“Federal Grand Jury Indicts Group of Information Technology Workers on Multiple Criminal Charges, Alleging They Physically Assaulted and Obstructed Federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agents During a Government Operation Targeting Cybersecurity Breaches and Unauthorized Data Access Within a Department of Homeland Security Facility.”

A federal grand jury indicted two employees of a medical surgery center in Ontario, California, after a confrontation with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers attempting to detain a Honduran man suspected of being in the country illegally. The defendants, identified as Jose de Jesus Ortega, 38, of Highland, and Danielle Nadine Davila, 33, of Corona, were charged on August 27 with one felony count each of assaulting, resisting, and impeding federal officers. Their trial is scheduled for October 6. The case stems from an incident on July 8, when ICE officers wearing law enforcement vests and operating an unmarked vehicle conducted a roving immigration operation in the city of Ontario.

According to the Department of Justice (DOJ), the ICE officers had been following a truck carrying three men when the driver abruptly pulled into the parking lot of a local surgery center. The men exited the vehicle, and two of them fled. One of the fleeing individuals, a Honduran national who was allegedly in the U.S. illegally, was briefly detained near the facility’s entrance but managed to resist and pull away, causing both him and the officer to fall to the ground. Video footage reportedly shows the man being assisted to his feet by a member of the surgery center’s staff, who then pulled him away from the officer before he ran inside the building.

Once inside, the ICE officer pursued the Honduran man and attempted to complete the arrest. The DOJ alleges that both Ortega and Davila, dressed in medical scrubs, actively interfered with the process. Davila allegedly placed herself between the officer and the suspect, shouting, “Let him go!” and “Get out!” while pushing the officer. Ortega allegedly grabbed the officer’s arm and vest in an attempt to prevent him from detaining the man. The situation escalated further when the officer called for backup, and a second ICE agent arrived to find multiple staff members restraining the first officer.

After additional officers intervened, the ICE agents successfully detained and handcuffed the Honduran man before escorting him out of the surgery center. The Justice Department later stated that the medical staff’s interference constituted a clear obstruction of a lawful arrest. Following the incident, Ortega told reporters that the staff had been instructed to verify identification and warrants before allowing law enforcement into the facility, suggesting that their actions were motivated by concern for workplace policy and patient privacy. If convicted, both Ortega and Davila face up to eight years in federal prison.

Subsequent reports revealed that the Honduran man was later detained at the Adelanto ICE Processing Center and ultimately chose to self-deport. The case has drawn significant attention due to its intersection of immigration enforcement, workplace safety, and the responsibilities of medical professionals when federal officers enter private facilities. Critics have argued that ICE’s tactics, such as conducting unannounced operations in civilian spaces, risk unnecessary confrontations, while others contend that obstructing federal officers undermines the rule of law.

In a separate but related immigration matter, the Supreme Court also made headlines when Justice Elena Kagan, one of the Court’s more liberal members, denied an emergency request from four Mexican nationals seeking to block their deportation. The petitioners, Fabian Lagunas Espinoza, Maria Angelica Flores Ulloa, and their two sons, fled Guerrero, Mexico, in 2021 after receiving death threats from the Los Rojos drug cartel. They argued that returning to Mexico would expose them to cartel violence. Despite their testimony and supporting documents, both an immigration judge and the Board of Immigration Appeals rejected their claims, and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the deportation order in February 2025.

The family’s attorney, LeRoy George, filed an emergency petition to the Supreme Court, stating that the migrants faced imminent removal and had been ordered to report to immigration authorities in April 2025. Justice Kagan could have referred the matter to the full Court but instead denied the request without comment, allowing the deportation order to proceed. The decision underscores the judiciary’s limited willingness to intervene in immigration enforcement decisions and highlights the growing tension between humanitarian concerns and the federal government’s immigration policies. Together, both cases reflect the broader national debate over immigration law, enforcement methods, and the boundaries of compassion and compliance in a deeply divided political landscape.

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