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February 14, 2026 at 9:38 pm
(This post was last modified: February 14, 2026 at 9:40 pm by Angrboda.)
How a Solitary Bullet Hole Blew Apart ICE’s Web of Lies
[emphasis mine]
Quote:After an ICE agent shot a DoorDash deliverista in Minneapolis on Jan. 14, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem quickly offered a variation of her standard falsehood.
She had said the same after the fatal shooting of an unarmed mother of three, Renee Good, a week earlier on Jan. 7. And she would repeat it regarding the killing of Veteran Affairs’ ICU nurse Alex Pretti on Jan. 24.
“Fearing for his life, he fired a defensive shot,” Noem said of the agent.
She told the press that the deliverista incident constituted “an attempted murder of federal law enforcement.”
“Our officer was ambushed and attacked by three individuals who beat him with snow shovels and the handles of brooms,” she added.
That falsehood was more elaborate than others, but received less attention because the person shot in this case, Venezuelan Julio Cesar Sosa-Celis, 24, only suffered a wound to his right thigh and survived. He was arrested along with another man who allegedly joined in assaulting the agent after a car chase ended in a struggle outside of his home.
But a bullet hole in the front door corroborates contradictory accounts by two eyewitnesses. They say the agent fired through the door, and Sosa-Celis was struck after he entered the house and could not have constituted a threat. The bullet was later found to have torn through into the apartment.
The bullet was found “between a child’s bed and a crib,” the wounded man’s attorney, Frederick Goetz, told the Daily Beast on Friday.
Goetz said two children, aged 1 and 3, were in the apartment at the time. The older one could be seen in a live video Sosa-Celis and his wife, Indriany Mendoza Camacho, made as they called 911 to report in Spanish that he had been shot “by ICE” when he was inside.
“They shot through the door,” she says in Spanish.
In a subsequent statement, she reported that her husband was not even the man that ICE had been chasing for fleeing a car stop. The agent had, in fact, been after fellow Venezuelan DoorDash deliverista named Alfredo Alejandro Aljorna, 26, who was arrested outside the home.
Aljorna’s partner, Valentina De Los Angeles Tiapa Moreno, was inside the house and had watched it all alongside Camacho. Sosa-Celis and the two women and the two young children had then sought refuge in an upstairs bedroom, but ICE drove them out with tear gas.
A number of area residents had gathered outside and were loudly expressing their displeasure when ICE sought to scatter them with more tear gas.
It seeped into the home of a neighbor whose six-month-old began to have difficulty breathing.
The neighbor took the baby out to his car only for agents to toss flash bangs under it, causing the airbags to inflate. The baby ended up going by ambulance to an emergency room, but thankfully survived.
In the meantime, ICE arrested the wounded Sosa-Celis and Aljorna. An FBI criminal complaint charged them with “aiding and abetting the forcible assault, resistance and impeding of a federal law enforcement officer.” ICE, which had been routinely barging private property in Minneapolis without a search warrant, reported that the lack of one kept it from collecting the bullet.
ICE used the same excuse for not vouchering the supposed ambush weapons, the broomstick and the snow shovel, which ultimately proved to have been plastic.
ICE also arrested the two women who had witnessed it all from inside the house. They and the two young children were flown out of Minneapolis the next morning.
“To Texas and other places,” Sosa-Celis’s lawyer, Goetz, reported.
But both women managed to file habeas corpus petitions seeking their release and their return to Minneapolis. The petitions were filed under seal but were viewed by the Minneapolis Star Tribune, which reported documents contain detailed eyewitness accounts of the incident. The report revealed that the women watched an unnamed ICE agent punch and choke Aljorna. Sosa-Celis sought to assist him.
“Seeing Alfredo in danger, Julio intervened and attempted to separate Alfredo from the man beating him and choking him — pulling on Alfredo towards the house to get him away from his attacker,” a petition says. “At no time did either Alfredo or Julio use or threaten to use a weapon, nor wield any object that could be deployed as a weapon, against the man assaulting Alfredo.”
The women say in the petitions that a child was in the room when Sosa-Celis was shot. Contrary to Noem’s initial statements regarding the encounter, the occupants were the ones truly afraid for their lives when they sought safety in an upstairs bedroom.
In the meantime, the women have been returned to Minneapolis. By all indications, they are ready to offer their accounts in the same courthouse should the case come to trial. The prospect of their testimony, combined with video of the incident and the bullet hole in the door, prompted the U.S. Attorney’s office to seek dismissal of the case with prejudice, meaning it cannot be reinstated.
[emphasis mine]
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