The claim that ICE tactics are becoming more violent and hostile is true. There have been multiple instances of unnecessary violence being used during raids, arrests, and during protests. One video was filmed by a photographer in Hyattsville, Maryland, and shows a man being pinned to the ground by two ICE officers. He pleads for bystanders to help him. One of the officers ended up dropping his gun, fumbling for it on the ground. He eventually grabbed hold of it and pointed it at the bystanders. To clear up this misunderstanding, Emily Covington, an assistant director in ICE’s Office of Public Affairs, told NPR that drawing a weapon can be used to de-escalate the situation.
Another video shows a man, Presbyterian Pastor David Black, outside an ICE facility getting shot in the head with a pepper ball, which is a projectile filled with chemical irritants. He has since sued the Trump administration. In one instance in Chicago, agents used unmarked trucks and a helicopter to surround a five-story apartment building in the South Side. Agents rappelled from Black Hawk helicopters and went door to door, waking up residents and restraining them with zip ties. Residents and the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights said that those who were zip-tied included children and US citizens. Dixon Romeo, who’s a part of an organization that has been helping the residents, said doors were knocked off the hinges. “Everyone we talked to didn’t feel safe. This is not normal. It’s not okay. It’s not right,” Romeo stated.
According to Politico, former acting ICE director John Sandweg argued that most ICE agents treat people with dignity, but he also noted that the Trump administration has revved up the agency’s raid operation strategy. ICE agents have been under a lot of pressure to get the number of arrests up. They’ve been forced to adapt to some of the more aggressive tactics because the Trump administration seems more focused on quantity rather than the quality of arrests. “What we’re seeing is a general escalation of violence and the use of excessive force by ICE officers,” says Ed Yohnka, director of communications and public policy at the ACLU of Illinois. Former Seattle police chief and police commissioner, Kerlikowske, said that good policing in cities relies on de-escalation, trust, and cooperation from the public. “The show of force federal agents are using in Chicago and elsewhere is unnecessary,” said Kelikowske.
NPR https://www.npr.org/2025/10/13/nx-s1-5566785/ice-dhs-immigration-tactics-more-violent