logo
Miami man claiming to be ICE agent arrested for DUI with children in Florida Keys, deputies say

Miami man claiming to be ICE agent arrested for DUI with children in Florida Keys, deputies say

CBS News4 days ago
A Miami man claiming to be a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent was arrested for allegedly driving drunk in the Florida Keys while he had two young children in his vehicle, deputies said.
The Monroe County Sheriff's Office said they had arrested 42-year-old Scott Thomas Deiseroth of Miami on Wednesday afternoon after another motorist called to report his reckless driving. He is currently in jail and facing a DUI charge, along with two counts of child endangerment, authorities said.
Deputies said Deiseroth identified himself as an ICE agent during the traffic stop. CBS News Miami reached out to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and a spokesperson with the agency said they were not aware of the arrest and were investigating it.
Just before 3:25 p.m., MCSO received the call regarding a vehicle driving recklessly near Mile Marker 40 on U.S. Highway 1 near the Seven Mile Bridge. When deputies responded, they saw the vehicle with Deiseroth behind the wheel and "driving into oncoming traffic and swerving heavily," MCSO said.
MCSO said the vehicle was stopped near Mile Marker 36.5, where deputies found two children — ages 7 and 9 — inside the vehicle. Deputies also smelled a "strong odor of alcohol" emanating from Deiseroth, who also misidentified his location and gave an erroneous travel direction, the agency added.
After Deiseroth failed standardized field exercises, he was taken to jail. MCSO said the children were turned over to a family member and that they notified the Florida Department of Children and Families about the incident.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ICE Arrests TikTok Influencer Who Documented Immigration Raids at Her Home on Livestream
ICE Arrests TikTok Influencer Who Documented Immigration Raids at Her Home on Livestream

Yahoo

time11 hours ago

  • Yahoo

ICE Arrests TikTok Influencer Who Documented Immigration Raids at Her Home on Livestream

An onlooker attempted to disrupt the detainment of Leidy Tatiana Mafla-Martinez by towing a police vehicle Colombian TikTok influencer Leidy Tatiana Mafla-Martinez was taken into ICE custody while live streaming from her home in Los Angeles. Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said Martinez was arrested in connection with a prior DUI. Newsweek reported Martinez, who is well-known on TikTok for posting videos that document several ICE arrests, was filmed on Friday seated in her Tesla when agents opened her car door and pulled her onto the pavement. She also appeared to experience a medical event during the arrest, and at one point onlookers are heard demanding treatment for her. More from TheWrap ICE Arrests TikTok Influencer Who Documented Immigration Raids at Her Home on Livestream Gal Gadot Says Hollywood 'Pressure' to Speak Against Israel Affected 'Snow White' Box Office | Video Gavin Newsom Explains the Social Media Strategy Behind His Viral Trump Trolling MrBeast, Adin Ross and xQc Raise $12 Million in 18-Hour TeamWater Charity Livestream The arrest was also briefly interrupted by a man who attempted to tow one of the police cars in the arrest. 'He mocked and videotaped ICE officers chasing after him,' McLaughlin also told Newsweek. 'Secretary Noem has been clear: Anyone who seeks to impede law enforcement will be found and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.' Martinez was initially transported to White Memorial Hospital and is currently being held in a detention center in downtown Los Angeles. On Thursday, Los Angeles Rep. Jimmy Gomez accused ICE of staging an empty migrant detention center. 'One person was talking to the Mexican consulate who happened to be there, and the other person was just in the cell with their head down on a table or on the table or something. He was just kind of sitting there,' Gomez said of the center he visited recently. Gomez also questioned why the center was so empty despite the numerous arrests made recently. Nearly 2,800 people have been taken into ICE custody since early June. 'They've been running raids, even over the weekend, and all of a sudden there's no one there? That's just completely bizarre,' he told MSNBC's Jen Psaki. The post ICE Arrests TikTok Influencer Who Documented Immigration Raids at Her Home on Livestream appeared first on TheWrap.

Man yells for help as ICE agents carry him from LA courthouse into unmarked car, video shows
Man yells for help as ICE agents carry him from LA courthouse into unmarked car, video shows

CNN

time12 hours ago

  • CNN

Man yells for help as ICE agents carry him from LA courthouse into unmarked car, video shows

