U.S.

Sons of Mexican man killed by ICE officer in Houston demand independent investigation


A Mexican national fatally shot by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer in Houston had no criminal convictions during his decades living in the U.S. and was driving a crew to a homebuilding site when he was killed, his family and a Texas congresswoman said Wednesday.

Lorenzo Salgado Araujo worked from sunrise to sunset for 35 years to send all three of his American citizen sons to college. He had been working toward securing legal status in the U.S. after neglecting that for years as he built homes, his son Ronaldo Salgado said at a news conference.

“He did not deserve to die. He did not deserve to be reduced to a headline of Mexican man shot and killed by ICE. He deserved to live a quiet life as Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, a husband, a father and a job creator for dozens of men who also wanted the American dream,” his son said.

The shooting happened Tuesday in Magnolia Park, a neighborhood that has been a hub for the Mexican American community for a century.

US Immigration Enforcement Houston

Lorenzo Salgado Jr., son of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, holds a family photograph during a news conference Wednesday, July 8, 2026, in Houston.

AP Photo/David J. Phillip


Federal officials say their vehicle was rammed but don’t provide evidence

Salgado Araujo was shot after he ignored commands and attempted to ram an officer who fired his weapon in self-defense, the Department of Homeland Security said Tuesday in a statement. ICE officers were targeting him because he was living in the country without legal permission, according to the department, which oversees ICE. The man’s car struck an ICE vehicle, the department added.

DHS claimed Salgado Araujo “refused to follow multiple verbal commands.” 

“The driver was struck, and emergency services were immediately contacted,” the agency’s statement said. “The driver was transported to the hospital where he passed away from his injuries.”

Houston firefighters said Salgado Araujo was shot in the abdomen.

Democratic U.S. Rep. Sylvia Garcia said Salgado Araujo had no criminal convictions. 

Three other men appeared to be detained as Salgado Araujo lay moaning on the ground, according to his son, who said one of them was his uncle and that no one has heard from them since.

Immmigration Enforcement Houston

Police work on Canal Street in Houston, Tuesday, July 7, 2026, after a shooting.

Jacob Lujan/Houston Chronicle via AP


Federal officials have not released video or images of the shooting or the damage to the vehicles. Salgado on Tuesday joined civil rights groups and Democratic officials in urging federal authorities to release all the footage and other information it has on the shooting.

A video shot by bystander Juliet Martinez shows a black vehicle angled toward a white van, their doors wide open. A bleeding and handcuffed man groans loudly on the ground and his leg shakes. Other federal officers stand over at least three other handcuffed men.

In several other shootings involving federal officers, initial descriptions by immigration officials have sometimes been contradicted later by video evidence.

In the case of Alex Pretti, a Minnesota ICU nurse who was shot and killed by Border Patrol agents earlier this year, top Trump administration officials made claims about the encounter that are contradicted by bystander video and witness testimony. They claimed that he approached federal agents with a gun, but multiple videos show Pretti did not have a gun in his hands. 

In the March 2025 fatal shooting of American citizen Ruben Ray Martinez, video obtained by CBS News also appears to contradict claims by federal officials that Martinez “accelerated” and “intentionally ran over” an agent with his car before an ICE agent shot him. The video shows that Martinez’s vehicle was stationary or going at a very low speed when he was fatally shot.

Civil rights groups say ICE can’t be trusted with the investigation

The federal immigration crackdown has created a country where it is “open season on Latinos” by officers who think they can “shoot and explain later,” League of United Latin American Citizens President Roman Palomares said during the news conference Wednesday.

The way ICE has handled previous investigations shows they have not earned the trust of taking their statements as facts without evidence like video to back it up, he said.

US Immigration Enforcement Houston

Ronaldo Salgado and Lorenzo Jr., sons of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, hold a photograph of their father during a news conference Wednesday, July 8, 2026, in Houston.

AP Photo/David J. Phillip


“Your pattern has been one of inaccuracies of prejudicial leaks before the facts are known, of twisting the narrative to fit your version of events,” Palomares said.

The league offered a $5,000 reward for information and videos from witnesses as it calls for an independent investigation. Others begged anyone with videos to not turn them over to ICE, which they said could destroy them.

U.S. Rep. Al Green on Wednesday also called for transparency, asking the House Committee on Homeland Security to hold a hearing on Salgado Araujo’s killing and demanding the release of all available body-worn camera footage.

“Whenever deadly force is used by federal law enforcement, the American people deserve a complete, transparent, and independent examination of the facts,” Green said in a statement. “Public confidence in our institutions depends upon the willingness of government to subject itself to meaningful oversight.”

There’s been uptick in arrests in recent weeks

Representatives of ICE and DHS have not responded to repeated requests for comment Wednesday.

Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin took over the department in March with the aim of keeping it away from the controversies that had marked the tenure of his predecessor, Kristi Noem.

In the months after the fatal shootings of Pretti and another U.S. citizen, Renee Good, in Minnesota sparked a fierce backlash, the number of immigration arrests across the country fell and ICE appeared to recalibrate its tactics. But in late June, arrests around the country surged to 10,000 over a five-day period, fueled in part by massive Congressional funding.

The shooting was at least the eighth death from an encounter with federal immigration officials since the start of the Trump administration’s intense immigration enforcement campaign in the U.S.

Son says father worked hard for decades

Ronaldo Salgado said his mother was told something bad had happened to his dad around 7 a.m. Tuesday. After frantically looking for him at his job site and finding his empty van, he saw a video.

“I recognized him, not from his appearance but from his voice crying for help as he lay on the street,” Salgado said.

Salgado Araujo met his wife as a teenager in Mexico. They came to America and built their own home in Houston with help from friends and family who worked on his crew. His wife made his lunch before he left for the day and had a hearty meal ready when he came home. He would listen to music and pet his dog on his porch, Salgado said.

US Immigration Enforcement Houston

Ronaldo Salgado, son of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, speaks during a news conference Wednesday, July 8, 2026, in Houston.

AP Photo/David J. Phillip


“After nearly 35 years of working to give us the American dream, he made the choice to begin the process of obtaining his American dream through a work permit,” Salgado said. “We dotted every I, crossed every T, filled every document, attended every appointment. He was close to obtaining his legal status.”

Salgado Araujo had biometric scan and fingerprints done earlier this year, his son said, and had carefully studied what to do if ICE pulled him over. If he was speeding away, it was probably because he feared having his tools stolen, his son said.

“Had my father seen an emblem of ICE or an emblem that says anything about a law enforcement agency, my father would have complied,” his son said.

Mexican president criticizes the latest killing

Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum said she is considering legal measures or may ask the United Nations to step in to stop the violence against Mexicans in the United States.

“There has been another tragic death of one of our compatriots in the United States due to detention issues, even though their only ‘offense’ is not yet having proper documentation,” Sheinbaum said.

Texas’ largest city has experienced heightened enforcement operations since the crackdown began last year, and not without public backlash. The Houston City Council voted to pass an ordinance limiting ICE cooperation but reversed course after Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, threatened to cut more than $100 million in state funding for public safety.



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