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Security video captures moments after man was fatally shot by ICE in Maine

▶ Watch Video: Federal officials suspend most vehicle stops during ICE operations after deadly shootings

 At 7:17 a.m. ET on Monday morning in Biddeford, Maine, a home security camera captured the sound of five gunshots when 25-year-old Johan Sebastián Durán Guerrero, a Colombian national, was fatally shot by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer while in a white sedan.

A photo showed multiple bullet holes in the windshield of the car that was being driven by Guerrero when he was shot.

A Kia sedan with four bullet holes in the windshield is seen at the scene of a shooting in Biddeford, Maine, July 13, 2026.
A Kia sedan with four bullet holes in the windshield is seen at the scene of a shooting in Biddeford, Maine, July 13, 2026.

Gregory Rec/Portland Press Herald via Getty Images

Seconds later, at 7:18 a.m., another surveillance video showed the sedan slowing down. In the video, ICE agents approached the car on both sides as it began to turn in circles for about a minute.

More than a minute later, at 7:19 a.m., the video shows an agent in a white SUV pinning Guerrero’s car, and the wounded man is then pulled out onto the pavement.

“I heard him say, ‘I tried to stop.’ I know that he was still cognizant because they told him to calm down,” witness Daniel Boucher, who heard the gunshots and saw the aftermath, told CBS News.

Boucher said it is a moment he’ll never forget.

“It’s something that’s horrific,” Boucher said. “You never forget that. You never forget the attitude of the ICE officers, too. And the ICE officer that shot him was in shock.”

Doorbell video showed first responders treating Guerrero. But the married father, who had a young daughter and worked as a delivery driver, died at the scene.

According to a statement from DHS, ICE agents were in the area “conducting targeted surveillance on the last known address of an illegal alien with a final order of removal.”

Law enforcement sources told CBS News that Guerrero was not the target of ICE’s surveillance. And in an interview with CBS News Monday, Democratic Rep. Chellie Pingree of Maine said she had “heard on good authority, though it’s not been confirmed by [DHS], that they perhaps shot the wrong person, that it was not the person they were going after.”

DHS maintains that when ICE agents approached Guerrero, he got in his car and “attempted to flee the scene.” DHS said that while “fearing for public safety,” an ICE officer “discharged his weapon.”

On July 7, Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, a Mexican man with no criminal record, was fatally shot by an ICE officer while driving a work crew to a construction site in Houston, Texas. In that case, DHS admitted that Salgado Araujo was also not the target of ICE’s operation at the time of his shooting death.

Multiple law enforcement sources told CBS News Tuesday that federal officials are suspending most vehicle stops during immigration enforcement operations nationwide. Sources said the directive applies to ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations, which primarily handles civil immigration arrests, and not Homeland Security Investigations, which handles criminal cases.

White House border czar Tom Homan later told reporters the decision to halt the stops was not a policy change.

“They believe it is a necessary short-term pause just to look at it and make sure everything’s good,” Homan said. 

“It would be wise for DHS to have a halt in non-urgent traffic stops until we get this straightened out,” Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine said Tuesday. “We still are waiting the facts of this investigation. We don’t know exactly what happened.”

South Florida mother accused of chaining 13-year-old daughter to fence in Florida faces child abuse charges

Click here for updates on this story    MIAMI, Florida (WFOR) -- A South Florida mother is facing child abuse and child neglect charges after Hialeah police say she chained her 13-year-old daughter to a fence outside a relative's home and left her there in the summer heat without food, water or shade.Authorities arrested 34-year-old Yashira Marie Maldonado in connection with the incident, which police say happened Saturday morning, July 11, at a home on West 63rd Street in Hialeah. She has since been released on bond and has been ordered to have no contact with her daughter.According to investigators, Maldonado drove her daughter from their apartment on West 28th Street to the home of the girl's great-grandmother. Police say the mother wrapped a metal chain around the child's waist, secured the other end to the property's fence and left her there before driving away.Ring camera video obtained by neighbors captured the mother's arrival at the residence shortly before 9 a.m. Investigators say the footage shows her leaving after chaining the girl to the fence."The defendant drove the victim in a beige Toyota Camry to the witness residence," the arrest report states. "She wrapped a metal chain around the victim's waist and tied the other end to the house fence, restricting her from moving around."Police said the girl was left with a clear backpack, some clothing and medication.Hialeah Police Lt. Eddie Rodriquez said a family member, not living in the home, called police. "Once the father got word of that, he contacted police," Rodriquez said. "Officers arrived and sure enough found this 13-year-old child tied to the fence."According to the arrest report, the child had no protection from the sun and was left without food or water."It's horrible. She left her outside, no shade. Right in the sun," Rodriguez said. "The heat alone, it's very sad for what happened to this 13-year-old child." Investigators also say a witness received a text message from Maldonado at approximately 9:10 a.m. that read, "I got fired from my job!!!!!!"Court documents said Maldonado told officers that she knew what she did was wrong and that she needed to take a break from caring for her child.Neighbors described the allegations as deeply disturbing."That's very disturbing," one neighbor, who asked not to be identified, told CBS News Miami. "It's sad. I don't know what happened in there, but it's sad."Another neighbor, Armando Calzadillo, who lives across the street, said the alleged abuse was unacceptable."That is something aberrant. It deserves to be punished," he said in Spanish. "You don't do that to a child, especially one with special needs."CBS News Miami visited the apartment complex where police say Maldonado and her daughter lived. When a crew knocked on the apartment door and rang the Ring doorbell, an automated response said, "We can't answer the door now."Neighbor Arlene Gomez identified Maldonado from a photograph and said she was shocked by the allegations."I'm just dumbfounded about what happened because I never thought that woman would do such a thing," Gomez said in Spanish.The 34-year-old now faces charges of child neglect and child abuse. As part of her release conditions, she has been ordered to stay away from her 13-year-old daughter while the criminal case proceeds.The child's current condition has not been released, and police have not disclosed who is caring for her following the mother's arrest.Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.
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