ICE KNOCKED… and SECONDS LATER, HE WAS GONE. 😱💥

Picture this: A hardworking dad, just sitting in a friend’s car at a St. Paul shopping center. Normal day. Then ICE agents swarm in, yank him out, slam him to the ground, cuff him… and that’s when the nightmare begins.

He says they started PUNCHING him, beating his head with a STEEL BATON—over and over. Eight skull fractures. Five brain hemorrhages. So bad he forgot his own 10-year-old daughter existed. Doctors say the injuries DON’T match “he ran into a wall.” Hospital staff called BS on ICE’s story right away.

ICE claims he tried to flee and smashed his own head on concrete. But a federal judge just ruled the whole arrest unlawful and ordered him RELEASED. Now FBI and local cops are raiding the parking lot for evidence. Community is FURIOUS—demanding body cams, answers, justice.

Was this a routine bust… or something way darker? The silence from officials is deafening, and the details coming out are horrifying. You need to see this. 👇

A routine immigration enforcement action in early January 2026 has escalated into a major controversy after the arrested man ended up in intensive care with catastrophic head injuries, prompting investigations by the FBI, St. Paul police, and sharp criticism from a federal judge.

Alberto Castañeda Mondragón, 31, a Mexican national who authorities say overstayed his visa, was taken into custody by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents on January 8 outside a shopping center in St. Paul. What followed has become a flashpoint in the ongoing national debate over federal immigration enforcement tactics under the current administration.

According to Castañeda Mondragón’s account in an Associated Press interview published February 7, agents pulled him from a friend’s vehicle without warning, threw him to the ground, handcuffed him, and then assaulted him with punches and repeated strikes to the head using a steel baton. He described the beating as immediate and unprovoked, with agents he called “racist” laughing as he pleaded for them to stop. He alleges additional mistreatment after being transported to an ICE processing facility at Fort Snelling.

The injuries were severe: eight skull fractures across the front, back, and sides of his head, five life-threatening brain hemorrhages, and significant facial damage. A CT scan revealed patterns that medical professionals at Hennepin County Medical Center told reporters were inconsistent with a simple fall. Castañeda Mondragón spent weeks in the hospital, initially so disoriented that he could not recall having a 10-year-old daughter or key family memories.

ICE and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) have offered a starkly different version. In statements and court filings, officials described a “targeted enforcement operation” against a removable noncitizen. They assert that after being handcuffed, Castañeda Mondragón attempted to flee toward a nearby highway, fell, and struck his head against a concrete wall, causing the injuries. DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin reiterated this account in mid-February, emphasizing that the man was an “illegal alien from Mexico who overstayed his visa.”

Hospital staff expressed immediate skepticism when ICE officers brought him in. Court documents note that one agent told caregivers the detainee “got his (expletive) rocked,” while the initial explanation—that he “purposefully ran headfirst into a brick wall”—drew doubt from nurses and doctors familiar with traumatic brain injuries. Tensions rose further when ICE insisted on shackling his ankles to the hospital bed, leading to confrontations with medical personnel who cited concerns over his impulsive behavior typical of severe head trauma.

The case drew judicial scrutiny when Castañeda Mondragón’s attorneys filed a writ of habeas corpus. U.S. District Judge Donovan W. Frank ruled in late January that the detention was unlawful because an arrest warrant was issued only after he was already in custody. The judge criticized ICE for failing to promptly complete intake or initiate removal proceedings, calling the delay unreasonable. He ordered immediate release from federal custody, though medical recovery continues.

As of mid-February 2026, a joint investigation by the FBI and St. Paul Police Department is active. Investigators canvassed the shopping center parking lot seeking witnesses, video, or physical evidence. The probe aims to determine the exact cause of the injuries amid conflicting narratives.

Castañeda Mondragón’s lawyers argue racial profiling played a role, pointing to his appearance as the trigger for the stop. Community advocates and immigrant rights groups have rallied around the case, viewing it as emblematic of overly aggressive tactics in Minnesota’s “Operation Metro Surge,” which ramped up deportations in late 2025 and early 2026. Protests have occurred, and some have linked it to prior ICE-related incidents in the Twin Cities area, including fatal shootings.

Federal officials maintain the operation was lawful and necessary for public safety and immigration compliance. They deny excessive force, attributing injuries to the suspect’s actions. DHS has highlighted that anti-ICE agitators sometimes complicate enforcement, though no such claims were directly tied to this arrest.

Castañeda Mondragón, a construction worker supporting his family, has spoken publicly about the long-term impact: ongoing medical needs, memory issues, and mounting bills. A fundraiser has been mentioned in reports to help cover costs.

The incident underscores broader challenges in immigration enforcement: balancing security priorities with accountability, especially when use-of-force allegations arise. With investigations ongoing and no criminal charges filed as of late February, the full picture remains unclear. Both sides continue to present evidence in support of their accounts, leaving the public and officials awaiting conclusive findings.

The case has already prompted calls for greater transparency, including mandatory body cameras for agents and independent reviews of enforcement actions. As Minnesota grapples with its role in national immigration policy, Alberto Castañeda Mondragón’s story serves as a stark reminder of the human stakes involved.