
Why Have Immigration Agents Detained This American Citizen Three Times? – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pexels)
Leonardo Garcia Venegas, a 26-year-old U.S. citizen born in Florida, has now been pulled from his vehicle and restrained by immigration agents on three separate occasions in coastal Alabama. Each time he presented his state-issued REAL ID, a document available only to citizens and lawful permanent residents, yet agents proceeded with the stops. The most recent encounter occurred on May 2, leaving him shaken and questioning whether he can continue living in the community where he grew up.
The pattern has drawn renewed attention because senior immigration officials have publicly stated that no U.S. citizens have been arrested by mistake during enforcement actions since the start of the current administration. Garcia Venegas’s experience, documented through video and court filings, stands in direct contrast to those assurances and illustrates the human cost when agents rely on broad criteria such as appearance, occupation, and language.
The May 2 Stop and Its Immediate Aftermath
Agents followed Garcia Venegas home after work and ordered him out of a truck registered to his brother. They ignored the REAL ID he held up and placed him in restraints for roughly fifteen minutes before releasing him. Local officers at the scene reportedly told him the stop would recur until he changed the vehicle registration into his own name.
Garcia Venegas described the mental strain in a recent court filing. He now drives to his construction job each morning aware that another encounter could happen at any moment. The stress has contributed to ongoing anxiety and depression, he said, even though he has lived in the same Alabama county since high school.
Earlier Encounters That Went Viral
The first detention took place last year during a raid at a construction site where Garcia Venegas was filming his brother’s arrest. Agents tackled him despite his repeated statements that he was a citizen. Weeks later, an officer entered a home he was building and refused to accept his REAL ID as proof of status.
Both incidents were captured on video and circulated widely online. Garcia Venegas testified before Congress and filed a federal lawsuit seeking to halt what he described as unconstitutional sweeps in the area. Those earlier events established a public record that made the third stop especially notable to observers tracking enforcement practices.
Official Denials Versus Documented Events
At a border-security conference in Phoenix this month, Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials stated that no U.S. citizens have been arrested for false identification since the administration began. One senior official described such incidents as having occurred “zero times.” Another acknowledged that citizens have been detained when they allegedly placed hands on officers, framing those stops as a deterrent.
A Department of Homeland Security statement issued after the May 2 encounter maintained that Garcia Venegas was not detained, only subjected to a routine vehicle stop. The agency emphasized that operations remain highly targeted. Yet court records show no assault charges were filed against him in any of the three cases, and video evidence has repeatedly contradicted claims that agents were attacked.
Legal Steps and Lingering Uncertainty
Garcia Venegas updated his pending lawsuit with details of the latest stop and filed a separate administrative claim for damages last fall. That claim was denied by ICE in mid-April without explanation. His attorneys argue that agents could have verified his citizenship immediately by examining the REAL ID he presented each time.
The stops have prompted discussion of what some legal observers call “Kavanaugh stops,” referencing Supreme Court language that permits brief inquiries based partly on apparent ethnicity, job type, and primary language. Garcia Venegas, who is Latino and works in construction while speaking Spanish at home, fits several of those factors. He has considered relocating to his family’s home in Mexico simply to avoid further encounters.
What Remains Unresolved
ProPublica continues to document cases of U.S. citizens detained during immigration operations. Garcia Venegas’s repeated experience shows that even clear documentation and prior public attention have not prevented additional stops. The gap between official statements and the record of these encounters leaves open questions about training, intelligence used in the field, and accountability measures.
For now, Garcia Venegas continues to work and live in the same community, carrying the same REAL ID that has failed to shield him from three separate restraints. His case stands as one concrete example of how enforcement actions can extend beyond their stated targets and affect citizens who have no reason to expect such interactions.