ICE killed a man who fought for America - by witholding his medicine

Torbee

Heisman
Sep 13, 2002
13,050
59,115
113
Classy administration we got here.

Yesterday morning, NBC News reported on the sudden death earlier this year of an Afghan national in the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Mohammad Nazeer Paktiawal, 41, had fought for a decade alongside U.S. Special Forces in Afghanistan. He was evacuated when U.S. troops pulled out in 2021 and entered the U.S. legally. He became a truck driver, worked at a market and bakery, and had requested asylum to remain here. That claim was pending when ICE seized him for deportation at his home in Richardson, Texas, on the morning of March 13, as he was getting his children ready for school.

Paktiawal died the next day in ICE custody. His death certificate says he died from “an adverse drug reaction” to an unidentified substance which triggered anaphylaxis and exacerbated his asthma, and his death was ruled an accident. We do know from his wife that he relied on an inhaler for asthma. We also know that ICE agents rejected her attempt to give them the device when he was taken into custody. We also know that Texas authorities have refused to release his autopsy report, arguing its disclosure would interfere with a pending criminal investigation.

Mohammed Nazeer Paktiawal was not a criminal. He was not here illegally. He was a threat to no one—except perhaps the Taliban. There was no reason for ICE to detain him—except to meet its arrest and deportation quotas. There is no reason for most of the fifty deaths in ICE detention during Trump’s second term except that the Trump administration is unsparing in pursuit of its mass deportation agenda, an agenda that is as irrational as it is crue
l.

 

WDDT

Heisman
Jan 3, 2023
11,000
11,780
113
Seems your sob story missed some details.

DALLAS — Mohammad Nazeer Paktiawal, 41, a criminal illegal alien from Afghanistan, passed away March 14 at the Parkland Hospital in Dallas, Texas. A physician at the hospital declared Paktiawal deceased at 9:10 a.m. Central Daylight Time. He had been in ICE custody for one day. His passing is currently under active investigation.

Paktiawal has a known criminal history including an arrest by local authorities for SNAP fraud, a felony, on Sept. 16, 2025. He was arrested a second time for theft on Nov. 1, 2025.

ICE arrested Paktiawal March 13 during a targeted enforcement action and placed him into immigration proceedings. At the time of arrest and processing, he did not report any prior medical history.

In the late evening of March 13, ICE contacted Emergency Medical Services when Paktiawal began complaining of shortness of breath and chest pains while in an ICE Dallas Field Office processing hold room. He was immediately transported to Parkland Hospital and received breathing treatment. The ER doctor recommended that he remain in the hospital for observation.

Early March 14, Paktiawal was eating breakfast when medical staff noted that his tongue had become swollen, prompting a medical response. After multiple lifesaving efforts were attempted, he was declared deceased at 9:10 a.m.

ICE notified his next of kin and the Consulate of Afghanistan in Toronto, Canada, of Paktiawal’s death on March 14.

Paktiawal entered the United States at Washington Dulles International Airport, Maryland Aug. 21, 2021 and was paroled into the U.S. by an immigration officer. The duration of his parole expired Aug. 20, 2025.

Consistent with ICE policy, ERO notified the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the DHS Office of Inspector General, and the ICE Office of Professional Responsibility via the Integrity Coordination Center. ERO will coordinate appropriate consular notifications in accordance with international and domestic laws and will make efforts to notify Paktiawal’s next of kin or other designated contact.

ICE makes official notifications to Congress, nongovernmental organization stakeholders and the media upon official reports of in-custody alien deaths and posts news releases with relevant details on ICE's public website. You may access this information in ICE.gov’s Newsroom. Congressional requirements described in the DHS Appropriations Act of 2018 require ICE to publicize all reports regarding in-custody deaths within 90 days. You may access these reports on ICE.gov’s Detainee Death Reporting page.

ICE is committed to ensuring that all those in custody reside in safe, secure and humane environments. Comprehensive medical care is provided from the moment individuals arrive and throughout the entirety of their stay. All people in ICE custody receive medical, dental and mental health intake screenings within 12 hours of arriving at each detention facility; a full health assessment within 14 days of entering ICE custody or arrival at a facility; access to medical appointments; and 24-hour emergency care. At no time during detention is a detained alien denied emergency care.

Updated: 03/16/2026
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There is always an asterisk.
 

