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Imagine a sad and confusing event: this week in a town called Biddeford in the U.S., a man from Colombia was shot and killed by someone who works for a group called U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (or ICE for short — they are like a police team for immigration rules).
We now know who that ICE person was.
Important Point: Brouillette was a new ICE recruit (like a beginner trainee) when this happened.
Right after the shooting, Brouillette called his ex-wife, Ashley Brouillette, on the phone. She later told a newspaper (the Portland Press Herald) what happened.
A magazine called The Atlantic said Brouillette was hired by ICE this year (2026). His name wasn’t officially confirmed until Thursday.
Usually, when a regular police officer in Maine shoots someone, their name is shared right away. But here, something different happened.
Important Point: Unlike normal local police, federal ICE officials kept the shooter’s name a secret at first.
We found papers (employment records) that show what Brouillette did before ICE.
ICE said Guerrero was in the country without permission and had a final removal order (a paper saying he should leave). A leader named Markwayne Mullin (Homeland Security Secretary) first said Guerrero had “weaponized” his white car, but later told a senator that Guerrero was not actually the target of the warrant (the legal paper allowing agents to act).
Two groups that help immigrants (Maine Immigrants’ Rights Coalition and Presente! Maine) said in a statement:
The ICE agents did not have body cameras (small cameras on their clothes). Congress gave $20 million this year for those cameras, but they weren’t used here.
Important Point: Because there were no body cameras, there is no direct video of what happened right before the shooting.
After Guerrero died, ICE temporarily stopped most traffic stops (pulling people over in cars). Another man, Lorenzo Araujo (52, a construction worker in Texas), also died in a traffic stop last week. On Wednesday, President Trump told ICE to go back to the old policy.
Many groups are investigating:
Maine leaders also reacted:
This may be at least the 11th fatal shooting by ICE agents since President Trump’s second inauguration (not counting deaths in custody).
Earlier in 2026, Maine saw more ICE agents as part of “Operation Catch of the Day.” That slowed down after nationwide anger when two protesters were shot in Minneapolis.
A new ICE recruit named David Brouillette shot and killed Johan Sebastian Duran Guerrero in Biddeford. Brouillette admitted it to his ex-wife and asked her to lie. Federal officials hid his name at first. Records show he was a former campus police officer, prison guard, and briefly a real estate agent. Guerrero had work permission and was not the warrant’s target. No body cameras recorded the event. ICE paused traffic stops after this and another death, and many leaders are calling for investigation or ICE reform. This is part of a larger pattern of deadly ICE shootings in 2026.
1. Who was the ICE agent who shot Guerrero?
David Brouillette, a 37-year-old new ICE recruit who previously worked in campus police and as a prison guard.
2. Did Guerrero do something illegal?
ICE says he had a removal order, but a senator was told Guerrero was not the target of the warrant. Immigrant groups say he had U.S. work authorization and a Social Security number.
3. Why is there no video of the shooting?
ICE agents in this case did not wear body cameras, even though Congress funded them this year.
4. What is Maine’s governor doing?
Governor Janet Mills asked lawmakers to reform or abolish ICE after the shooting.
5. How many ICE shootings have happened recently?
This is at least the 11th fatal shooting by ICE agents since Trump’s second inauguration, not including detention deaths.