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Norms Impact

911 call describes woman screaming to ICE agents that she’s a U.S. citizen

Masked federal agents allegedly broke a citizen’s car window, used force, and left without accountability—normalizing immigration enforcement that operates beyond identification and local oversight.

Executive

Feb 13, 2026

Sources

Summary

A Salem woman identified as Maria suffered a concussion, a torn rotator cuff, and bruised ribs after an encounter with four ICE officers who broke her car window and forced her to the ground despite her screaming that she is a U.S. citizen. The incident reflects federal immigration enforcement operating with masked, unidentified agents and no immediate local law-enforcement response. The practical consequence is that U.S. citizens can be subjected to violent, unaccountable stops and then left to seek medical care and accountability on their own.

Reality Check

When federal officers can allegedly shatter a car window, use force on a person asserting U.S. citizenship, and then vanish without identifying themselves, we are watching the guardrails of accountable policing erode in real time—and our rights become conditional on an agent’s discretion. If the reported facts are accurate, the conduct raises serious constitutional and civil-rights exposure under 18 U.S.C. § 242 (deprivation of rights under color of law) and potential federal assault liability, along with civil claims for unreasonable seizure and excessive force under the Fourth Amendment. Even if prosecutors never file charges, the refusal to identify, the reported racial profiling, and the lack of an on-scene response create a blueprint for unreviewable coercion that chills everyday movement, speech, and due process for citizens and noncitizens alike.

Media

Detail

<p>A 911 call obtained through a public records request describes a Jan. 29 stop in Salem involving four U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and a woman identified by SEIU Local 503 as Maria. Maria’s daughter, Marlene, called 911 about 30 minutes after Maria phoned her in panic as officers approached her vehicle. Marlene told the dispatcher her mother was screaming that she was a U.S. citizen; she said officers broke the car window before Maria could put the car in park.</p><p>In the call, Marlene said officers read Maria’s passport and then forced her to the ground, threw her papers on the ground, and left. Union officials and a Latino advocacy group said Maria was racially profiled, pulled from her car, thrown to the ground, and had her purse emptied. Marlene told Salem police the officers refused to identify themselves; she said they wore ballistic vests and masks and did not show identification. Salem police did not respond to the scene and advised reporting to the FBI or Homeland Security. DHS officials did not respond to questions.</p>