What we know about the Dallas ICE facility shooter
The sniper fired anti-ICE marked bullets from a rooftop, killing one detainee and critically injuring two others in a politically motivated attack, officials said.
- A shooter opened fire at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Dallas, killing one detainee and critically injuring two others before taking his own life, according to law enforcement officials.
- The shooter, identified as Joshua Jahn, had previously researched ICE-related locations and expressed anti-ICE sentiments in writings found at his home.
- The incident is being investigated as an act of targeted violence, with messages recovered suggesting a premeditated assault against ICE, according to FBI Special Agent Joe Rothrock.
- Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem announced increased security measures at ICE facilities nationwide following the shooting.
125 Articles
125 Articles
The attacker who shot on Wednesday at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) prosecution office in Dallas, Texas, had left a handwritten note threatening federal agents. This was revealed on Thursday by the FBI director, Kash Patel. “I wish this caused real terror in ICE agents, thinking, ‘Will there be a sniper with punching bullets on that roof?”, the message said, according to authorities. Continue reading
DALLAS, TEXAS.- On the morning of Wednesday, September 24, 2025, a shooting was recorded at an ICE facility in Dallas, Texas. An armed man — identified as Joshua Jahn — shot from a nearby rooftop at the building and at people at an exit door used for the transfer of detainees. At least one person died there, and two others — who were in ICE custody — were seriously injured; one of them is Mexican. No ICE agent was injured in the shooting. The ag…
Texas ICE Shooting: The motive for Wednesday's shooting of U.S. immigration officials in Dallas remains unclear. According to the…
Dallas ICE office shooting heightens fears among immigrants
One detainee was killed and two others injured in the shooting. Though federal officials are investigating it as an "anti-ICE" attack, many migrants and immigration advocates are worried they'll be further targeted because of it.
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