ICE pepper sprays protesters and press at S.F. immigration court

Chaos erupted after ICE arrested an asylum-seeker at the courthouse

A young woman with long brown hair and a black top smiles at the camera in a softly lit indoor setting.A man with glasses and a beard smiles while sitting on grass in a park, wearing a white shirt. by MARGARET KADIFA and JOE RIVANO BARROS

August 20, 2025 (MissionLocal.org)

A police officer wearing protective gear confronts a masked individual holding a bicycle during a street incident. Another person stands nearby holding a sign or poster.
A police officer with the Department of Homeland Security clashes with a protester in Downtown San Francisco on Aug. 20, 2025. Photo by Zenobia Lloyd.
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Federal immigration agents pepper-sprayed protesters and a reporter in San Francisco on Wednesday after arresting an asylum-seeker in immigration court that morning.

In a chaotic street scene caught on video, the agents pulled out batons and tasers and tackled several protesters to the ground, detaining at least one.

As has become routine, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrested an asylum-seeker after a hearing at San Francisco’s immigration court, and were transporting them to their headquarters a half-mile away when protesters intervened. 

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ICE officers encountered about 20 people who had gathered outside the court at 100 Montgomery St. Immigrants legally seeking asylum have been routinely arrested after their court hearings and flown to far-flung detention centers, and protesters often congregate outside court.

https://videopress.com/embed/yo4w44hk?cover=1&preloadContent=metadata&useAverageColor=1&hd=0Protesters captured chaotic scenes outside San Francisco immigration court on Wednesday, as ICE agents tackled several people to the ground.

Witnesses said the two sides squared off — protesters trying to stop the vehicles, and ICE agents trying to get through.

“This car has ICE in it!” one protester yelled. “ICE is not welcome in San Francisco!” said another through a bullhorn as protesters stood in front of a silver minivan holding signs reading, “Stop your car to block ICE.”

Video shows masked ICE agents disembarking from the minivan and wielding batons to push the protesters aside. 

“The protesters and the ICE agents were facing off … and there were probably like 30-40 passers by, stopped, staring, filming,” said Zenobia Pellissier Lloyd, a freelance photographer and former Mission Local intern.

Pellissier Lloyd said traffic and a Muni bus had effectively blocked the ICE vehicles in. The ICE vehicles then turned around and sped down a one-way street, she said.

Several masked law enforcement officers detain and handcuff a person in front of a metal barricade on a city sidewalk.
ICE agents arresting a protester in downtown San Francisco at what have become common anti-ICE actions, on Aug. 20, 2025. Photo by Tyler Morris.

Video shows the protesters then chasing the van down the street.

About a dozen ICE agents headed toward 630 Sansome St., the ICE headquarters about a half mile away, followed by protesters. Pellissier Lloyd said the crowd shouted after them.

“It was just, ‘Shame! Shame! Shame!’ Someone had a megaphone saying, ‘These are ICE agents kidnapping our neighbors,” she said. “It was just a lot of, ‘What are you so afraid of? … How do you sleep at night? What will your children think of you?’”

A law enforcement officer in tactical gear points a yellow Taser at a white van on a city street near an ABC Cleaners storefront.
ICE agents in downtown San Francisco on Aug. 20, 2025. Photo by Zenobia Lloyd.

The ICE agents were “holding each other’s arms, hands on each other’s shoulders, saying “Stay close, stay close,” Pellissier Lloyd said. “They were blocking cameras, they were randomly lashing out at people … They all had their weapons out, tasers ready.” 

Several videos show ICE agents tussling with protesters, tackling at least four to the ground, zip-tying several, and pointing their tasers. At one point, an ICE agent “decides to turn and pepper-spray four people” about a block from the ICE headquarters, Pellissier Lloyd said.

One of them was a reporter with the online news site Gazetteer, who wrote that he was hit directly and “fell to the ground.”

“In a literal second, the agent pulled out his pepper gel, sprayed the protester next to me, and then shot a stream straight into my eyes,” the reporter, Eddie Kim, wrote.

A group of police officers face protesters, some with bicycles; one protester holds a "Road Closed" sign on a city street with tall buildings in the background.
ICE agents and protesters in downtown San Francisco on Aug. 20, 2025. Photo by Zenobia Lloyd.
Several law enforcement officers detain a person with a head covering on a city sidewalk while a photographer captures the scene.
ICE agents arrest protesters in downtown San Francisco on Aug. 20, 2025. Photo by Zenobia Lloyd.
Two law enforcement officers wearing tactical gear and face coverings detain a person and escort them into a gray van on a city street.
ICE agents in downtown San Francisco on Aug. 20, 2025. Photo by Zenobia Lloyd.
Law enforcement officers detain a person on the ground during an operation on a city street.
ICE agents zip tying a protester on the ground outside 630 Sansome St. on Aug. 20, 2025. Photo by Zenobia Lloyd.

Once the ICE agents arrived at HQ, “I turned and saw one protester on the ground, two ICE agents on top of them, and then dragging them into 630 Sansome,” Pellissier Lloyd said.

Mission Local has reached out to ICE for comment.

Wednesday’s detention marks the second time the Department of Homeland Security has detained a protester in San Francisco recently. On Aug. 8, ICE detained two protesters outside of the field office on Sansome.

Both of the people detained earlier this month were U.S. citizens. It was unclear if the protester detained on Wednesday was.

On Wednesday afternoon, the chaos outside could be felt inside the courtrooms as well.

Mission Local did not see any arrests at afternoon hearings. But one family was visibly shaken.

An asylum-seeker who appeared with two family members — including a child — asked the judge hearing his case, Arwen Swink, if he could appear by video for his next hearing.

“This is very tense for us,” he told Swink in Spanish through an interpreter. “This is the first day I feel afraid.”

A lawyer representing the Department of Homeland Security objected, citing department policy.

In recent months, asylum-seekers have been increasingly trying to appear remotely because of the arrests at San Francisco’s courtrooms.

Swink pushed back on the Homeland Security attorney.

There is “value” to in-person hearings, Swink said. But, the judge added, “many, many” immigrants have said they are afraid.

“The court does not condone using these facilities for any purposes that would generate fear,” Swink said, quickly adding the attorney himself may not be intending to do so.

Swink granted the man’s request to appear remotely in the future.

“Amen,” he said.

Immigrants like the man who was arrested this morning who are able to quickly connect with an attorney are sometimes released on habeas corpus petitions. Such petitions argue, often successfully in California, that their detention is a violation of their due process rights.

A person in sunglasses holds a sign reading "STOP YOUR CAR TO BLOCK ICE" during a street protest; other people and buildings are visible in the background.
Protesters attempting to block ICE vehicles carrying an immigrant in downtown San Francisco on Aug. 20, 2025. Photo by Zenobia Pellissier Lloyd.

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MARGARET KADIFA

margaret@missionlocal.com

I’m covering immigration. My background includes stints at The Economist in print and podcasting as well as reporting from The Houston Chronicle and elsewhere.More by Margaret Kadifa

JOE RIVANO BARROSSENIOR EDITOR

joe.rivanobarros@missionlocal.com

Joe was born in Sweden, where half of his family received asylum after fleeing Pinochet, and then spent his early childhood in Chile; he moved to Oakland when he was eight. He attended Stanford University for political science and worked at Mission Local as a reporter after graduating. He then spent time at YIMBY Action and as a partner for the strategic communications firm The Worker Agency. He rejoined Mission Local as an editor in 2023. You can reach him on Signal @jrivanob.99.More by Joe Rivano Barros

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