WDDT

Heisman
Jan 3, 2023
11,000
11,780
113
I ignore morons. I presume the village idiot twin is bootlicking in his post?
Why acknowledge facts when you could just plug your ears and piss your pants eh bud?



There is a reason your wife makes you sit in the corner while her a$$hole gets blown out like a blockbuster super Mario brothers cassette.
 
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jimneffer

All-Conference
Jan 27, 2026
1,428
4,407
113
Seems your sob story missed some details.

DALLAS — Mohammad Nazeer Paktiawal, 41, a criminal illegal alien from Afghanistan, passed away March 14 at the Parkland Hospital in Dallas, Texas. A physician at the hospital declared Paktiawal deceased at 9:10 a.m. Central Daylight Time. He had been in ICE custody for one day. His passing is currently under active investigation.

Paktiawal has a known criminal history including an arrest by local authorities for SNAP fraud, a felony, on Sept. 16, 2025. He was arrested a second time for theft on Nov. 1, 2025.

ICE arrested Paktiawal March 13 during a targeted enforcement action and placed him into immigration proceedings. At the time of arrest and processing, he did not report any prior medical history.

In the late evening of March 13, ICE contacted Emergency Medical Services when Paktiawal began complaining of shortness of breath and chest pains while in an ICE Dallas Field Office processing hold room. He was immediately transported to Parkland Hospital and received breathing treatment. The ER doctor recommended that he remain in the hospital for observation.

Early March 14, Paktiawal was eating breakfast when medical staff noted that his tongue had become swollen, prompting a medical response. After multiple lifesaving efforts were attempted, he was declared deceased at 9:10 a.m.

ICE notified his next of kin and the Consulate of Afghanistan in Toronto, Canada, of Paktiawal’s death on March 14.

Paktiawal entered the United States at Washington Dulles International Airport, Maryland Aug. 21, 2021 and was paroled into the U.S. by an immigration officer. The duration of his parole expired Aug. 20, 2025.

Consistent with ICE policy, ERO notified the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the DHS Office of Inspector General, and the ICE Office of Professional Responsibility via the Integrity Coordination Center. ERO will coordinate appropriate consular notifications in accordance with international and domestic laws and will make efforts to notify Paktiawal’s next of kin or other designated contact.

ICE makes official notifications to Congress, nongovernmental organization stakeholders and the media upon official reports of in-custody alien deaths and posts news releases with relevant details on ICE's public website. You may access this information in ICE.gov’s Newsroom. Congressional requirements described in the DHS Appropriations Act of 2018 require ICE to publicize all reports regarding in-custody deaths within 90 days. You may access these reports on ICE.gov’s Detainee Death Reporting page.

ICE is committed to ensuring that all those in custody reside in safe, secure and humane environments. Comprehensive medical care is provided from the moment individuals arrive and throughout the entirety of their stay. All people in ICE custody receive medical, dental and mental health intake screenings within 12 hours of arriving at each detention facility; a full health assessment within 14 days of entering ICE custody or arrival at a facility; access to medical appointments; and 24-hour emergency care. At no time during detention is a detained alien denied emergency care.

Updated: 03/16/2026
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Report suspicious activity: 1-866-DHS-2-ICE
U.S. Department of Homeland Security Seal
ICE.gov

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There is always an asterisk.
if he was a criminal illegal alien, how was he arrested in texas 3 separate times between Sept 2025 and March 2026?

why was he released from custody after the first arrest?
 

GesterHawk

Heisman
Jan 3, 2023
19,893
38,754
113
Seems your sob story missed some details.

DALLAS — Mohammad Nazeer Paktiawal, 41, a criminal illegal alien from Afghanistan, passed away March 14 at the Parkland Hospital in Dallas, Texas. A physician at the hospital declared Paktiawal deceased at 9:10 a.m. Central Daylight Time. He had been in ICE custody for one day. His passing is currently under active investigation.

Paktiawal has a known criminal history including an arrest by local authorities for SNAP fraud, a felony, on Sept. 16, 2025. He was arrested a second time for theft on Nov. 1, 2025.

ICE arrested Paktiawal March 13 during a targeted enforcement action and placed him into immigration proceedings. At the time of arrest and processing, he did not report any prior medical history.

