By Jamie Stengle
Updated September 25, 2025 — 6.37am
Dallas: A shooter with a rifle opened fire from a nearby roof onto a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement location in Dallas on Wednesday, killing a detainee and critically wounding two others before taking his own life, authorities said.
The suspect has been identified by a law enforcement official as 29-year-old Joshua Jahn. The official could not publicly disclose details of the investigation and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.
Investigators on the roof of a building near the scene of a shooting at a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Dallas on Wednesday.Credit: AP
The exact motivation for the attack was not immediately known. The head of the FBI, Kash Patel, released a photo on social media that shows an unused bullet found at the scene containing the words “ANTI-ICE” written in what appears to be marker.
After two deaths were initially reported, Homeland Security later revised the death toll, saying one detainee had been killed and two wounded. The detainees who survived are in critical condition at a hospital, DHS said. No ICE agents were injured.
The attack is the latest public, targeted killing in the US and comes two weeks after conservative leader Charlie Kirk was killed by a rifle-wielding shooter on a roof.
“The shooter fired indiscriminately at the ICE building, including at a van in the sallyport where the victims were shot,” the Department of Homeland Security said in a release about the Dallas shooting.
The FBI said during the news conference that it was investigating the shooting as “an act of targeted violence.” Little other information was given out at the news conference.
Officers responded to a call to assist an officer on North Stemmons Freeway around 6.40am Wednesday, local time, and determined that someone opened fire at a government building from an adjacent building, Dallas police spokesperson Officer Jonathen E. Maner said in an email.
Edwin Cardona, an immigrant from Venezuela, said he was entering the ICE building with his son for an appointment about 6.20am when he heard gunshots.
An agent gathered people who were inside the building, took them to a more secure area and explained that there was an active shooter in the area, Cardona said.
Law enforcement gather at a staging area close to a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement office after the shooting.Credit: AP
“I was afraid for my family because my family was outside. I felt terrible because I thought something could happen to them. Thank God no,” Cardona said.
Cardona said his family was brought into the building, and they were later reunited.
The ICE facility is along Interstate 35 East, just southwest of Dallas Love Field, a large commercial airport serving the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area, and blocks from hotels catering to travellers.
Shortly after the shooting and before officials said at least one victim was a detainee, US Vice President JD Vance posted on X that “the obsessive attack on law enforcement, particularly ICE, must stop”.
The body of the shooting suspect is placed in the medical examiners van.Credit: AP
Republican U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz from Texas continued in that direction, calling for an end to politically motivated violence.
“To every politician who is using rhetoric demonising ICE and demonising CPB: stop,” Cruz told reporters, referencing Customs and Border Protection.
The Rev. Ashley Anne Sipe, who prays outside the Dallas ICE facility every Monday, called the shooting heartbreaking.
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“Violence doesn’t heal anything,” Sipe, a pastor in Lewisville near Dallas, told AP.
Sipe and other local faith leaders who have decried deportations hold weekly vigils and serve as “moral witnesses.” They pray and observe for about three hours, watching as immigrants enter the building to meet with advisers and to report for check-ins.
Over the past couple of months, Sipe said she has noticed that people who walk into the building are shuttled away on buses.
“They’re taking them away, and we don’t know where they’re taking them,” Sipe said.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem noted a recent uptick in targeting of ICE agents.
Attackers dressed in black military-style clothing opened fire July 4 outside the Prairieland Detention Centre in Alvarado, southwest of Dallas, federal prosecutors said. One police officer was injured. At least 11 people have been charged in connection with the attack.
Days later, a man with an assault rifle fired dozens of rounds at federal agents leaving a U.S Border Patrol facility in McAllen on July 7. The man, identified as Ryan Louis Mosqueda, injured a police officer who responded to the scene before authorities shot and killed him. Police later found other weaponry, ammunition and backpacks inside Mosqueda’s car.
In suburban Chicago, federal authorities erected a fence around an immigration processing centre after tensions recently flared with protesters. US President Donald Trump’s administration has stepped up immigration enforcement in the Chicago area, resulting in hundreds of arrests.
Ahead of the latest immigration operation, federal officials boarded up windows at the centre.
Sixteen people have been arrested outside the centre, according to federal authorities who characterised the activists as “rioters”.
AP
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