A disturbing video shared on Instagram this week has reignited outrage over the tactics of ICE in Washington D.C. The footage, recorded near 13th & I Street NE, shows a man hobbling toward an ambulance with his hands cuffed behind his back after being detained by federal officers.
According to witnesses, the incident began when plainclothes officers (identified by their generic black “POLICE” vests) allegedly opened a car door to knock the man off his motorbike. He was then restrained and made to walk despite his visible injuries. “Knocked him off his scooter while he was riding it, injured his leg, chained his hands and legs together like El Salvador’s SECOT prisoner, and made him stand and walk. He needs a stretcher. What has become of us? This is disgusting, inhumane,” one Instagram commenter wrote.
While details remain murky, such as whether a warrant was involved, community members have characterized the act as a deliberate assault. Some even likened it to “attempted vehicular manslaughter.” Others asked the obvious question: “Why’s he handcuffed if he was the one assaulted?”
The video has raised broader concerns about ICE’s role in Washington D.C. and beyond, where the agency appears to be operating with few restraints. In recent years, ICE has been accused of targeting individuals without due process, detaining them without warrants, and deploying unmarked officers to conduct raids in public spaces. This latest incident, critics say, exemplifies the impunity with which federal units move against civilians.
The optics were especially striking: more than ten officers –both Metropolitan Police Department and federal agents– swarmed the scene to detain a single injured man. One witness noted the imbalance bluntly: “There is NO way having 10+ MPD & FLEO nabbing a delivery driver is making DC safer… NO WAY!!!”
Legal observers have pointed out that if officers did in fact knock the man off his scooter, the action could constitute a criminal offense. Yet accountability seems unlikely. “They are operating as if they don’t need probable cause. We got rogue offices out here just doing anything,” one commenter wrote, echoing concerns of a city drifting toward a police state.
The comparison has been made before: militarized raids, faceless officers in plainclothes, arrests without transparent justification. To some residents, the United States is beginning to resemble the authoritarian regimes it claims to oppose. “I served with a cavalry unit in Iraq and processed evidence at my regiment’s detainee holding unit. I can confirm that we treated detainees in Iraq with more dignity than I’ve seen law enforcement give people on American soil,” one veteran remarked.
What happens next remains unclear. Questions linger about the man’s identity, his current medical condition, and whether he will have access to legal counsel. For now, the video stands as another grim reminder of how fragile civil rights have become in the District, and how limited the recourse is for ordinary people when federal power is used against them.