So, based on the summary, it's a he said / she said situation (unless I missed something). He was arrested for assaulting/impeding a federal officer. The only way we will know if it was justified is when the court case comes out. If they are guilty of wrongdoing, they should be held accountable.
However, this was bound to happen. I pointed this out WAY before Trump's second season that the media's going to ignore all the good, and highlight the bad. It's inevitable ICE/DHS will make mistakes, and anyone with common sense knows this.
For example, I saw something like 170 US Citizens wrongly detained. That's bad.....but put it with 600,000 arrests/deports, it's tiny in comparison. That means under 0.03% was done wrong, which puts them near perfect.
But the reality is, if the prior admin enforce our border, this admin wouldn't have to clean it up.
Regardless of when that event happened, the video was posted today by both deadz and then reposted by Illuminati. I am not sure why they posted it because neither of them made any reference to it. Instead rehashing the details of the incident in Minneapolis. I found that odd.
FYI, civil lawsuits in L.A. County take one to three years to get heard in court. I would not expect there to be an update on it so soon unless the government settled which has a 'snowballs chance in hell' to happen.
As for the total number of illegal immigrants deported, it is what DHS has claimed. This number is under dispute, particularly the number of illegal immigrants with a criminal history.
It is not clear to me why anyone who is a U.S. citizen should have been detained if they were wrongly arrested and accused. Even if the folks arrested could not show proof of citizenship, the government should be able to verify it pretty quickly.
In more normal times, most U.S. citizens did not carry around proof of U.S. citizenship, I.E. a real ID driver's license, birth certificate, or passport, unless they were traveling out of the country. In fact, it is not legally required for U.S. citizens to carry proof of U.S. citizenship.
But, just to be safe, I recently upgraded my Oregon Driver's License to an EDL, which is supposed to insure a person is a legal U.S. citizen, but still does not insure it, and it is advised folks carry an unexpired passport, or a certified U.S. birth certificate with them. Who does this?