Another Person Is Dead. ICE Was There
Another death. Another disputed story. Another demand for the truth
By Dr. John Petrone
Another person is dead.
Another American community has awakened to gunfire, flashing lights, federal agents, blocked streets, frightened families, and questions that the government may already be preparing not to answer.
This time, it happened in Biddeford, Maine.
At approximately 7:20 Monday morning, witnesses reported seeing federal immigration agents surrounding a white sedan at an intersection. Voices were raised. Weapons were drawn. At least four gunshots shattered the morning.
When it was over, a person was dead.
ICE was involved.
And almost immediately, the machinery of uncertainty began grinding into motion.
Who was the person?
Why were federal immigration agents surrounding the vehicle?
Who fired?
Were the agents wearing body cameras?
Was the person ICE was confronting actually the person they were looking for?
Was the vehicle moving toward an agent?
Was there an immediate threat?
Was deadly force truly necessary?
The public does not yet know.
But we know enough to demand answers.
Because this was not an isolated event.
It happened only six days after an ICE agent shot and killed Lorenzo Salgado Araujo during a traffic stop in Houston.
One week.
Two communities.
Two vehicles.
Two fatal encounters involving immigration enforcement.
And once again, the country is being asked to trust the very agency whose agents were involved in the killing.
That is not accountability.
That is institutional self-protection.
A Morning of Gunfire in Maine
Biddeford is not a war zone.
It is a small coastal city built by generations of working people, including immigrants who came seeking safety, employment, and a chance to build a better life.
But on Monday morning, federal immigration enforcement brought the atmosphere of a military operation into one of its neighborhoods.
Witnesses saw agents in green ICE vests surrounding a vehicle.
One witness said the driver accelerated toward an agent.
Other details remain uncertain.
Videos circulated online.
Protesters gathered.
State police, the Maine attorney general’s office, the chief medical examiner, and federal authorities began investigating.
The governor urged patience while the facts were gathered.
Patience is appropriate.
Silence is not.
No responsible person should declare a final verdict before the evidence is examined. But no responsible citizen should accept an official press release as a substitute for that evidence either.
The public deserves every available recording.
Every body-camera video.
Every dashboard-camera video.
Every radio transmission.
Every photograph.
Every witness statement.
Every operational order that brought ICE agents to that intersection.
We should not be asked to choose between blind condemnation and blind obedience.
We should demand the truth.
Six Days Earlier in Houston
The urgency is magnified by what happened in Houston on July 7.
Lorenzo Salgado Araujo was a 52-year-old construction worker and father who had lived in the United States for more than three decades.
He was driving workers to a job site when federal agents in unmarked vehicles attempted to stop his van.
ICE claimed Salgado rammed a law-enforcement vehicle and tried to run over an agent, leaving the agent no choice but to fire.
That was the government’s version.
But the men who were inside the van tell a different story.
They say no agent was standing in the van’s path.
They say Salgado did not weaponize the vehicle.
His brother says the van had already stopped when the shots were fired.
And in a detail that should horrify every American, Salgado was not even the target of the immigration operation.
Authorities reportedly stopped him because someone inside the van merely resembled the person they were seeking.
Read that again.
A man was pursued by unidentified agents in unmarked vehicles, shot to death, and he was not even the person they were looking for.
The witnesses who survived were then taken into immigration custody.
No publicly released body-camera footage has settled the dispute.
No publicly presented evidence has conclusively substantiated the government’s account.
A family buried a father.
ICE detained the witnesses.
And the agency expected America to accept its explanation before the evidence could speak.
That is precisely why the Biddeford investigation cannot be controlled by the same federal apparatus whose conduct is under examination.
The Government Cannot Investigate Itself
When an immigration agent uses deadly force, the Department of Homeland Security cannot be permitted to become investigator, witness, evidence custodian, public-relations office, judge, and jury.
That is not independent oversight.
That is a closed loop designed to protect the institution.
A credible investigation requires evidence to be preserved immediately and shared with state investigators, prosecutors, Congress, defense attorneys, and the victim’s family.
Agents must be identified.
Witnesses must be protected, not intimidated, detained, deported, or pressured into silence.
Video must be released as quickly as legally possible.
Officials must explain why deadly force was used and what alternatives were available.
And the investigation must follow the evidence wherever it leads, even when that evidence contradicts the first official statement.
Especially when it contradicts the first official statement.
We have seen too many cases in which government officials rush before cameras, portray the dead as dangerous, and announce justification before investigators have finished measuring the scene.
The accusation becomes the headline.
The dead person cannot answer.
The agency’s language spreads across television and social media.
By the time video or eyewitness testimony challenges the story, millions of people have already absorbed the government’s preferred narrative.
That is not transparency.
It is narrative warfare.
The Pattern
The Biddeford shooting cannot be separated from the larger transformation of immigration enforcement under Donald Trump.
ICE arrested approximately 10,000 people during a single five-day period at the end of June.
Masked agents have appeared in neighborhoods, workplaces, courthouses, parking lots, and outside immigration appointments.
Unmarked vehicles have become tools of enforcement.
Families have watched people pulled from cars.
Workers have fled rooftops.
Citizens have struggled to determine whether the armed, masked people confronting them are legitimate federal officers or criminals impersonating them.
Protesters have faced chemical agents, projectiles, and other crowd-control weapons.
A recent open-source investigation documented hundreds of alleged instances in which law-enforcement agencies misused crowd-control weapons during immigration-related protests, resulting in more than 200 reported injuries across 16 cities.
