ICE-involved shooting leaves 1 person dead in Maine, officials say
BIDDEFORD, ME – A federal immigration enforcement agent fatally shot a man during a traffic stop in Maine on Monday, July 15, less than a week after an ICE agent shot and killed a man during a traffic stop in Houston.
Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin said immigration enforcement agents targeted the man because he had been given an order to leave the country. A U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot him after he "weaponized" his vehicle, Mullin said, using the same term ICE officials used to describe what happened during last week's shooting in Houston. Mullins' comments were relayed through U.S. Sen. Angus King, a Maine Democrat who spoke with the Homeland Security boss following the shooting.
The shooting occurred during the morning in the downtown area of Biddeford, a city about 15 miles south of Portland, according to a statement from Gov. Janet Mills. FBI officials are investigating the shooting, said King, adding ICE agents were not wearing body cameras during the incident.
Homeland Security officials have not responded to USA TODAY requests for information on what prompted the stop and on the man killed in the incident.
According to local immigrant rights groups, the man killed was a 26-year-old native of Colombia who was legally in the U.S. on a work permit that granted him a social security number. The Maine Immigrants' Rights Coalition said he was a "member of our community, a neighbor, and a human being whose life was cut tragically short."
The group added: "A 26-year-old man came to Maine to live and work, and now his family is mourning his death following an incident involving ICE. This is devastating, enraging, and unacceptable. His loved ones deserve answers, and the public deserves a full and transparent account of what happened."
Colombian embassy officials told USA TODAY that they are working to confirm the identity of the man killed in the shooting.
Shooting sparks protests
Protests gathered at the scene of the shooting in Maine within hours of the incident. They chanted and held signs reading "Leave Biddo" and "ICE Out of Our Neighborhoods." Dozens also gathered at a nearby park, where a woman with a bullhorn shouted, "ICE shot and killed a man in Biddeford! Murder! Murder!" Several motorists honked in support as they drove by.
Among the protesters near the shooting scene was Kyle Billings, who said he thought he heard three or four gunshots shortly after waking up.
"Sure enough, that's what it was," he told the Portsmouth Herald, part of the USA TODAY Network.
ICE not wearing body cameras
Sen. King confirmed that authorities involved in the incident were not wearing body cameras. Former DHS Secretary Kristi Noem announced the deployment of body cameras in February, after the killings of Pretti and Good.
"We've been told that body cameras would be widely distributed," King said, adding that he spoke to Mullin after the fatal shooting. "(The) secretary told me that they're on order, that they have been distributed widely across the country, but not everywhere, and apparently not in Biddeford."
ICE agents involved in the recent ICE shooting in Texas were also not wearing body cameras, according to U.S. Rep. Sylvia Garcia.
Maine officials call for investigation
Maine officials, including King, are calling for a "full, transparent and open investigation" of the shooting which comes after the July 7 fatal ICE shooting in Houston of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo.
The 52-year-old Houston-area home builder was killed by an ICE agent during a traffic stop after he was mistaken for another man. ICE officials said Salgado Araujo was shot after he "weaponized" his vehicle in an attempt to run over an ICE agent. Witnesses say that description of what happened is "simply false."
Salgado Araujo's death triggered protests and a wave of scrutiny on federal agents months after the shooting deaths of Alex Pretti and Renee Good by immigration officers in Minneapolis.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz referenced their deaths in a statement responding to the shooting in Maine. Walz called for an end to President Donald Trump's aggressive enforcement campaign that has seen multiple people fatally shot by ICE agents nationwide.
"Americans are once again watching in horror as Trump's lawless federal agents took another life - this time in Maine," Walz said. "We must seek accountability and justice and an end to this madness."
Federal officials have repeatedly accused people shot by immigration authorities of using their vehicles to ram agents though Homeland Security's claims have fallen apart under scrutiny.
Among them was Good, 37, who was shot and killed inside her car on Jan. 7. The fatal shooting was captured on video by witnesses. A USA TODAY analysis of the footage showed Good's vehicle turning away from the officer who opened fire on her at the time of the shooting.
'Operation Catch of the Day'
In January, ICE launched a five-day enforcement effort in Maine dubbed "Operation Catch of the Day." The agency surged federal agents into the state and accused its leaders of having "sanctuary" policies.
The agency said it arrested around 200 people it described as the "worst of the worst." But only 11 of those arrested had a criminal record, according to an analysis of federal data by The Maine Monitor and Bangor Daily News.
The surge in Maine mirrored similar deployments to other states, including Illinois, Minnesota, North Carolina and Tennessee. But after fierce backlash over the deaths of Pretti and Good in Minneapolis, as well as a leadership shakeup at the Department of Homeland Security, the highly visible operations largely came to an end, though immigration-related arrests have continued nationwide.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: ICE-involved shooting leaves 1 person dead in Maine, officials say
Reporting by Christopher Cann, Shawn P. Sullivan and Natalie Neysa Alund, USA TODAY NETWORK / USA TODAY
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This story was originally published July 13, 2026 at 2:16 PM.