In the late evening of March 13, ICE contacted Emergency Medical Services when Paktiawal began complaining of shortness of breath and chest pains while in an ICE Dallas Field Office processing hold room. He was immediately transported to Parkland Hospital and received breathing treatment. The ER doctor recommended that he remain in the hospital for observation.

Early March 14, Paktiawal was eating breakfast when medical staff noted that his tongue had become swollen, prompting a medical response. After multiple lifesaving efforts were attempted, he was declared deceased at 9:10 a.m.

ICE notified his next of kin and the Consulate of Afghanistan in Toronto, Canada, of Paktiawal’s death on March 14.

Paktiawal entered the United States at Washington Dulles International Airport, Maryland Aug. 21, 2021 and was paroled into the U.S. by an immigration officer. The duration of his parole expired Aug. 20, 2025.

Consistent with ICE policy, ERO notified the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the DHS Office of Inspector General, and the ICE Office of Professional Responsibility via the Integrity Coordination Center. ERO will coordinate appropriate consular notifications in accordance with international and domestic laws and will make efforts to notify Paktiawal’s next of kin or other designated contact.

ICE makes official notifications to Congress, nongovernmental organization stakeholders and the media upon official reports of in-custody alien deaths and posts news releases with relevant details on ICE's public website. You may access this information in ICE.gov’s Newsroom. Congressional requirements described in the DHS Appropriations Act of 2018 require ICE to publicize all reports regarding in-custody deaths within 90 days. You may access these reports on ICE.gov’s Detainee Death Reporting page.

ICE is committed to ensuring that all those in custody reside in safe, secure and humane environments. Comprehensive medical care is provided from the moment individuals arrive and throughout the entirety of their stay. All people in ICE custody receive medical, dental and mental health intake screenings within 12 hours of arriving at each detention facility; a full health assessment within 14 days of entering ICE custody or arrival at a facility; access to medical appointments; and 24-hour emergency care. At no time during detention is a detained alien denied emergency care.

Updated: 03/16/2026
Media Inquiries
About Us
Enforcement and Removal Operations
Homeland Security Investigations
Newsroom
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement logo
Facebook
X
YouTube
Flickr
Instagram
LinkedIn
Email
RSS
ICE Contact Center

Report suspicious activity: 1-866-DHS-2-ICE
U.S. Department of Homeland Security Seal
ICE.gov

An official website of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security

About ICE
Accessibility
FOIA Requests
Privacy Policy
DHS.gov
Archive
No FEAR Act Data
Site Links
Performance Reports
Inspector General
The White House
DHS Components
USA.gov
Mobile Menu Bar
Menu
Search
Report Crime



There is always an asterisk.
So does that mean he deserved to die
 

WDDT

Heisman
Jan 3, 2023
11,000
11,780
113
if he was a criminal illegal alien, how was he arrested in texas 3 separate times between Sept 2025 and March 2026?

why was he released from custody after the first arrest?
He had two local arrests in Texas (Sept. and Nov. 2025) plus the March 2026 ICE arrest—three encounters total. He was released after the local ones because they were standard criminal justice processing for non-violent allegations without immediate detention mandates, and he had no final convictions.

ice.gov

Key Facts from ICE and News ReportsSept. 16, 2025: Arrested by local authorities in the Dallas area for alleged SNAP (food stamp) fraud—a felony involving $200 or more. A grand jury indicted him, but the case was pending (not resolved/convicted) at the time of his death.

ice.gov

Nov. 1, 2025: Arrested for theft (reportedly involving a Walmart incident where he forgot his wallet; family described it as a misunderstanding). He was released on bail; no conviction, and in some accounts, he was not even formally charged.

texasmonthly.com

March 13, 2026: ICE arrested him at his home in Richardson, Texas, during a targeted enforcement action for immigration violations (his humanitarian parole had expired in 2025; asylum claim was pending). He died the next day in a hospital after a medical emergency.

nbcnews.com

ICE publicly labeled him a "criminal illegal alien" with "previous arrests for fraud and theft" in their detainee death notification.

ice.gov

Why Released After the First (and Second) Arrest?These were local Texas law enforcement arrests, not federal immigration detainers initially. Standard procedure for such cases (especially non-violent, first-time or low-level allegations) often involves booking, possible bail/bond, and release pending court proceedings—particularly if no flight risk or public safety threat was deemed high enough for pretrial detention.
No convictions occurred. Sources (including family, advocates, and background checks by outlets like NPR) confirm the cases were unresolved/pending. One was described as an honest mistake with SNAP benefits amid policy changes cutting aid to many parolees.

texasmonthly.com +1

Local authorities handle their cases independently. ICE can issue detainers, but these don't always result in holds if not prioritized or if the person posts bond quickly. Here, ICE acted later via a targeted operation once his immigration status lapsed.

