Photo bloody attack on the Dallas Immigration Bureau: Two people killed, “anti-Iice” on the suspect's bullets


Police officers at the scene of an armed incident near a detention center of the United States immigration and customs service (ICE) in Dallas, Texas, on September 24, 2025. Photo: Aric Becker / AFP / Profimedia
An armed man who inscribed the message “Anti-Iice” on an unused bullet killed two detained persons and injured another, at a local office of the Dallas Immigration and Customs Service, to commit suicide, American officials announced, according to Reuters.
The director of the FBI, Kash Patel, posted on X a photo of what he said are the unused bullets of the suspect, on one of them being written “anti-Iice” on the side.
“Although the investigation is ongoing, an initial analysis of the evidence shows that behind this attack there is an ideological reason,” Patel said, in the message accompanying the photo.
In a statement, the Department of Internal Security (DHS) said that the suspect fired “without discrimination” on the ICE building, including a van in the secure hall, where the victims were shot.
At a press conference in Dallas, officials revealed the existence of bullets, but stressed that the investigation is still in the incipient phase. Authorities treat the attack as an “act of targeted violence”, told reporters Joseph Rothrock, a special agent of the FBI in Dallas.
This Morning Just Before 7am Local Time, Individual Fired Multiple Rounds at Dallas, Texas Ice Facility, Killing One, Wounding Several Others, BeFore Taking His Own Life. FBI, DHS, ATF is on the Ground with Dallas PD and State Authorities.
While the investigation is… pic.twitter.com/smoyxiklqa
– FBI Director Kash Patel (@fbidirectorkash) September 24, 2025
US officials did not provide details about the suspect's identity.
The attacker opened the fire on the office in an adjacent building around 6:40 am, local time (11:40 GMT), the police said. Two people were transported to the hospital with wounds by shooting, and a third person died on the spot.
No police officer was injured during the attack, officials said. The attack took place at a local ICE office (anti -immigration police), not at a detention center, where ICE officers deal with the short -term processing of recently arrested persons.
“It seems that it was a sniper or a kind of fire fired by a long distance weapon,” said Tricia McLaughlin, spokeswoman for the Department of Internal Security, for the “Fox & Friends” show at Fox News on Wednesday morning.
The incident takes place two weeks after the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk by a sniper during an event in Orem, Utah, a murder that has fueled a new wave of political violence in the United States.
President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance and other Washington administration officials have accused the liberal organizations of inciting disorders and encourages violence against the right. On Monday, Trump signed a presidential decree declaring the anti -fascist movement as an internal “terrorist organization”, despite the fact that no evidence was made to link Kirk's death.
The aggressive use by the Trump Administration of ICE agents during repression against without document immigrants has aroused protests from democrats and liberal activists. ICE detention centers have become more and more conflict places, armed agents to teeth using pepper, tear gas and other chemical agents in confrontations with protesters.
An ICE center in a suburb of the city of Chicago, in front of which the protesters gathered daily from the beginning of the month, when the Trump administration intensified measures against immigrants, raised a protective fence on Monday, after several demonstrators, including the mayor of Evanson, Illinois, were injured in a week.
Wednesday's attack was the third armed incident this year in Texas at a center of the Department of Internal Security. A policeman was shot in July in an incident at an ICE detention center in Prairieland, and a 27-year-old Michigan was deadly shot by agents after opening fire on a US Border Patrol post in July.




