
Federal agents have arrested yet another illegal-alien thug who solicited the murder of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents.
This time, the suspect is Mexican Eduardo Aguilar, who posted his death wish for ICE agents — and the reward for murdering them — on TikTok.
The latest arrest follows not only the arrest of an illegal-alien goon in Chicago for doing likewise, but also the report that the drug cartels in Mexico have created a three-tiered bounty system for the kidnapping and murder of agents.

$10,000 Bounty
A criminal complaint dated October 11 and previously sealed says FBI agents with the North Texas Joint Terrorism Task Force reported that the Dallas Police Department told the bureau on October 10 about “a TikTok post soliciting individuals to murder ICE agents.”
Reproduced in the complaint, the post of October 9 says “I need 10 dudes in Dallas with determination (guts) who aren’t afraid to [two skull emojis],” with the emojis meaning “die.”
“The second phrase, in red and white text, states: ‘10K for each ICE agent,’” the complaint says.
The bureau quickly zeroed in on Aguilar:
This post was made from the TikTok account assigned to username “Eduardo.Aguilar004.” Emergency process was issued to TikTok for information regarding the account. In response, TikTok provided a Dallas based phone number and a Google email account associated with the account. Additional emergency process was issued to Verizon Wireless, initially believed to be the carrier supporting the Dallas-based phone number. That process returned a third-party provider, Charter Communications. Emergency process issued to Charter Communications associated the account with the name and address of Eduardo Aguilar.


The complaint alleges that Aguilar violated 18 U.S.C. § 875(c), which forbids using interstate communications to transmit a death threat.
Involved in the arrest of Aguilar were, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) reported, were ICE; the FBI; the Federal Protective Service; the U.S. Marshals; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; and the Dallas and Garland police departments.
Aguilar jumped the border in 2018 as an “unaccompanied minor,” and received a deportation order in February 2019, DHS reported. Of course, he became a criminal, with charges for “violating liquor laws.”
Chicago Arrest
Aguilar is the second illegal alien to be arrested this month for soliciting the murder of ICE agents. On October 6, ICE collared Latin Kings gang member Juan Espinosa Martinez, who No Kings malcontents will say is here to do a job Americans won’t do.
True, perhaps, if one of those jobs is paying a bounty to murder ICE agents — in this case, Greg Bovino, head of the Border Patrol.
“On October 03, 2025, a confidential source provided information indicating a ‘hit’ had been placed on Chief Bovino by a member of the Latin Kings Street Gang,” DHS reported. Agents arrested Martinez in Burr Ridge, Illinois, after Homeland Security Investigations
received a screenshot of a Snapchat conversation from a user named “Juan” appearing to place a $2,000 bounty for information “cuando lo agarren,” which translates to “when they catch him,” and a $10,000 reward “if you take him down.” A third response of “LK….on him” indicates the involvement of the Latin Kings.


Cartel Involvement
After federal authorities arrested Martinez, they revealed that the Mexican cartels have created a three-tiered bounty program to end in the murder of ICE agents.
Indeed, the department revealed, the cartels “have issued explicit instructions to U.S.-based sympathetics, including street gangs in Chicago, to monitor, harass, and assassinate federal agents” to stop the raids for jailing or deporting illegal-alien criminals.
One means of frustrating the immigration crackdown is a “spotter network.” Gang members deploy “‘spotters’ on rooftops equipped with firearms and radio communications,” DHS disclosed. The notorious Latin Kings are part of the operation, DHS alleged.
The bounty system is structured
to incentivize violence against federal personnel, with payouts escalating based on rank and action taken:
$2,000 for gathering intelligence or doxxing agents (including photos and family details).
$5,000–$10,000 for kidnapping or non-lethal assaults on standard ICE/CBP [Customs and Border Protection] officers.
Up to $50,000 for the assassination of high-ranking officials.
The Latin Kings operate in the United States “under two umbrella factions — Motherland, also known as KMC (King Motherland Chicago), and Bloodline (New York),” the Justice Department reported in a piece archived online in 2020.
The Motherland faction has “more than 160 structured chapters operating in 158 cities in 31 states,” DOJ reported. The KMC faction’s membership is some 20,000 to 35,000.
The gang derives income from dealing drugs, and represents itself “as a community organization while engaging in a wide variety of criminal activities, including assault, burglary, homicide, identity theft, and money laundering.”
It also boasts an offshoot wing, the Latin Queens, which is for women, not homosexuals or transvestites.
Chicago ICE Facilities Mapped
The murder solicitation is particularly worrisome in light of an anarchist website that has published “detailed layouts, diagrams and photos” of four ICE facilities in the Chicago area, as one news account said.
The website also published agents’ names, photos, and badge numbers.
That news surfaced after two radicals, federal authorities allege, attacked Border Patrol agents in the city.









