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1 victim dead, others injured in Dallas immigration field office shooting

At least one victim is dead after a shooting at an ICE facility in Dallas.
Yfat Yossifor
/
KERA News
At least one victim is dead after a shooting at an ICE facility in Dallas.

At least one victim is dead and two more hospitalized after a gunman opened fire outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement field office in Dallas Wednesday, according to federal and local officials.

The shooter is also dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, Dallas police and FBI said.

The suspect opened fire from an adjacent building, according to DPD. Two victims were taken to a nearby hospital with gunshot wounds and another died at the scene.

The identities of the victims were not immediately clear, but federal officials confirmed no one in law enforcement was injured. Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons, in an interview with ABC Wednesday morning, said "preliminary reports" indicate detainees may have been shot.

Early evidence from rounds found near the alleged shooter contained anti-ICE messages. The FBI is investigating the incident as an act of targeted violence, said R. Joesph Rothrock, the special agent in charge of the Dallas FBI field office.

Despite no injuries to ICE agents, lawmakers on X characterized the shooting as a politically motivated attack against the agency.

J.D. Vance called the shooting an "attack on law enforcement," while Gov. Greg Abbott said Texas fully supports ICE.

"This assassination will NOT slow our arrest, detention and deportation of illegal immigrants," Abbott said.

Dallas city council member Adam Bazaldua criticized those who were politicizing the shooting in a press release shared with KERA.

"At a time when our communities are desperate for healing, leadership, and real solutions, we are instead met with more division and finger-pointing," Bazaldua said.

Politically Motivated

FBI director Kash Patel called the shooting a politically motivated attack on law enforcement in a statement on X.

"We are only miles from Prarieland, Texas where just two months ago an individual ambushed a separate ICE facility targeting their officers," Patel said. "It has to end and the FBI and our partners will lead these investigative efforts to see to it that those who target our law enforcement are pursued and brought to the fullest extent of justice."

At least 17 people have been charged in connection with a July 4 attack at a the Prairieland immigration detention center where a local police officer was injured.

Court documents unsealed in July allege as many as 12 people dressed in all black were shooting fireworks towards the Prairieland Detention Center July 4 when correctional officers called dispatch.

When an Alvarado police officer arrived, several people began to flee the scene on foot and ignore verbal commands, according to a most recent complaint.

A person in the woods then opened fire, hitting the Alvarado officer in the neck, according to court records. It's unclear who among those arrested is accused of opening fire.

Immigration Hub

The facility in downtown Dallas is ICE's main field office in Dallas and serves a much wider geographic area than Dallas, including Oklahoma.

The field office that sees people with ongoing immigration cases who check in with ICE officers, as well as detainees who are processed and placed at different detention facilities, according to Belinda Arroyo, a Dallas immigration attorney whose firm is only a few minutes away from the building.

Arroyo said she had to send most of her staff home this morning as they couldn't get into their office.

"I mean, I have clients that come in all the way from East Texas to check in with ICE office," Arroyo said. "So, it's not even just officers, you also have, you know, people who are in active removal proceedings who are there on a daily basis. So, I'm sure there were probably a lot of other people there as well."

At the height of the Biden administration, Arroyo estimates hundreds of people visited the facility daily. With fewer people coming in at the border under the Trump administration, she said, that number is probably closer to 100 a day.

Arroyo doesn't exactly know how the shooting will affect the facility and her clients, she said. But she expects to see increased security, something she said has been lacking in the years she's worked in and around the building.

"Every type of person goes to that facility," Arroyo said. "And so, any type of person could have been hurt. So, you know, all this hate towards anybody is really hurting everybody."

Eric Folkerth is the lead pastor at Kessler Park United Methodist Church, which hosts weekly prayer vigils on the sidewalk outside the Dallas ICE facility. No congregants were there Wednesday morning.

In a Facebook post, Folkerth asked for prayers for everyone involved, especially first responders.

"I will say this: Every week in my prayers, I pray sincere prayers for ICE agents and staff, alongside our fervent prayers for immigrant neighbors," Folkerth wrote. "I do this precisely because, as a follower of Jesus, I am convinced that violence...either perpetrating it, or being a victim of it...is not a solution to our problems."

Copyright 2025 KERA

Domini Davis
Caroline Love
Toluwani Osibamowo