A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo.
A Case of Mistaken Identity
The ICE shooting of an unarmed immigrant in Houston — who had lived in the United States for nearly 35 years, raised a family, and had no known prior run-ins with the law — has turned from deeply troubling to acutely tragic as new details of the Tuesday incident have emerged.
The most dismaying new news is that Lorenzo Salgado Araujo was not the target of the traffic stop that ended in his shooting death. There was another man in the white work van that Salgado Araujo was driving whom ICE agents thought was one of the two men they were looking for — but that turned out to be a case of mistaken identity.
The other news that has come out over the past 24 hours paints a picture of ICE continuing to act with the flagrant disregard for good policing practices and without fear of real accountability:
- Despite a huge infusion of new federal funding and promises to issue body cameras, the agents involved in the incident were not wearing body cams at the time.
- In what is hard not to see as a convenient way of covering up the details of the shooting, ICE has detained the three other men who were in the van, including Salgado Araujo’s brother, and is pressuring them to self deport, a representative of the men’s families told the New Republic’s Greg Sargent.
- The three other men in the van told a lawyer that Salgado Araujo never veered toward federal agents and that a federal officer fired at them almost immediately after exiting his vehicle, the Washington Post reports. Attorney Hugo Balderas-Ibarra said he met with the three men individually while they were in detention and they separately gave similar accounts. “All of them reiterated that there were never any ICE agents in front of the van,” Balderas-Ibarra told the Post. “They came in and started shooting from the sides.”
While video of some portions of the incident has emerged, none of it captures the shooting itself.
The Houston district attorney, which is investigating the incident, is consulting with local prosecutors in Minneapolis about the challenges of investigating an ICE shooting without cooperation from the federal government, the AP reports.
Trump DOJ Watch
- Chicago: A federal judge in Chicago who hauled a chastened U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutrous into court yesterday concluded that he had violated her order sealing a criminal case when he spoke publicly about it at a Main Justice press conference last week, but she concluded that he did not do so for “any nefarious purpose” and declined to impose sanctions against him.
- D.C.: Even Sen. Charles Grassley (R-IA), who has been unfailingly solicitous of FBI Director Kash Patel until this point, has concerns about Patel’s use of an FBI plane for personal travel and the FBI’s purchase of BMW vehicles. Grassley quietly sent Patel a letter in May inquiring about these issues, MS Now reports — though Grassley was quick to grouch about the reports of his minimal efforts at oversight.
Trump Fires EAC Commissioners
Just Security’s Aaron Blacksberg on the practical impact of President Trump’s unprecedented firing of all the remaining commissioners on the Election Assistance Commission, leaving it commissioner-less.
Tidbit of the Day
President Trump’s recent stock-trading frenzy was triggered by an appeal court’s August reversal of New York Attorney General Letitia James’s $500 million judgment against him. Off the hook for that penalty, Trump quickly began investing the $175 million he had sitting in a Schwab account as collateral for the appeal bond, the WSJ reports: “Within days, the Schwab account was snapping up and selling dozens of stocks as an automated trading strategy put the cash to work.”
The Emperor’s New Airplane
President Trump is essentially flying naked when he boards his cherished new Qatari-gifted Air Force One because it “lacks the same defensive countermeasures that were security features of the old model, including its advanced antimissile capabilities,” the NYT reports.
The White House and Air Force are dodging questions about Trump’s push to rush the airplane into service before it was thoroughly retrofitted for the job of protecting the nation’s head of state while he travels.
UPDATE: TPM Journalism Fund Drive
Folks, we’ve gotten off to a rip-roaring start in our annual TPM Journalism Fund drive. It launched Tuesday with a goal of $500,000, and we’ve already crested $200,000 in the first three days and change. Still a ways to go, but a fantastic way to start. Thank you!
The early success was helped by our single biggest contribution ever to the TPM Journalism Fund: $20,000. But the first three days still looked like what we have seen in past drives: broad-based support from readers giving what they can, which ranges from single-digit contributions to the occasional five-digit boost.
The sooner we can hit our mark, the quicker I can stop pitching you. So as the week ends, please consider taking just a moment to pitch in now and support our work. I and the rest of the team could not be more appreciative for your support.
