San Diego’s struggles with ICE agents aren’t new. These confrontations have become part of the city’s daily routine. Over the past year, immigration enforcement has ramped up here, turning California into a hot spot for these kinds of clashes.
Take the most recent incident. It happened in an elevator. There was no shouting or fighting, but just a tense, quiet exchange. The video, posted on April 27, catches the action already underway. The person filming said the ICE agent had started using “intimidation tactics” before the recording began. What comes next shows a man standing directly in front of the agent, looking him in the eye and speaking without hesitation.
He calls the agent a “kidnapper.” He says it plainly: “I called you a kidnapper because that’s what you are. How does it feel to be a kidnapper? You should be ashamed of yourself for what you do.”
The agent then turns to face the elevator wall. But he keeps pushing, “Face to the wall because you’re ashamed?”
At that point, the agent faces the camera. Then the person recording points the camera at his badge, zooming in before swinging back to him, “Not ashamed? No? Proud? Proud boy? Ha ha.”
The agent does not respond at any point in the clip. Meanwhile, neither ICE nor the Department of Homeland Security has commented on the specific clip.
Internet Reacts To San Diego, California ICE Agent Elevator Confrontation
The comments took different angles but largely circled the same theme. “Looks crazy and aggressive — yep, fits the job description,” one person wrote. The identity question came up quickly: “If these ICE thugs are so proud of what they are doing, why are they keeping their identities hidden?” another asked.
Others kept it blunt. “They’re not ashamed. They’re proud of it. So evil,” one comment read. The exhaustion of the moment came through in an exchange one commenter shared: “‘Gonna be a long five years,’ someone replied to this comment: ‘ Honestly, the past year has been the longest decade in forever.'” And one commenter had a simpler take on the agent himself: “That old *expletive* needs to be retired.”
Ever since Trump began his second term, California has found itself at the center of the national fight over immigration enforcement. ICE arrests have surged, and now agents are even going after persons without any criminal background. That shift set off lawsuits from California’s attorney general and motivated legislators to pass more protections for residents. The state’s sanctuary laws are already among the toughest in the country, so it’s no wonder that clashes between state officials and federal agents happen almost every day.







