Maine’s commercial seafood industry.

Now, locals say agents have returned, making frequent appearances in Biddeford in recent months. Biddeford, a working-class city of roughly 22,000, contains a growing community of Latin American immigrants.

Talla Fall, who is originally from Senegal, lives near where the shooting took place on Monday. ICE agents have been in the neighborhood “every day, every week,” he said.

Reporting was contributed by Jacey Fortin, Heather Beasley Doyle, Miriam Jordan, Hamed Aleaziz, Christina Morales, Aric Toler, Allison McCann, Soumya Karlamangla and Murray Carpenter.

The post What We Know About the ICE Shooting in Maine appeared first on New York Times.

Disturbing pattern revealed as judge blisters Trump DOJ’s ‘slush fund’: analyst
News

Disturbing pattern revealed as judge blisters Trump DOJ’s ‘slush fund’: analyst

by Raw Story
July 14, 2026

A judge had a blistering response Monday for President Donald Trump‘s Department of Justice “slush fund,” which a former Florida ...

Read more
News

Norway’s Erling Haaland brought a $750 taxidermy raccoon home from the World Cup

July 14, 2026
News

Trump Says Fighting With Iran Has Resumed as He Orders Blockade and Tolls

July 14, 2026
News

FBI offers $15K reward for tips after newborn found dead in Electric Forest music festival porta-potty

July 14, 2026
News

Jon Stewart Skewers Aging Congress After Lindsey Graham’s Death, Mitch McConnell’s Hospitalization: ‘This Is Not Right’

July 14, 2026
Arson investigation underway after beloved family-owned Mexican market burns in Sun Valley

Arson investigation underway after beloved family-owned Mexican market burns in Sun Valley

July 14, 2026
Agitation in Dementia Can Be Helped by Medical Cannabis, Study Suggests

Agitation in Dementia Can Be Helped by Medical Cannabis, Study Suggests

July 14, 2026
Theo Burrell, star of ‘Antiques Roadshow’ and a cancer research advocate, dies at 39

Theo Burrell, star of ‘Antiques Roadshow’ and a cancer research advocate, dies at 39

July 14, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026