A shooting incident occurred at a federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) field office in Dallas, Texas on September 24, resulting in one fatality and two critically injured individuals. The gunman committed suicide.
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Director Kash Patel took to the social media platform “X” on September 25 to disclose the latest details of the shooting incident. He mentioned that all accumulated evidence so far indicates that the attack was “highly premeditated.”
Patel wrote that the gunman had downloaded a document titled “Dallas County Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Management,” which contained a list of Department of Homeland Security (DHS) facilities.
The gunman had also searched multiple times for “bullet ballistics information” and “Charlie Kirk gunshot video” the day before and on the day of the shooting incident.
Between August 19 and August 24, the gunman had searched for applications to track ICE agents’ locations.
The FBI found a handwritten note by the gunman, stating, “Hope this scares ICE agents, making them wonder if a sniper with armor-piercing bullets is hiding on the roof.”
Media reports identified the gunman as 29-year-old Joshua Jahn. Patel shared photos of bullets found at the scene on the platform “X,” with “Anti-ICE” written on them.
Dallas police reported that the shooting took place around 6:40 am on Wednesday (24th) at the 8100 block of North Stemmons Freeway. A rifle-armed sniper fired at the ICE office building from a nearby rooftop, resulting in one detainee’s death and critical injuries to two others. No ICE agents were injured. The gunman ultimately succumbed to self-inflicted gunshot wounds.
【Editor: News Team】