Following two fatal shootings during immigration enforcement operations within a single week, U.S. immigration authorities have decided to temporarily suspend vehicle-based enforcement stops.
In the U.S., a 26-year-old man was shot and killed by enforcement agents in the northern state of Maine yesterday (July 14), following a similar incident last week in Houston, Texas.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has been employing a tactic of monitoring the homes and workplaces of targeted immigrants and apprehending them the moment they depart in their vehicles, which is when these incidents occurred.
Furthermore, as body cameras have been issued to only half of the total agents, there have been numerous instances where no evidence was recorded because the cameras were not used at all.
[Nivra Shah / Democratic State Senate Candidate in Maine: Does the immigration agency have the capacity to pull a dying young father out of a car, but not the capacity to provide cameras to their agents?]
Immigration authorities have been intensifying operations across the U.S. in recent weeks with a set goal of arresting 2,000 people per day.
[John Sandweg / Former Acting Director of ICE: There are other ways to arrest people. You can arrest them when they arrive at their destination or when they leave their homes.]
However, as immigration authorities maintain that they may resume the same enforcement methods once additional training is completed, the controversy and conflict are expected to continue.
Reported by Lee Hee-hoon | Video edited by Kim Jong-mi
※
Copying, redistribution, and unauthorized use in AI training are strictly prohibited.