Norms Impact
Armed ICE officer in Portland called 911 during confrontation: ‘I’m going to have to shoot this kid’
A federal immigration officer threatened to “shoot this kid” on a live 911 call, collapsing the basic norm that armed agents de-escalate and submit to local emergency command.
Sources
Summary
An armed ICE officer in Northeast Portland pulled his service weapon from his SUV console and told a 911 dispatcher, “I need someone here now, or else I’m going to have to shoot this kid.” The incident unfolded amid heightened friction between federal immigration enforcement and the city, with local police maintaining contact with federal agencies while stating they do not cooperate on immigration enforcement. The practical consequence is a documented moment where a federal officer threatened lethal force during a street-level confrontation before local police arrived, with no public clarity on federal oversight or accountability.
Reality Check
Threatening lethal force in a volatile street encounter, while rejecting de-escalation instructions from dispatch, sets a precedent where federal armed power can be exercised on impulse rather than rule-bound restraint—putting our safety and rights at the mercy of a single officer’s anger. On these facts, the more plausible legal exposure is civil-rights and use-of-force law: if a weapon was displayed to intimidate without lawful justification, it can support claims under 18 U.S.C. § 242 (deprivation of rights under color of law) and related federal civil liability, even if no shot was fired. Even where criminal charges are uncertain, the conduct reflects a breakdown of core governance norms—discipline, proportionality, and accountability—made worse by the absence of any confirmed DHS review or public explanation.
Detail
<p>On Oct. 31 at about 3:30 p.m. in Northeast Portland, Israel D. Hernandez, who self-identified as a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer, called 911 during a confrontation with an unidentified person described as a teen or young adult on a motorized bicycle.</p><p>Hernandez told dispatchers the person was “punching my window” and said it was “because I work for ICE.” Hernandez later told police the person likely saw “gear with U.S. Immigration and Customs identification” inside his unmarked Ford Explorer.</p><p>Hernandez told police he opened his center console and pulled out his service weapon, and he told a dispatcher, “I need someone here now, or else I’m going to have to shoot this kid.” He did not fire; the person ended the encounter and fled.</p><p>A Portland Police Bureau report documented probable cause for second-degree criminal mischief and second-degree disorderly conduct. Records show the first officer arrived around 4 p.m. Department of Homeland Security officials did not respond to questions about whether they were aware of the incident or Hernandez’s status.</p>