FBI Investigating After Shots Fired Into ICE Offices in San Antonio in ‘Targeted Attack’

FBI Investigating After Shots Fired Into ICE Offices in San Antonio in ‘Targeted Attack’
An ICE agent takes part in an operation in Florida, Puerto Rico, and the U. S. Virgin Islands, on March 21, 2018. (ICE)
Simon Veazey
8/14/2019
Updated:
8/14/2019

The FBI has opened a federal case after shots were fired into Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE) offices in two buildings early in the morning of Aug. 13 in what agents described as a “very targeted attack” in San Antonio.

“Had the bullets gone two inches in another direction, we could be talking about the murder of a federal official,” FBI Special Agent in Charge Christopher Combs said, according to media reports.

One of the buildings shot at has multiple tenants, with the ICE facility located on upper floors, according to the FBI.

“I don’t think there’s a question that they knew which floors the ice offices were,” Combs said, according to My Antonio.

“All of the shots that we have found are on the floors where ICE had offices,” said Combs “This is no question a very targeted attack. They did some research, they knew what floors ICE was on, they knew what buildings they were and they hit those.”

The shots were fired into offices at the Jefferson Bank high rise and another building across Loop 410, according to KTLA, at around 3 a.m.

According to CBS, Combs said he thinks the shooter may have believed the building to be unoccupied at the time.

Jefferson Bank building, San Antonio. (Screenshot/Google Maps)
Jefferson Bank building, San Antonio. (Screenshot/Google Maps)

Combs told reporters that the FBI will open a federal case.

“To fire indiscriminately into any building, let alone a federal facility, is not an act of protest. It’s an act of violence … against the federal government that could have resulted in the assassination of a federal employee,” Combs said.

The shooter is believed to have fired the shots from across the highway, Police told News 4. The building does not have bulletproof windows, according to News 4.

A photograph of one of the bullet holes in a now-shattered window overlooking the highway was shared on social media by the acting director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, Ken Cuccinelli.

Daniel Bible, the field office director for the agency’s enforcement and removal operations in San Antonio, said ICE officer’s lives were being put at risk by the “disturbing public discourse” that he said “shrouds our critical law enforcement function.”

“Political rhetoric and misinformation that various politicians, media outlets and activist groups recklessly disseminate to the American people regarding the ICE mission only serve to further encourage these violent acts,” Bible said in a statement, according to KABB-TV. “ICE officers put their lives on the line each and every day to keep our communities safe.”
An Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent detains an illegal immigrant in Los Angeles on Oct. 14, 2015. (John Moore/Getty Images)
An Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent detains an illegal immigrant in Los Angeles on Oct. 14, 2015. (John Moore/Getty Images)

The incident in San Antonio follows three other incidents at ICE facilities in the last month.

An armed member of the far-left extremist group, Antifa, threw firebombs at an immigrant detention building, and at cars in the parking lot, and attempted to blow up a large propane tank in Tacoma, Washington, on  July 13, before being shot dead by police.

The man succeeded in setting one car on fire before officers responded at 4 a.m. and gunned him down, according to the Tacoma Police Department. The man was armed with a rifle and wore a satchel with flares, the police said. No officers were hurt in the encounter.

Anti-ICE protesters pulled down a star-spangled banner that hung over a federal building holding illegal immigrants on July 12, and raised a Mexican flag in its place.
The protest at the ICE facility near Denver, Colorado, was organized by a collection of local socialist, Marxist, and communist organizations, along with other groups opposed to current U.S. border policy.

They were calling for the shutdown of “concentration camp” detention centers and to “let them all in.”

During what police described as a peaceful protest, a “Blue Lives Matter” flag was also taken down and spray-painted with the words “Abolish ICE,” then raised again upside-down, according to CBSDenver.
Simon Veazey is a UK-based journalist who has reported for The Epoch Times since 2006 on various beats, from in-depth coverage of British and European politics to web-based writing on breaking news.
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