From KERA News:
In the days leading up to July 4, 2025, prosecutors allege at least six people in a Signal group chat named the “4th of July Party!” discussed what to bring to the Prairieland Detention Center in Alvarado: fireworks, guns, medical kits.
The night of July 4, about a dozen people started shooting fireworks toward the facility holding people in ICE custody. Correctional officers called 911, and Alvarado Police Lt. Thomas Gross arrived minutes later.
That’s when federal prosecutors say someone in a green mask fired at Gross and the correctional officers from the woods. Court records alternately say Gross was shot in the neck or back.
Within a few days, 10 people were in federal custody and charged with the attempted murder of federal agents, and one was on the run. Nine more were arrested in the months to come.
“It was a planned ambush with the intent to kill ICE corrections officers,” then-Acting U.S. Attorney Nancy Larson told reporters the next Monday. “Make no mistake, this was not a so-called peaceful protest.”
But Maricela Rueda remembers things differently. In an interview from the Johnson County Jail last year, the 33-year-old mother from Fort Worth told KERA News the night of July 4 was meant to be a noise demonstration, a “joyful” show of support for the immigrants inside the ICE facility.
Rueda said she was afraid when she heard gunshots ring out, and described a scene of aggression and fear when she and a handful of others were arrested while walking away from Prairieland.
“I saw the mass of vehicles, police vehicles, state troopers’ vehicles, sheriff’s official vehicles. They put another person in the back of the car with me, and we didn’t speak. We all didn’t speak throughout this,” Rueda said. “Even through this time, what is there to cooperate when they want us to give them information to fill in the narrative they want to portray?”
A federal jury will decide how much of each narrative is true as Rueda and eight other defendants go on trial starting this week, with jury selection scheduled for Tuesday.
The case could prove the first major test of President Donald Trump’s push to prosecute antifa as a domestic terrorist organization. Tensions are rising across the country over the administration’s immigration enforcement, and government officials have described individuals involved in anti-ICE activism — like Minnesotans Renee Good and Alex Pretti — as terrorists, with little to no evidence.











