Eyes On Intel
Release Date: Friday, April 24, 2026
Episode Overview
If a federal agency can deploy chemical weapons against peaceful people singing civil rights hymns on a residential street and face zero consequences, what is stopping them from coming to your street next?
This week on Eyes On Intel, we break down the unhinged, violent ICE escalation on Dorset Street in South Burlington, Vermont that took place on March 11, 2026. We examine the timeline of the nine-hour standoff, question the complicity of local and state law enforcement, and name the weapons of war deployed against a peaceful community. We also look at the massive legislative victory in Oregon (SB 1516) restricting Automated License Plate Readers (ALPRs) and empowering the public to sue private tech vendors, and we track the growing, nationwide resistance against the deportation machine.
The machine operates on fear, but the resistance operates on solidarity. Resist ICE. Prosecute the Gestapo.
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Segment 1: The Assault on Freedom and Unity
The March 11 Timeline: Breaking down how ICE agents escalated a reckless, botched enforcement operation at 337 Dorset Street during the morning school run near South Burlington High School. Agents initiated a high-speed vehicle pursuit based on “mistaken identity,” crashing a vehicle and sparking chaos during morning rush hour.
The Human Chain: Following an emergency text alert from Migrant Justice’s Rapid Response Network, over 150+ Vermonters arrived to form a physical blockade, linking arms to shield the vulnerable individuals who sought refuge inside the two-family home.
Accountability: Scrutinizing the role of the South Burlington Police Department and the Burlington Police Department. While South Burlington Police Chief Bill Breault publicly called the federal agents’ tactics “poor decision making,” local officers stood on the perimeter while the situation escalated.
Reference Links:
VTDigger Investigative Report: ICE pushed ahead over state and local objections as Dorset Street raid escalated, police reviews conclude
WAMC Northeast Public Radio: South Burlington City Council to scrutinize ICE raid body camera video
Vermont Public Interest Research Group (VPIRG): About Last Week’s Botched ICE Raid
World Socialist Web Site (WSWS): A week after ICE raid in South Burlington, Vermont, 1 detainee free, 2 remain in custody
Segment 2: Weapons of War and The Collateral Damage
5:30 PM Breach: Federal agents, backed by the Vermont State Police Critical Action Team, assault the residence using a battering ram to smash down the door. During the breach, a federal agent accidentally discharged their service weapon.
The Arsenal: A breakdown of the crowd-control munitions deployed against peaceful protesters by federal agents attempting to exit the scene, including pepper spray, flash-bang grenades, and CS gas.
The Collateral Damage: ICE’s original target was Deyvi Daniel Corona-Sanchez, a 24-year-old Mexican national. He was not in the home. Instead, ICE took three innocent community members not named in the warrant:
Christian Humberto Jerez Andrade (31, of Honduras)
Jisella Johana Patin Patin (31, of Ecuador)
Daysi Camila Patin Patin (20, of Ecuador)
The Fallout: By March 25, ICE admitted in a federal court filing that the entire operation rested on a case of mistaken identity.
Mayor Mulvaney-Stanak’s Condemnation: Quoting the Mayor’s public statement calling the ICE tactics “instruments of terror.”
Reference Links:
Official City of Burlington Press Release: Statement from Mayor Emma Mulvaney-Stanak on ICE Enforcement Action in South Burlington
Vermont Legislature Brief (Public Comment): Duty of State and Municipal Law Enforcement Officers to Intervene (March 2026 PDF)
Segment 3: The Oregon Blueprint & The Growing Resistance
Oregon Senate Bill 1516: Signed by Governor Tina Kotek on March 31, 2026, this bipartisan omnibus package establishes Oregon’s first comprehensive Automated License Plate Reader (ALPR) framework.
How It Fights the Surveillance State: * Limits ALPR data retention to 30 days.
Mandates strict end-to-end encryption.
Prohibits data sharing for federal warrants not substantially equivalent to Oregon state law.
Crucially: Creates a private right of action empowering citizens to sue surveillance vendors (like Flock Safety) who misuse data or hand it over to federal immigration enforcement without a warrant.
The Nationwide Resistance: District Attorneys are pressing charges against federal agents; state courts are rejecting federal overreach; and grassroots organizers are mobilizing faster than ever.
Reference Links:
Oregon Public Broadcasting (OPB): New Oregon law regulates use of license plate readers
Oregon Legislative Information System (OLIS): Read the Full Staff Measure Summary for SB 1516
Vendor Policy Tracking: What Does Oregon Senate Bill 1516 Mean for ALPR Use in Oregon? (Flock Safety Blog Response)
Get Involved / Take Action
The state wants to blur the lines; clarity is what this moment needs. If you are tracking ICE operations in your local municipality, or if you have documents, timelines, or firsthand video accounts of federal overreach, we want to hear from you.
Secure Tip Line / Contact: [Insert Secure Email / Signal Number / Discord Link Here]
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