A man yelled for help as a group of men – one of whom said he was with Immigration and Customs Enforcement – picked him up and pushed him into a car outside a Los Angeles courthouse Wednesday, video shows. The detention has been condemned by the county's top judge and the man's lawyers, who said such operations will deter people from showing up to court. Video obtained by the Los Angeles Times shows the man being carried away with his hands bound behind his back. Those detaining him are in plainclothes, and some are wearing masks. The detained man repeatedly screams, 'Can you help me, please?' as his body flails. The man is then pushed into the back seat of an unmarked car. It's not clear where he was taken. Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin later identified the man as Steven Reyes-Luna in a statement to CNN Saturday. 'ICE arrested Steven Reyes-Luna, a criminal alien from Guatemala, outside a courthouse following a preliminary hearing for his drug trafficking charges on August 13, 2025,' McLaughlin said. 'This criminal entered our country under the Biden Administration in 2024. A judge issued a final order of removal on March 27, 2025.' The incident happened as ICE increasingly make arrests at courthouses under recent guidance from the Trump administration. Los Angeles County Superior Court's presiding judge issued a critical statement in response to questions about Wednesday's incident, saying such operations will have a negative effect on the judicial system. 'While the court is rarely notified of federal immigration enforcement activity occurring outside our courthouse, I am deeply disturbed by such actions,' the presiding judge, Sergio C. Tapia II, said in a release. 'These intimidating and unnecessary displays undermine public trust in the justice system, deter people from seeking justice, and send a dangerous message to immigrant communities that they are not safe to fully and freely participate in the legal process.' Court records show Reyes-Luna, who is represented by the Los Angeles County Alternate Public Defender's Office, had an appearance at the county's criminal justice center Wednesday on a state felony charge of having or buying illegal drugs with the intent to sell them. Records show he had pleaded not guilty to the charge on July 31 and was free on his own recognizance. 'These alleged ICE agents, without a warrant or any explanation, clearly deprived our client of his liberty without due process,' Public Defender's Office spokesperson Jenny Cheng said in an email to CNN. 'It shocks the conscience to see any human violently abducted by a group of mostly masked unidentified individuals. Such aggressive ICE abductions threaten the integrity of the court system and discourage participation.' Wednesday's detention happened outside the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center, according to the Times and the L.A. Public Press, which told CNN it obtained the video from a witness and published a shorter, edited clip on social media. In the longer video published by the Times, an onlooker asks one of the men detaining Reyes-Luna whether he is from ICE. The man responds, 'yes.' When further questioned by an onlooker, the man quickly flashes a badge twice. While the footage is too blurry to show exactly what the badge says, it resembles a Homeland Security Investigations badge. The person who appears to be taking the video asks if the men have arrest warrants, and the men do not respond to that question. It's unclear where Reyes-Luna is being detained following his arrest. ICE and the Department of Homeland Security previously operated under guidelines that limited immigration enforcement at or near courthouses, but the Trump administration rescinded those guidelines shortly into the president's second term. Masked law enforcement officers have been showing up at courthouses across the country to arrest migrants. Trump officials have argued the previous guidance hampered the ability of immigration enforcement officers to apprehend people they say are dangerous individuals. 'The ability of law enforcement to make arrests of criminal illegal aliens in courthouses is common sense,' McLaughlin said in a May news release. 'It conserves valuable law enforcement resources because they already know where a target will be. It is also safer for our officers and the community. These illegal aliens have gone through security and been screened to not have any weapons.' Immigrant rights groups have said the increasing number of courthouse arrests by ICE reflect a broader trend of enforcement extending into places once considered out of bounds and no longer confined to border crossings or work sites. The Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office, which is prosecuting Reyes-Luna for the drug charge, said it had no prior knowledge of and played no part in Wednesday's detention outside of court. 'Our ultimate goal is to seek justice for victims and hold criminals accountable,' the district attorney's office wrote in a statement. 'Detaining a defendant before the judicial process has concluded interferes with our ability to prosecute cases and is not to the advantage of the pursuit of justice.' CNN's Holly Yan, Caroll Alvarado and Sara Smart contributed to this report.

Caught on video: Cyclist claims Miami Beach police arrested him for touching police cruiser
Caught on video: Cyclist claims Miami Beach police arrested him for touching police cruiser

CBS News

time13 hours ago

  • CBS News

Caught on video: Cyclist claims Miami Beach police arrested him for touching police cruiser

A 55-year-old cyclist said he was unfairly arrested and charged with two felonies after placing his hands on a police cruiser during an operation on Ocean Drive. Vladimir Tovar, an engineer from Miami, faces charges of disorderly conduct and resisting arrest. According to the arrest report, Tovar "intentionally struck" the cruiser hard enough to cause dents "approximately four to five times" before ignoring commands to stop. "I put my hand (on) the police car," Tovar said after bonding out of jail Friday morning. Police: Cyclist ignored orders to stop Tovar said he rode his bicycle into Miami Beach Thursday evening. On Ocean Drive, he rolled past undercover officers preparing to arrest people involved in illegal sales. During the operation, officers requested a cruiser nearby to keep everyone safe, a Miami Beach Police Department spokesman said. The cruiser was partially in the bike lane when cameras recorded Tovar approaching. "A cyclist traveling northbound reportedly struck the marked police vehicle intentionally before fleeing the area despite a sergeant's lawful directive to stop," MBPD Public Information Officer Christopher Bess said in a statement. "The cyclist was subsequently located and arrested." Tovar says he tried to avoid other riders, barriers Tovar insists he did nothing wrong. He said video shows another cyclist approaching him as he neared the cruiser. He claims he put his hand on the vehicle to keep his balance while avoiding the other cyclist and barriers in the street. "The first hand (on the cruiser) was to stop," Tovar said. "The second hand (was) to (not) fall down. I just (tried) to stop." Tovar also expressed frustration with how officers treated him after his arrest. "It's crazy," he said. "At the Miami Beach detention center, they sent me to a little jail with people with mental problems. Then, they put me in a van with nine people with 90 degrees outside like you see people at the border." "How can I explain this to my 17-year-old son?" he asked. Tovar said he plans to fight the charges.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store