ICE Shot and Killed a Houston Man Not Its Target. No Cameras Rolled.

Resist Now 3 min read

ICE Agents Shot and Killed a Man They Were Not Targeting

Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, a 52-year-old Mexican immigrant who had lived in the United States for decades, was shot and killed by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Houston on July 7, 2026. He was not the target of the operation. The Department of Homeland Security confirmed this on July 10, 2026.

U.S. Rep. Sylvia Garcia (D-Houston) spoke directly with acting ICE Director David Venturella on July 10. Venturella told her that agents had administrative warrants for two Guatemalan immigrants. Salgado Araujo and the other men in his van are from Mexico.

“Officers were almost at the target’s address when they observed a white van with an individual who resembled the target. Officers then initiated the vehicle stop.”

Department of Homeland Security statement, July 10, 2026

ICE agents stopped Salgado Araujo’s van based on a tip from an unspecified law enforcement agency and a visual similarity to their target. That resemblance was the only basis for the stop.

No Video Exists of the Shooting

Garcia told the Texas Tribune that Venturella confirmed ICE agents carried neither body-worn cameras nor dashboard cameras during the shooting. Garcia has publicly called for release of any footage. There is none.

DHS claims an agent fired in self-defense after Salgado Araujo “weaponized his vehicle,” but the agency has provided no evidence to support that claim. A lawyer representing three other men who were in the van is demanding an independent investigation.

Administrative Warrants Do Not Require a Judge

The warrants ICE agents carried were administrative warrants, not criminal warrants. A criminal warrant must be reviewed and signed by a judge. An administrative warrant carries no such judicial review. This distinction matters because agents acting on administrative warrants have no legal authority to force entry into a home or compel a stop based solely on the document.

Salgado Araujo’s sons have said their father was leaving for work when the shooting occurred.

What You Can Do Now

  1. Call Rep. Sylvia Garcia’s office at (713) 247-0019 and ask her to formally request the Department of Homeland Security release its full incident report, including the basis for the tip and the identity of the law enforcement agency that provided it.

  2. Contact your own U.S. representative via the Capitol switchboard at (202) 225-3121 and demand a congressional hearing on ICE body camera policy. As of July 2026, ICE has no mandatory body camera requirement for enforcement operations.

  3. Contact the DHS Office of Inspector General at (800) 323-8603 to request an independent review of the July 7 shooting. The OIG investigates civil rights violations and misconduct by DHS components including ICE.

  4. Find your U.S. senators at senate.gov/senators and ask them to cosponsor the Law Enforcement Body Camera Act, which would require body cameras for federal officers conducting arrests and detentions.

Sources

Texas Tribune: Immigrant Killed by ICE Was Not Target of Operation, Congress Member Says PBS NewsHour: DHS Says Man Killed by ICE Was Not Target of Immigration Operation ACLU: Know Your Rights: Administrative Warrants vs. Judicial Warrants DHS Office of Inspector General: File a Complaint or Report Fraud

[Callout: Administrative warrants carry no judicial review.

ICE held administrative warrants, not criminal warrants, at time of shooting. ACLU]