Another ICE Shooter Wounds Man and Woman in Portland
By Reuters | 09 Jan, 2026
This shooting too entails a questionable claim of self-defense against a vehicular threat, angering residents.
A U.S. immigration agent shot and wounded a man and a woman in Portland, Oregon, authorities said on Thursday, leading city and state officials to call for calm given public outrage over the ICE shooting death of a Minnesota woman a day earlier.
"We understand the heightened emotion and tension many are feeling in the wake of the shooting in Minneapolis, but I am asking the community to remain calm as we work to learn more," Portland police chief Bob Day said in a statement.
The Portland shooting unfolded Thursday afternoon as U.S. Border Patrol agents were conducting a targeted vehicle stop, the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement.
The statement said the driver, a suspected Venezuelan gang member, attempted to "weaponize" his vehicle and run over the agents. In response, DHS said, "an agent fired a defensive shot" and the driver and a passenger drove away.
Reuters was unable to independently verify the circumstances of the incident.
Portland police said in a statement that the shooting took place near a medical clinic in the eastern part of the city.
Six minutes after arriving at the scene and determining federal agents were involved, police were informed that two people with gunshot wounds - a man and a woman - were asking for help at a location about 2 miles (3 km) to the northeast of the medical clinic.
Police said they applied tourniquets to the man and woman, who were taken to a hospital. Their condition was unknown.
Portland and Oregon leaders said at a news conference Thursday evening that they had no details on what led to the shootings, including whether the violence was linked to immigration enforcement.
While they said the FBI was investigating, Portland Mayor Keith Wilson and Oregon Governor Tina Kotek, both Democrats, called for a pause in the federal immigration crackdown pending a full and independent investigation.
"There was a time when we could take them at their word," Wilson said of how federal officials had described the shooting. "That time is long past."
At the same news conference, state Senator Kayse Jama, who arrived in the U.S. 28 years ago as a refugee from Somalia, addressed federal immigration agents: "We do not need you, you are not welcome, you need to get the hell out of our community."
Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield said late on Thursday that his office is opening a formal investigation into the incident to look into whether "any federal officer acted outside the scope of their lawful authority."
"We have been clear about our concerns with excessive use of force by federal agents in Portland and nationally," Rayfield said.
The shooting came a day after a federal agent from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), a separate agency from the Border Patrol within the Department of Homeland Security, fatally shot a 37-year-old mother of three in her car in Minneapolis.
That shooting has prompted two days of protests in Minneapolis.
Officers from both ICE and Border Patrol have been deployed in cities across the U.S. as part of Republican President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown.
While the aggressive enforcement operations have been cheered by the president's supporters, Democrats and civil rights activists have decried them as unnecessary provocation.
U.S. officials contend criminal suspects and anti-Trump activists have increasingly used their cars as weapons, though video evidence has sometimes contradicted their claims.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh, Brad Brooks and Jasper Ward; Additional reporting by Akanksha Khushi. Writing by Daniel Trotta; editing by Costas Pitas, Diane Craft, Paul Thomasch and Stephen Coates)
Demonstrators gather outside the Portland ICE facility to protest after U.S. federal agents shot two people in Portland, Oregon, U.S., January 8, 2026. REUTERS/John Rudoff
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