(PHOENIX, ARIZONA) Federal and local authorities are investigating a contested traffic stop that escalated into a five-hour standoff in Avondale on the morning of October 22, 2025, after U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said a 21-year-old Honduran immigrant, William Hernandez, rammed an agent’s vehicle and fled. Two ICE agents were hospitalized, and the FBI opened a probe for possible assault on a federal officer, a felony under 18 U.S.C. § 111.
The case, unfolding across Phoenix and Avondale, has drawn sharp community reaction and fresh debate over how enforcement actions are conducted in residential neighborhoods.

What ICE says happened
ICE said agents attempted a traffic stop when Hernandez allegedly refused to comply, struck an ICE vehicle with his truck, then ran on foot. According to ICE’s account, Hernandez later barricaded himself at a nearby home before authorities detained him and another undocumented family member.
The FBI confirmed it is investigating and will refer its findings to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for charging decisions. As of October 27, 2025, no formal charges had been announced, and Hernandez remained at the center of a case that could hinge on an unresolved question: who initiated the collision.
Conflicting accounts and video evidence
Multiple witnesses, including Hernandez’s wife, Charlyn Flores, dispute ICE’s description, saying agents aggressively drove into Hernandez’s truck. Flores told reporters that ICE officers caused the crash and that her husband did not ram anyone.
A doorbell camera video reviewed by ABC 15 shows Hernandez’s truck making contact with a stationary vehicle believed to be an ICE unit. However, glare, camera angles, and preexisting damage on the vehicles make it unclear who first set the movement that led to impact. In short, the video is inconclusive.
The inconclusive footage has become the focal point for both sides: supporters of Hernandez argue it undermines ICE’s claim, while ICE maintains the agents’ version is accurate.
With two agents treated at a hospital and a neighborhood shaken by a lengthy police presence, the unresolved facts now sit with federal investigators.
Witness descriptions of the scene
- Neighbors reported seeing unmarked or lightly marked vehicles cluster around the area and hearing commands shouted in both English and Spanish.
- After the collision, officers tracked Hernandez to a home, set up a perimeter, and called in backup.
- Negotiators and tactical teams arrived, contributing to a standoff that stretched for hours before authorities detained Hernandez and a relative with no lawful status.
- Family members said children were present and frightened as police moved in with rifles and shields.
Legal framework and investigative steps
The FBI’s inquiry for potential assault on a federal officer places the case within a well-established legal framework. Prosecutors evaluating potential charges will look to 18 U.S.C. § 111, which covers assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain officers or employees.
Key points investigators typically examine:
- Detailed collision analysis (skid marks, impact points, airbag deployments)
- Officer reports and witness statements
- Video evidence (doorbell, dash cam, body-worn cameras) and its limitations
- Timelines, radio logs, and physical evidence to determine intent and sequence of events
Without a clear, full view of the interaction, investigators generally cross-check all available evidence to reconstruct what happened.
Community response and advocacy
Community advocates mobilized quickly. The People First Project criticized the law enforcement response as excessive and launched fundraising for Hernandez’s legal defense. Organizers argue that enforcement actions near family homes early in the morning erode trust and demand public release of full, unedited footage before prosecutors consider charges.
Hernandez’s family members are seeking legal counsel to address both the criminal investigation and potential immigration consequences.
Local perspectives
- Supporters of law enforcement note two agents were injured and stress that running from a traffic stop raises safety risks for everyone in Avondale.
- Others recall past incidents in cities such as Oxnard and Los Angeles where initial ICE claims were later disputed by video or witnesses, deepening mistrust.
- Analysis by VisaVerge.com finds disputes between official statements and witness videos often shape community perceptions of federal actions and whether charges are seen as fair.
Immigration implications
For immigrant families, this event has consequences beyond criminal exposure:
- A federal conviction could carry jail time and trigger removal proceedings if the person lacks lawful status.
- An arrest alone can lead ICE to place someone into detention or initiate immigration court proceedings.
- Attorneys commonly advise families to:
- Document vehicle positions with photos
- Collect contact details for witnesses
- Save any video clips that might clarify events
Evidence, records, and defense requests
Authorities have not identified the specific ICE team involved in the Phoenix-area operation or released full patrol car video. In similar cases, defense counsel typically requests:
- All recordings: dash cams, body-worn cameras, doorbell/surveillance footage
- Dispatch audio and radio logs
- Internal guidance or policies on vehicle stops in residential areas
- Tactics regarding boxing in vehicles and thresholds for calling tactical units
Those records can test whether the operation followed agency policy and whether the collision was avoidable.
Timeline and next steps
- October 22, 2025: Attempted traffic stop in Avondale; collision with disputed initiation; foot chase; five-hour standoff.
- Authorities detained William Hernandez and a relative with no lawful status.
- The FBI is centralizing evidence, conducting interviews, and will send the case file to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for charging decisions.
- Federal officials said no further details would be released while the investigation is active.
The public record and remaining questions
For now, the public record contains three core strands:
- ICE’s claim that Hernandez rammed an agent’s vehicle.
- Witnesses’ accounts, including Flores’s, saying ICE rammed Hernandez.
- Video footage that does not resolve who initiated contact.
Those strands will guide any decision on an assault on a federal officer charge, an allegation that requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
Until the FBI completes its investigation and the U.S. Attorney’s Office decides on charges, residents of Phoenix and Avondale are left with an unsettling memory of flashing lights, blocked streets, and a family’s home at the center of a national debate over how immigration enforcement should be conducted in everyday neighborhoods.
This Article in a Nutshell
On October 22, 2025, a traffic stop in Avondale involving 21-year-old Honduran national William Hernandez resulted in a collision and a five-hour standoff. Two ICE agents were hospitalized, prompting the FBI to investigate a potential assault on a federal officer under 18 U.S.C. § 111; no formal charges had been announced as of October 27. Witnesses and Hernandez’s wife claim agents struck his truck, while ICE maintains Hernandez rammed an agent’s vehicle. Doorbell camera footage reviewed by local media is inconclusive due to glare, angles, and existing vehicle damage. Authorities detained Hernandez and another undocumented family member. Community groups demand release of full, unedited footage and raise concerns about enforcement tactics in residential neighborhoods. The FBI will compile evidence and forward its findings to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for charging decisions.