• Getting Used to It

    Ten. That is the count now, in this administration alone, of human beings shot and killed by agents of Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection. Not accidents. Not natural causes. Shot. Ten.

    And the tenth barely made the news cycle before it moved on to something else.

    His name was Lorenzo Salgado Araujo. He was 52 years old. He had lived in Houston for 35 years, longer than some of the agents who killed him have been alive. He ran a small construction business. He raised three sons and taught them to work hard and never complain. He was driving a crew to a job site at 6:50 in the morning when ICE agents, hunting for someone else entirely, decided he looked close enough.

    Acting ICE Director David Venturella has since confirmed it: Araujo was not the target. Neither was his brother, riding beside him. ICE was looking for two other men. They found a work van full of Latino men on their way to build something, and that was close enough to shoot at.

    This is the part that should stop a country cold. Instead, it is barely a ripple. We have gotten used to it. That is the crime underneath the crime.

    DHS says Araujo “weaponized his vehicle.” Rammed an officer or tried to run him down. This is the official account, delivered within hours, before any evidence existed to support it.

    There is still no evidence to support it.

    Bystander and passenger video shows two unmarked black vehicles pursuing Araujo’s white van and cutting it off. No footage anywhere shows that van ramming anything. Three men who were riding with Araujo, interviewed separately, in ICE custody, with every incentive to say what their captors wanted to hear, all told the same story instead: there was no ramming. Agents opened fire almost immediately after stepping out of their vehicles.

    DHS has had days to produce a photo. A clip. A damaged bumper. Anything. They have produced nothing but the sentence itself, repeated.

    This is not new. It is a script. “He weaponized his vehicle” is what “the suspect lunged” used to be. It is the line ICE reaches for every time, and every time video exists, the line collapses. Ask anyone who has watched this pattern for the last year: the sentence is now a confession painted over as a defense, and everyone can see it except the agency saying it.

    The passengers’ families say ICE is now pressuring the witnesses to sign voluntary deportation paperwork. DHS calls this “categorically false.” DHS also called the ramming true. Weigh those two denials against each other and decide which agency deserves the benefit of the doubt.

    Before Araujo reached the hospital, ICE agents took his wallet. His ID. Everything that said who he was. He arrived at Ben Taub with a gunshot wound to the abdomen and no name. The hospital admitted him as John Doe.

    That single act did more damage than a delayed press release. It meant his family could not identify him. Could not confirm he was alive, then could not confirm he was dead. Could not claim his body. His wife, who does not have legal status herself, has had to retain a lawyer and secure power of attorney from her son just to bury her husband.

    Juan Proaño, CEO of the League of United Latin American Citizens, put it plainly: “This is Soviet gestapo tactics when you want to hide a crime or a victim.”

    He is right, and the word choice is not rhetorical excess. An agency that strips a dying man of his name before the ambulance arrives is not securing a crime scene. It is managing a liability.

    No agent on scene wore a body camera. DHS blames the government shutdown, claiming it delayed distribution of the equipment.

    That is pure bullshit.

    Here is what the shutdown did not delay: the $75 billion ICE received in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act back in July of 2025. The additional $29.9 billion allocated on top of that for personnel, transportation, and facilities. ICE has been sitting on more money than most federal agencies see in a decade, and somewhere in that pile, cameras were apparently unaffordable.

    The shutdown excuse is not an explanation. It is a stall, offered by an agency that knows the only people who could contradict its account are its own officers, and that the easiest way to protect a story is to make sure no one recorded it.

    In January, ICE shot and killed Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis. The country noticed. Marches. Statements. Wall-to-wall coverage for days.

    Salgado Araujo died in July, shot in the same manner, his story falling apart in the same way, and the reaction has been a fraction of that size. A vigil. A GoFundMe. A press conference most of the country never saw.

    The difference is not the facts. The difference is who he was. Renee Good and Alex Pretti were legal observers, American, and white. Lorenzo Salgado Araujo was a Mexican immigrant who had spent 35 years building homes for other people’s American dreams, and had only recently begun the paperwork toward legal status.

    That last part matters, because somewhere out there, someone is already saying it: he should have done it the legal way. There is always a Karen O’Maga ready to explain that the path to citizenship exists, that it is simple, that a man who worked in this country for 35 years just never got around to using it. She will say this with total confidence and no knowledge of a system that can take over a decade and thousands of dollars to complete, assuming it does not simply run out the clock on you first, the way it ran out on Lorenzo Salgado Araujo. He was in the process. It didn’t matter. They shot him anyway, and then they took his name so no one would have to explain why.

    Karen O’Maga will also tell you he wasn’t even a citizen, as though that settles something. As though the bullet asked for papers before it hit him. She says it as a fact, but it functions as a verdict: not a citizen, therefore not fully a person, therefore his death is a technicality rather than a tragedy. She would never say this part out loud, not even to herself, but the arithmetic is right there in what she accepts without blinking:

    A citizen shot by mistake is a scandal.

    A noncitizen shot by mistake is an update.

    We are supposed to notice when governments start shooting their own residents and inventing stories to cover it. We are supposed to be horrified every single time, not just the first time, or the tenth time, or the time the victim happens to look like us.

    Instead we scroll past it. Another van. Another story that falls apart in 48 hours. Another family locked out of a morgue by a stolen wallet. Another agency daring us to prove what the missing camera was supposed to hide.

    This is what getting used to it looks like. Not silence. Something worse: attention that lasts exactly as long as the news cycle allows, for a man who deserved more than a headline, and got less than his own name.