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In a tragic incident on a Virginia highway, 24-year-old Josué Castro Rivera from Honduras lost his life while attempting to evade federal immigration agents. Castro Rivera was fatally struck by a vehicle, marking a chilling addition to a growing list of immigrant fatalities linked to enforcement operations under the Trump administration.
This heartbreaking event unfolded as Castro Rivera was on his way to a gardening job last Thursday. According to his brother, Henry Castro, Josué was pulled over by officers from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The agents attempted to detain him along with three other passengers in the vehicle. In a desperate attempt to escape, Castro Rivera fled on foot and tried to cross Interstate 264 in Norfolk, where the fatal accident occurred, as confirmed by state and federal officials.
Having arrived in the United States four years ago, Castro Rivera was diligently working to support his family back in Honduras. His death adds to a series of recent incidents in Chicago and California, where three other immigrants have died amid immigration enforcement actions, highlighting the human toll of the intensified crackdown.
Agents tried to detain Castro Rivera and the three other passengers, and he fled on foot, tried to cross Interstate 264 in Norfolk and was fatally struck, according to state and federal authorities.
Castro Rivera came to the United States four years ago and was working to send money to family in Honduras, according to his brother.
“He had a very good heart,” Castro said Sunday.
The Department of Homeland Security said Castro Rivera’s vehicle was stopped by ICE as part of a “targeted, intelligence-based” operation and passengers were detained for allegedly living in the country without legal permission.
DHS said in a statement that Castro Rivera “resisted heavily and fled” and died after a passing vehicle struck him. DHS officials did not respond Sunday to requests for further comment.
Virginia State Police said officers responded to a report of a vehicle-pedestrian crash around 11 a.m. Thursday on eastbound I-264 at the Military Highway interchange. Police said Rivera was hit by a 2002 Ford pickup and was pronounced dead at the scene.
The crash remains under investigation.
Federal authorities and state police gave his first name as Jose, but family members said it was Josué. DHS and state police did not explain the discrepancy.
Castro called his brother’s death an injustice and said he is raising money to transport the body back to Honduras for funeral.
“He didn’t deserve everything that happened to him,” Castro said.
DHS blamed Castro Rivera’s death on “a direct result of every politician, activist and reporter who continue to spread propaganda and misinformation about ICE’s mission and ways to avoid detention.”
Similar deaths amid immigration operations elsewhere have triggered protests, lawsuits and calls for investigation amid claims that the Trump administration’s initial accounts are misleading.
Last month in suburban Chicago, federal immigration agents fatally shot a Mexican man during a traffic stop. DHS initially said a federal officer was “seriously injured,” but police body camera video showed the federal officer walking around and describing his own injuries as “ nothing major.”
In July a farmworker who fell from a greenhouse roof during a chaotic ICE raid at a California cannabis facility died of his injuries. And in August a man ran away from federal agents onto a freeway in the same state and was fatally struck by a vehicle.