Dueling Accounts Emerge of ICE Shooting in Minneapolis
A Chaotic Scene Unfolds
According to cell phone footage shared by Democratic state Sen. Erin Maye Quade on social media, a woman can be heard pleading for help as she calls 911 after her husband was allegedly chased by ICE agents and shot in front of their family. The video appears to show the moments immediately following the shooting, with the caller describing the events leading up to the incident.
DHS Offers a Different Account
In stark contrast to the account provided by the woman on the phone, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) claims that Julio Cesar Sosa-Celis, the Venezuelan migrant who was shot, fled from federal officers and crashed into a parked car. The DHS asserts that Sosa-Celis then resisted arrest, prompting one of the ICE officers to fire a defensive shot, hitting him in the leg.
Tensions Flare in Minneapolis
The shooting has ignited some of the fiercest clashes since the federal government deployed nearly 3,000 ICE and Customs and Border Protection agents to the Twin Cities over the last few weeks. During one protest on Thursday, federal agents deployed chemical agents on a crowd without warning, further escalating tensions in the area.
A Pattern of Controversy
This incident marks the second Minneapolis shooting in a week involving an ICE officer, with the fatal shooting of Renee Good by an ICE officer in a residential neighborhood in south Minneapolis on January 7 sparking widespread outrage. The deployment of federal agents to the Twin Cities has been met with resistance from local communities, who argue that it is an overreach of authority and an attempt to suppress dissent.
The conflicting accounts of the ICE shooting in Minneapolis have left many questions unanswered, but one thing is clear: the use of force by federal agents has sparked a firestorm of controversy in the Twin Cities. As the situation continues to unfold, it remains to be seen how this incident will impact the ongoing debate about immigration policy and the role of law enforcement in communities across the country.
Topic Live














