In a video that’s stoking concerns about racial profiling and federal overreach, a Latino driver in Florida calmly shut down what many are calling a “gestapo cosplay” stop by U.S. Border Patrol, all without raising his voice or backing down.
The van full of Latino passengers was pulled over, not near a border, but somewhere in the middle of Florida. Border Patrol agents, whose jurisdiction technically extends 100 miles from any national border, which includes most of Florida, ask the driver for the IDs of everyone in the vehicle. He refuses, standing his ground.
With border patrol determined to check the IDs of his passengers, the driver points out the obvious: they’re nowhere near an international border. And more importantly, he’s under no obligation to volunteer the identities of passengers based solely on their ethnicity or perceived immigration status.
As the confrontation fizzles and the agents realize they’re not getting what they want, one throws in a final jab: “Just so you know, we contacted your boss.” A moment dripping in spite disguised as professionalism. The driver, unimpressed, simply drives off as laughter breaks out in the van behind him. Mission failed, dignity intact.
On Reddit, this last move became the biggest punchline. “We called your boss,” one commenter snarked, “was this guy’s next line going to be ‘we’re telling your mom’?”
“We actually called your mom and told on you,” joked another, mocking the agents’ pettiest move of the day.
But beneath the jokes, there’s anger, and it’s not unwarranted. Since the Trump administration expanded ICE’s powers and blurred the line between law enforcement and immigration policing, encounters like this have become disturbingly common.
The law on these stops is murky. While CBP does have the authority to operate within 100 miles of a border (a definition that includes most of Florida) there’s a vast difference between a fixed checkpoint and roving stops based on little more than suspicion. Legal experts and civil rights organizations like the ACLU have long warned that such practices often blur into racial profiling.
The man in the video didn’t yell, didn’t escalate, didn’t invoke memes about “sovereign citizens.” He just knew his rights and exercised them. His refusal to be intimidated and the shared laugh as they drove off clearly struck a chord with those who are tired of seeing minorities treated as permanent suspects in their own country.