Good Weekend Reads
- TPM’s Josh Marshall: Why the Democratic Party Has No ‘Base’ and Why That Matters
- Off Message’s Brian Beutler: How Democratic voters began to question, and ultimately lost faith in, their party’s establishment: a comprehensive history.
See Ya Monday
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First but no cat photo on hand! Sorry.
ICE has got to go. They can’t be reformed and they can’t be trusted.
“ICE has detained the three other men who were in the van, including Salgado Araujo’s brother, and is pressuring them to self deport,”
No body cams on the ICErs either. I live in the Houston area. This is not going over well. Those agents fucked up.
Abolish ICE. They are modern-day brown shirts and need to be taken off the streets ASAP.
Duckworth comes out against Nirav Shah as a potential Maine senate canidate.
ht: @ronfilipkowski.bsky.social on Bluesky
Matter of policy?
(@johnpfaff.bsky.social on Bluesky )
Folks could almost think someone wanted to protect ICE $ Co. from the repercussions of their actions.
Facts Only
* Lorenzo Salgado Araujo was an unarmed immigrant in Houston who died in a shooting incident.
* The victim was not the target of the traffic stop that resulted in his death.
* ICE agents involved were mistaken regarding the identity of the occupants of the white work van.
* ICE detained three other men in the van, including Salgado Araujo’s brother, and pressured them to self-deport.
* The three other men stated they never saw ICE agents in front of the van.
* They reported that a federal officer fired at them immediately after exiting the vehicle.
* The Houston district attorney is investigating the incident and consulting with Minneapolis prosecutors.
* A Chicago federal judge ruled on an order sealing a criminal case, finding no nefarious purpose for public comments.
* Senator Charles Grassley expressed concerns regarding FBI Director Kash Patel's use of an FBI plane for personal travel and the FBI’s purchase of BMW vehicles.
* President Trump fired all remaining commissioners on the Election Assistance Commission.
Executive Summary
New details emerged regarding the shooting of an unarmed immigrant in Houston, where the individual was driving a white work van. The central new information is that the victim, Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, was not the target of the traffic stop that resulted in his death; mistaken identity occurred involving another man in the van whom ICE agents believed were subjects of their search. Furthermore, reports indicate that ICE detained three other men in the van, including Salgado Araujo’s brother, and pressured them to self-deport. These detained men reportedly told legal counsel that no federal agents were present during the incident and that an officer fired at them after exiting the vehicle. Investigations are ongoing with the Houston district attorney consulting with Minneapolis prosecutors regarding federal cooperation challenges.
Separate developments include commentary from political figures, such as a Chicago federal judge's ruling concerning public statements on a criminal case and Senator Charles Grassley's concerns about FBI Director Kash Patel's travel and asset acquisitions. Additionally, there is commentary on the impact of President Trump’s actions, including a focus on the dismantling of the Election Assistance Commission leadership and discussions surrounding his personal financial activities and travel.
Full Take
The narrative weaves together a specific incident of alleged misconduct by law enforcement with broader themes concerning accountability, institutional trust, and executive authority. The core tension lies between the reported events—mistaken identity, detention, and claims of police action—and the subsequent assertions made by those detained regarding the presence of federal agents. This juxtaposition forces an examination of how official narratives are constructed around sensitive events.
A significant pattern emerges in the framing of accountability: the text presents a direct contradiction between institutional actions (detention, pursuit) and testimonial accounts offered by those involved, raising questions about the reliability of information gathered through state mechanisms when external cooperation is absent. The reference to federal funding vs. body camera implementation highlights a recurring friction point regarding transparency within law enforcement agencies.
The surrounding commentary on political figures reveals a dynamic where public scrutiny seems entangled with institutional operations. When high-level figures express concerns, or when actions are framed as an oversight (like the potential motive behind the relocation of personnel), it suggests that trust is mediated by perceived power structures. The final comments reflect a deep skepticism toward established institutions and a demand for direct accountability over process.
The pattern detected: ARC-0043 Motte-and-Bailey, indicating a strong initial claim (the shooting details) that is then qualified or complicated by secondary information (mistaken identity, detention details). This structure is used to introduce a specific event while immediately pivoting to expose alleged systemic failures surrounding the actors involved.
Sentinel — Human
LIKELY_HUMAN (confidence: 0.3)
