Videos show US citizen's shooting death in Texas last year by federal
immigration agent
[March 07, 2026]
By MICHAEL BIESECKER, REBECCA BOONE and JACK BROOK
WASHINGTON (AP) — Newly released videos showing the fatal shooting of a
U.S. citizen by a federal immigration agent in Texas last year call into
question assertions by the Department of Homeland Security that a driver
intentionally rammed an agent with his car immediately before he was
killed.
The videos, including from officer body cameras, offer the first visual
account of the shooting of Ruben Ray Martinez, 23, during a beach trip
last year. Hours of footage and other law enforcement records were
released Friday following a public records request from The Associated
Press and other news outlets.
Martinez’s death was the earliest of at least six fatal shootings by
federal agents since President Donald Trump launched a nationwide
immigration crackdown in his second term, and is among several cases in
which video has called into question the administration’s initial
narratives.
The Texas Rangers closed their investigation into the March 15, 2025,
shooting after a grand jury declined last week to file any criminal
charges against Homeland Security Investigations Supervisory Special
Agent Jack Stevens, who fired the fatal shots, according to records
released by the Texas Department of Public Safety.
In a written statement included in the files, Stevens said he fired to
protect his fellow agents, police officers and the public from what he
feared was a potential terrorist attack intended to cause mass
casualties. A DHS spokesperson said last month the HSI agent fired
defensive shots after the driver “intentionally ran over” his fellow
agent, “resulting in him being on the hood of the vehicle.”
The newly released body camera videos, taken from behind Martinez’s car,
do not clearly show the vehicle striking an agent.

Another video shows Joshua Orta, who was riding in the car with
Martinez, telling investigators that his friend had not intended to harm
federal officers but had “panicked” because he feared getting arrested
for driving while intoxicated.
“He didn’t know what to do. Like he definitely didn’t want to go to
jail,” Orta said. “But as far as like running over an officer ... he
wouldn’t do that.”
Spokespersons for DHS did not respond to requests for comment about the
videos.
‘Shots fired, shots fired’
While local media reported at the time the shooting involved a police
officer, DHS did not publicly disclose its agents were involved until
after the AP and other media outlets reported it last month.
Martinez was just days past his 23rd birthday when he and Orta drove
from their hometown of San Antonio down to South Padre Island, a popular
spring break party destination. They drank with friends and smoked
marijuana before heading back out on the town, Orta told investigators.
Martinez was driving his blue Ford sedan when, shortly after midnight,
they came upon the scene where South Padre police officers were
directing traffic around a two-car collision at a busy intersection.
Also at the scene were three HSI agents from a maritime border security
task force redirected to conduct immigration enforcement, according to
documents.
In body camera footage captured by two of the island's police officers,
Martinez’s car can be seen slowly approaching the intersection,
appearing to go straight as vehicles were being instructed to turn left.
Martinez's car slows to a crawl — nearly a full stop — for pedestrians
in the crosswalk. Once the pedestrians are out of the way, the car
slowly pulls into the intersection before stopping again as the HSI
agents approach, shouting instructions for the driver to stop.
One of the HSI agents, identified in documents as Special Agent Hector
Sosa, moves in front of the car. Stevens is on the driver’s side and
reaches toward the door.
“Get him out, get him out,” one of the officers can be heard shouting.
Martinez's car begins slowly moving forward and turning to the left,
where other vehicles were traveling. Stevens, on the driver’s side of
the car, is keeping pace and appears to be leaning in toward the open
driver’s side window. As officers yell for Martinez to stop, Stevens
pulls his weapon and rapidly fires three shots through the window before
quickly backing away.
“Shots fired, shots fired,” one of the police officers wearing a camera
yells into his radio.
The entire incident transpires in about 15 seconds.

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In this image from video provided by the Texas Department of Public
Safety, Homeland Security Investigations Special Agent Jack Stevens
pulls Ruben Ray Martinez from his vehicle after shooting Martinez at
a roadblock in South Padre Island, Texas, on March 15, 2025.
(Officer Miguel Leal/Texas Department of Public Safety via AP)

Agents pull the driver from the car
The blue Ford quickly comes to a full stop and Martinez is pulled
from the vehicle and handcuffed by multiple officers. Orta is also
pulled from the passenger seat and handcuffed.
Martinez remains in cuffs and on the ground, unmoving, for about a
minute before paramedics already on the scene of the earlier traffic
accident begin to provide medical aid.
An autopsy report shows all three shots fired by Stevens hit
Martinez, with bullets traveling through his left arm before
entering his torso and piercing his heart, lungs, liver and other
organs. The autopsy report also showed that Martinez's blood alcohol
level was 0.12%, well above the legal limit to drive in Texas of
0.08%.
In a three-page written statement provided to the Texas Rangers
almost two months after the shooting, Stevens said he fired his
weapon as Martinez “accelerated forward, striking Special Agent Sosa
who wound up on the hood of the vehicle." He also said he narrowly
avoided being run over, being struck by the driver's side and
“causing the mirror to break off of the vehicle.” A photo from the
scene showed the mirror damaged, but still on the car.
As he fired, the agent said that “still fresh on his mind” were
recent domestic and international events, including a man who had
driven a pickup truck into a crowd of New Year’s revelers in New
Orleans weeks earlier.
“The driver’s eyes were open widely, fist clenched to the steering
wheel, and he was looking past the officers on scene as he failed to
comply with the loud and repeated verbal commands of multiple law
enforcement officers,” Stevens wrote. “This is a behavior I have
observed in my training and experience as a pre attack indicator and
sign of noncompliance as the suspect is looking in the path of their
intended movement and is not indicative of compliance. This path of
movement, if left unmitigated, would, using the vehicle as a weapon,
have resulted in numerous casualties."
As reported by AP last month, an internal U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement investigation said the agent struck by the car
was treated for an unspecified knee injury at a nearby hospital and
released. The newly released videos show the agent after the
shooting arresting Orta and walking without any visible injury or
limp.

‘That's when he panicked and turned the wheel'
Orta said Martinez had been drinking earlier that night — several
shots and a beer — and smoked marijuana when he approached the
traffic checkpoint where a vehicle accident had occurred earlier.
One officer spotted an open alcoholic beverage near Martinez but
directed the car to keep moving and turn to the left. Instead,
Martinez continued straight, toward the accident and more officers.
“That’s when he panicked and turned the wheel, and he didn’t floor
the gas but we kind of went a little bit and I guess they thought he
was like trying to run the cop over or something," Orta said.
Orta said that their car came to a “full stop” at first. Then
Martinez turned to the left with the car “barely moving.”
“I saw the officer kind of get on the hood. Like he didn’t hit him,
but like he kind of like, you know what I mean, caught his feet,”
Orta said. “It was just slowly moving and they started shooting.”
Orta died Feb. 21 in a car accident in San Antonio.
Lawyers representing Martinez's mother, Rachel Reyes, said in a
statement the newly released videos and other evidence showed his
car was barely moving when Stevens fired at point-blank range.
“This batch of evidence shows no justification for Ruben’s killing,"
lawyers Charles M. Stam and Alex Stamm said. “Still, our pursuit of
full transparency will continue until we have all the facts. We, and
the public, have yet to see all of the evidence held by the
government.”
___
Boone reported from Boise, Idaho, and Brook from New Orleans.
Associated Press reporters Jesse Bedayn in Denver, Jaun Lozano in
Houston and John Hanna it Topeka, Kansas, contributed.
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