Share and Follow
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) on Monday released a video showing an illegal alien suspected of shooting an off-duty Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officer being dumped outside a Bronx hospital by another suspect.
The video shows a man in a red shirt riding a black moped into what appears to be a hospital bay, and subsequently pushing a passenger in a white shirt onto the ground. The passenger slinks off the moped before the driver flees the scene.
DHS said in a post on X that the video shows the suspects on the same moped that was also captured on video at the scene of the shooting. “These individuals will face the full weight of the U.S. Justice System,” DHS added in the post.
Miguel Francisco Mora Nunez is accused of shooting the CBP officer during an attempted robbery in Fort Washington Park late Saturday night. The CBP officer was hanging out in the park with a companion when police say Nunez and another suspect pulled up on the moped and tried to rob the officer at gunpoint. The officer pulled out his own service weapon to defend himself. Both Nunez and the officer were shot multiple times.
In February of this year, Berroa was arrested for 2nd degree reckless endangerment, reckless driving and for driving without a license, according to DHS.
“On June 12, 2025, Berroa pled guilty to petit larceny at the Bronx County Supreme Court. This plea was made in consolidation of all his previous arrests, and he was conditionally discharged and allowed to roam the streets of NYC,” it also said. “A judge ordered Berroa a final order of removal on January 3, 2023.”
New York is a sanctuary city for illegal aliens, and does not comply with ICE detainer holds.

Christhian Aybar-Berroa, left, and Miguel Francisco Mora Nunez, right, have been taken into custody following the shooting of an off-duty CBP officer in New York City on Saturday, July 19. (Department of Homeland Security )
Nuna and Berroa are expected to face federal charges.
Fox News’ Greg Norman and Bill Melugin contributed to this report.