Early Tuesday morning in Houston, Lorenzo Salgado Araujo took the coffee and the meal his wife had prepared for him, said goodbye to his dog, and walked out of the house he built with his own hands.

Lorenzo was 52 years old, a husband and father, a carpenter and contractor by trade. He had spent 35 years building homes in and around Houston, framing the suburbs of that city. Hundreds of homes, by his family's count.

On Tuesday, Lorenzo was driving through the Magnolia Park neighborhood looking for workers to hire when agents of Immigration and Customs Enforcement moved to stop his van. Within minutes, one of them shot him.

Lorenzo Salgado Araujo died at Ben Taub Hospital in Houston—the same hospital, his eldest son said, where he and his brothers were born.

A good man was killed, and now an American family—yes, an American family—is torn apart, drowning in grief.

The government claims the killing was justified. The Department of Homeland Security asserts that Salgado rammed an ICE vehicle and tried to run over an officer, who fired in self-defense. Their evidence for this scenario, ICE tells us, is based on "information we are receiving." They are immediately declaring that unverified information proves a settled verdict of self-defense.

That’s not an investigation. It’s a press release pretending to be one.

And we have seen this press release before.

In January, in Minneapolis, the government told us that Renee Good, an American citizen and mother, had weaponized her car against an ICE officer who fired in self-defense.

Then the video emerged, showing the agent standing clear of her car when he shot her. The Hennepin County medical examiner ruled her death a homicide, but the feds were—and remain—adamant. They want the world to believe Renee Good was a killer. The State of Minnesota actually had to go to court to pry the evidence out of federal hands.

In Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, last week, just six days before the shooting in Houston, an ICE officer fired at another driver who, the agency said, had "weaponized his car." Same story, same script, same word. Juan Proaño of LULAC spoke for a skeptical nation when he responded with two syllables: "Prove it."

Instead, what we get from the Trump administration is a process that’s a legal farce, at best, a coverup at worst.

The shooting of Lorenzo Salgado is being investigated by the Department of Homeland Security's own inspector general. The agency is investigating itself. And the current inspector general—hand-picked by Trump in 2019 and left there through the Biden administration—was cited by Congress in 2024 for “engaging in conduct undermining the independence or integrity reasonably expected of his position.”

The FBI, meanwhile, has opened an investigation into the alleged “assault” by Loranzo Salgado on the federal officer. Which means that right now the only criminal suspect in this killing in Houston is the man in the morgue.

The Harris County District Attorney, whose office ordinarily investigates every death at the hands of law enforcement in that county, says federal authorities have shut him out entirely. A man is dead on a Texas street, and Texas is not permitted to ask why.

Here is what I think this case reveals.

And why it matters beyond one family's grief—though that grief is what speaks most powerfully to us, what ought to bind us in the fight for justice.

The American people were promised an immigration crackdown aimed at the worst among us—the traffickers, the gang members, the predators. That promise won an election. But dangerous criminals are hard to find, because dangerous criminals hide.

A carpenter is easy to find.

Lorenzo Salgado's son described his father as a man of routine—same early hour, same white van, same streets, same lunch his wife packed, same porch in the evening with his dog and his music.

This is the basic truth right now in Washington, DC: A bureaucratic machine handed $70 billion by Congress and assigned obscene arrest quotas will always optimize the easily findable over the truly fearsome. The very virtues that made this man admirable—regularity, industry, visibility, roots—are what made him catchable. That’s what’s happening.

The cruelty of the killing of Lorenzo Salgado—and of so many more non-lethal arrests and brutalizations of our immigrant neighbos—is not an accident of the Trump administration’s policy. It is the arithmetic of their policy.

And Americans have noticed: it’s why support for an enforcement regime that polls once showed to be Trump's strongest issue has collapsed. The country was promised the worst of us and has watched the government harvest the best of us.

Salgado, by his son's account, had spent the last year and a half assembling a work-permit application—photographs, letters from employers, testimonials—and was close to receiving it. He was in the line. Then they killed him.

Most Americans do not want this.

They want a border that is orderly, safe, lawful, and democratically accountable, and immigration enforcement aimed at people who actually endanger them. What they got instead, on Tuesday, was a man shot at dawn while he was looking for work, a government trying to cover it up, and a family learning of his death from a video. His son recognized his dad not by his face but by his voice, as he cried out in the street with his last breaths for help as he was being killed.

His name was Lorenzo Salgado Araujo. He built houses. He built a family. He built a life.

The American dream is not an abstraction; it is a man like this.

And this week, the government of the United States shot it dead in the street and called it self-defense.

—Terry

Reply

Avatar

or to participate

Keep Reading