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A man was killed in Texas after a shooting at a US Border Patrol station

Local police reported that a 27-year old Michigan man died after police shot him dead Monday morning in McAllen, Texas. The Michigan man had opened fire with an assault weapon on a U.S. Border Patrol post.

McAllen police chief Victor Rodriguez said that Ryan Louis Mosqueda had fired dozens at the facility's entrance shortly before 6 am. U.S. Border Patrol agents responded with fire.

Rodriguez reported that a McAllen officer was wounded in the leg during an exchange of gunfire and taken to the hospital.

A Border Patrol agent was also injured, according to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

The police found more assault weapons and ammunition in Mosqueda’s Chevrolet car that was parked near, Rodriguez said.

He said that the suspect fired dozens and dozens of shots at the building, as well as the agents inside.

The vehicle was covered in writing, which Rodriguez thought was Latin. He did not say what the writing said or if it indicated the motive of the attack.

According to a former U.S. Customs and Border Protection employee, the Border Patrol special operations teams are housed in the facility where this shooting occurred.

Mosqueda, who was reported missing from Weslaco at 4 am, is believed to be a local. He lived about 18 miles (30 kilometers) east of McAllen.

Rodriguez stated that the FBI was leading the investigation, as there had been an attack against federal officers and on a federal building.

Law enforcement securing the area caused several hours of delays at McAllen International airport.

Former CBP officials who requested anonymity in order to discuss the details of the incident said that a member of Border Patrol’s tactical unit known as BORTAC helped stop the alleged gunman.

Donald Trump, Republican President, has made fighting illegal immigration his top priority. He sent troops to secure the U.S.Mexico border, and launched aggressive raids on U.S. cities.

Americans are concerned that the actions, supported by Trump's hardline Republican supporters, have led to arrests of noncriminals and enforcement techniques which include officers wearing masks in order to conceal their identities.

Under Trump, the number of illegal migrants crossing the border has dropped to new lows. A new monthly low was reached of 6,100 in late June.

Trump sent BORTAC agents in 2020, his first term to Portland, Oregon, to protect federal buildings following attacks on a federal building during protests against police brutality and racism. (Reporting and editing by Ted Hesson, Jasper Ward and Kevin Liffey; Reporting by Ted Hesson, Jasper Ward and Bill Berkrot)

(source: Reuters)