This is no longer simply an immigration-policy dispute.
It is a crisis of governmental power.
It is what happens when a president spends years describing immigrants as invaders, criminals, animals, poison, and enemies.
It is what happens when cruelty becomes political theater.
It is what happens when agents are rewarded for arrest totals instead of judged by constitutional restraint.
It is what happens when military-style operations replace ordinary law enforcement.
It is what happens when masks replace identification, unmarked vehicles replace marked patrol cars, secrecy replaces transparency, and fear replaces public trust.
And it is what happens when an administration decides that some lives deserve fewer protections because of where those people were born.
The badge does not erase the Constitution.
A deportation agenda does not create a license to kill.
A civil immigration violation is not a death sentence.
Running from unidentified armed men is not proof of guilt.
Driving away is not automatically attempted murder.
Looking like someone else is not probable cause for execution.
And being undocumented does not make a human life disposable.
This Is Trump’s America
Donald Trump wanted immigration enforcement to become a spectacle.
He wanted dramatic raids.
He wanted frightened families.
He wanted viral images of shackles, armored agents, aircraft, detention compounds, and people forced onto buses.
He wanted America to see power being exercised without apology.
Now we are seeing the inevitable consequences.
When a president demonizes an entire population, agents begin to view every encounter through the lens of suspicion.
When an administration celebrates aggression, restraint begins to look like weakness.
When oversight disappears, force becomes easier to use.
When Congress refuses to investigate, abuses multiply.
And when every death is justified before the evidence is released, the next trigger becomes easier to pull.
This administration wants us to treat each killing as a separate event.
A misunderstanding in Minneapolis.
A dangerous driver in Houston.
A chaotic confrontation in Maine.
An unfortunate accident somewhere else.
Never a system.
Never a policy.
Never a consequence of presidential rhetoric.
Never the predictable result of unleashing a heavily armed federal agency while stripping away transparency and meaningful accountability.
But the pattern is the story.
The fear is the policy.
The violence is the warning.
What Accountability Requires
The Biddeford investigation must be independent, transparent, and immediate.
All available video must be preserved and released.
The identity and agency of every officer who discharged a weapon must be disclosed.
The deceased person must be publicly identified once the family has been notified.
The operational purpose of the ICE action must be explained.
Investigators must determine whether the agents were clearly identifiable, whether they issued understandable commands, whether they attempted de-escalation, and whether deadly force was proportionate to the threat they faced.
Congress must demand a complete accounting of every shooting involving ICE, Customs and Border Protection, and other federal immigration personnel since January 20, 2025.
That accounting must include:
• The name of every person shot or killed
• The citizenship and immigration status of each person
• Whether the individual was the intended target
• Whether agents wore body cameras
• Whether video exists
• Whether state investigators received immediate access to the scene and evidence
• Whether witnesses were detained or deported
• Whether disciplinary or criminal action followed
Agents involved in deadly-force incidents must not be allowed to hide indefinitely behind agency anonymity.
Families must not be forced to learn the truth through leaked videos.
Witnesses must not disappear into detention centers.
And no agency should be permitted to withhold evidence merely because that evidence might embarrass the administration.
Public servants work for the public.
The evidence belongs to the people.
How We Fight Back
We refuse to let another death vanish beneath the next news cycle.
We demand that Maine’s elected officials insist upon an investigation independent of ICE and the Department of Homeland Security.
We demand that Congress subpoena the records, video, communications, training materials, and use-of-force reports connected to these shootings.
We demand mandatory body cameras for every federal immigration agent conducting field operations.
We demand visible names, badge numbers, and agency identification.
We demand an end to masked enforcement operations by unidentified federal personnel.
We demand protection for witnesses, regardless of immigration status.
We demand prosecution when the evidence supports it.
We demand that lawmakers stop funding an agency whose expansion has dramatically outpaced its accountability.
And we demand that Democratic leaders stop responding to state violence with carefully worded expressions of concern.
Concern is not oversight.
A statement is not a subpoena.
A press conference is not accountability.
A promise to monitor the situation will not protect the next person surrounded by masked agents in an unmarked vehicle.
Use the power voters gave you.
Hold hearings.
Issue subpoenas.
Block funding.
Force disclosure.
Write laws with consequences.
The Constitution does not defend itself.
A Country Must Decide Who It Is
We do not yet know every fact about what happened in Biddeford.
That is precisely the point.
A person is dead, and the government owes the public the entire truth.
Not a slogan.
Not a carefully edited press release.
Not an accusation against someone who can no longer answer.
Evidence.
Transparency.
Accountability.
Justice.
Those demands are not anti-police.
They are pro-democracy.
They protect responsible officers as well as the public.
They distinguish constitutional law enforcement from political intimidation.
They are the minimum obligations of a government that claims authority to carry weapons, seize people, imprison them, and sometimes take a human life.
The measure of a democracy is not how mercilessly it treats the powerless.
It is how rigorously it restrains the powerful.
Another person is dead.
ICE was there.
America must not look away.



I wonder how long before they blame Biden for this. I say before the end of the day. This was all Biden’s fault.
Unfortunately, I don’t believe people understand that ICE is no longer an agency, but a militia. The more they get away with, the farther they will reach!!!
It’s the same way we got here with tRump and his cronies…no accountability!!! It’s infuriating…
Thank you for writing this piece and sending love ❤️ peace ☮️ and strength 💪🏻 to all!