Alberto Castañeda Mondragón, a 31-year-old Mexican migrant, suffered severe brain injuries after a violent detention by ICE agents in St. Paul, Minnesota, on January 8. He accuses the officers of beating him with a baton to the head, causing eight skull fractures and five brain hemorrhages, contradicting the official claim that he injured himself by hitting a wall. His case has prompted calls for investigation from local officials and criticism of federal immigration policies.
Alberto Castañeda Mondragón, from Veracruz, Mexico, entered the United States in March 2022 on a temporary work visa and settled in Minnesota as a driver and roofer. On January 8, while running errands in a vehicle with a friend in St. Paul, ICE agents surrounded the car, broke the windows, and detained him. According to his account, they pulled him from the vehicle, threw him to the ground, handcuffed him, and immediately struck him in the head with a steel telescopic baton (ASP), an action experts in police use of force consider potentially lethal.
After the arrest, social media video showed Castañeda staggering as four masked agents led him handcuffed, supporting him. He was taken to an ICE detention center in Ft. Snelling, where he claims they resumed the assault, laughing at his pleas to stop. Hours later, he arrived at Hennepin County Medical Center (HCMC) in Minneapolis with swelling, bruises, and bleeding, diagnosed with eight skull fractures and five brain hemorrhages that endangered his life.
ICE agents claimed he intentionally headbutted a brick wall, but a CT scan and an independent doctor indicated the injuries did not match a fall. "There was never a wall," Castañeda told the Associated Press. He spent days disoriented under constant ICE surveillance in the hospital, where medical staff questioned the official version. Initially, he lost his memory and did not remember his 10-year-old daughter in Mexico, erasing memories like the day he taught her to dance.
A federal judge ruled his detention illegal, as he had overstayed his visa but had no criminal record, and ordered his release on January 27. He now faces a prolonged recovery with balance and memory issues, without health insurance, relying on community donations via GoFundMe. Officials like Governor Tim Walz and Senator Tina Smith have demanded investigations, criticizing the pattern of violence in ICE operations. "Law enforcement cannot be anarchic," Walz wrote on X. The Department of Homeland Security has not responded to comment requests.