ICE Agents Killed Johan Sebastián, 25, in Maine. Gov. Mills Calls for Reform or Abolition.

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ICE Agents Fatally Shot Johan Sebastián in Biddeford, Maine

On July 13, 2026, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents shot and killed Johan Sebastián, 25 years old, in Biddeford, Maine. Two days later, Gov. Janet Mills visited the makeshift memorial residents had built in his honor, and within minutes she was surrounded by neighbors demanding answers.

The scene at the memorial captured a tension running through the state. One man asked through her car window, “What do you feel about ICE in Maine? It’s a simple question.” Another shouted, “He’s dead because you won’t get ICE out of Maine.” Mills told those who followed her, “I’m just here to pay my respects.”

Mills Sent Congress a Letter Demanding Reform or Abolition

Hours before visiting the memorial, Mills had already sent a letter to Maine’s congressional delegation calling for Congress to reform ICE, or abolish it entirely. She wrote that the agency had expanded its funding and staffing and placed agents in the field:

“Without rigorous, and necessary, training.”

Gov. Janet Mills, letter to Maine’s congressional delegation, July 15, 2026

Mills also repeated a request she had made earlier this year: that all federal immigration agents be required to wear body cameras and be subject to civil and criminal liability for abuses of power.

A Brief Federal Pause on Traffic Stops Was Reversed Within Days

After Sebastián’s death, the Department of Homeland Security announced it would pause immigration-related traffic stops. President Trump reversed that directive on July 14, ordering agents to resume stops. Mills called the pause “not even a half measure to what should be happening to meet this moment.”

Maine has passed several laws aimed at limiting local law enforcement cooperation with federal immigration authorities. Those laws cannot stop federal agents from performing their lawful duties under the U.S. Constitution’s Supremacy Clause. That gap leaves Mills with few tools short of congressional action.

What You Can Do Now

  1. Call Maine’s U.S. Senators. Sen. Susan Collins and Sen. Angus King can be reached through the Senate switchboard at (202) 224-3121. Tell them you support Gov. Mills’ request for mandatory ICE body cameras and civil and criminal liability for agent abuses. Name Johan Sebastián specifically.

  2. Contact your own U.S. representative. The House Judiciary Committee holds jurisdiction over immigration enforcement policy. Call the main switchboard at (202) 225-3121 and ask your rep to support ICE oversight legislation, including mandatory body cameras.

  3. Submit a public comment to DHS. The Department of Homeland Security accepts public comments on enforcement policies at regulations.gov. Search “ICE” to find open comment periods and submit your concerns about accountability gaps and use-of-force training requirements.

  4. Contact the Maine Governor’s office directly. Call (207) 287-3531 and urge Mills to continue pressing Maine’s delegation and to publicly support legislation that would require federal body cameras on ICE agents operating in the state.

Sources

Maine Morning Star: Mills Calls Congress to Reform ICE or Abolish It After Biddeford Shooting

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