Context on status: He entered the U.S. legally in 2021 via humanitarian parole/evacuation after serving ~10 years alongside U.S. Special Forces in Afghanistan. His parole expired in August 2025; asylum was pending. ICE prioritized him for removal due to the arrests + expired status.

nbcnews.com

This case became controversial due to his military service ally background, the rapid death in custody (ruled accidental from an allergic/anaphylactic reaction), and debate over the "criminal" label vs. unconvicted arrests. Family and advocates disputed some ICE details. The arrests themselves followed routine local processes common for many people (citizen or not) facing similar allegations.
 

GesterHawk

Heisman
Jan 3, 2023
19,893
38,754
113
We don't need ICE. We need a robust and effective Border Patrol.
We would still need an entity whose job it is to work within the boarders and whose responsibility is with people currently residing within the country.

But it does not, should not, and cannot be an army of over-weaponized masked thugs working outside the bounds of our Constitution.

So, yes, we need ICE just not the current ICE.
 
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WDDT

Heisman
Jan 3, 2023
11,000
11,780
113
Your pointing out his criminal record would imply, at best, that you are indifferent to the loss of a human life due to said criminal record.
I posted the full response from the DHS website. Those are not my words. His criminal history was given to clarify why he was arrested.
 

lucas80

Heisman
Jan 30, 2008
13,232
31,062
113
Classy administration we got here.

Yesterday morning, NBC News reported on the sudden death earlier this year of an Afghan national in the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Mohammad Nazeer Paktiawal, 41, had fought for a decade alongside U.S. Special Forces in Afghanistan. He was evacuated when U.S. troops pulled out in 2021 and entered the U.S. legally. He became a truck driver, worked at a market and bakery, and had requested asylum to remain here. That claim was pending when ICE seized him for deportation at his home in Richardson, Texas, on the morning of March 13, as he was getting his children ready for school.

Paktiawal died the next day in ICE custody. His death certificate says he died from “an adverse drug reaction” to an unidentified substance which triggered anaphylaxis and exacerbated his asthma, and his death was ruled an accident. We do know from his wife that he relied on an inhaler for asthma. We also know that ICE agents rejected her attempt to give them the device when he was taken into custody. We also know that Texas authorities have refused to release his autopsy report, arguing its disclosure would interfere with a pending criminal investigation.

Mohammed Nazeer Paktiawal was not a criminal. He was not here illegally. He was a threat to no one—except perhaps the Taliban. There was no reason for ICE to detain him—except to meet its arrest and deportation quotas. There is no reason for most of the fifty deaths in ICE detention during Trump’s second term except that the Trump administration is unsparing in pursuit of its mass deportation agenda, an agenda that is as irrational as it is crue
l.

Relax. The article clearly states there is an ongoing criminal investigation. If you can't trust the professionals in this administration, who can you trust?
 

GesterHawk

Heisman
Jan 3, 2023
19,893
38,754
113
If that happened, you better be hosting a livestream!
John Candy No GIF by Laff


I ain't giving that away for free.
 
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Reactions: GOHOX69
Jun 1, 2026
821
322
63
So does that mean he deserved to die
I don’t think anyone has mentioned anything along the lines that he deserved to die. He died while in custody, unrelated to anything ice or anyone else did to him.
Long story short, just another illegal costing tax payer money and I’m sure it will still be costing us money as we will most likely pay to ship him somewhere to be laid to rest.
I’ll never understand you or the op and others defending criminals. Instead you have blamed a department for a death of a criminal that they had nothing to do with.
 
Jun 1, 2026
821
322
63
Your pointing out his criminal record would imply, at best, that you are indifferent to the loss of a human life due to said criminal record.
You seeing that he had a criminal record in the media release would imply, at best, that you believe others don’t care that he died due to said criminal record.
See how easy that was to play the other side?
 

GOHOX69

All-Conference
Sep 26, 2009
2,542
4,288
113
@Torbee and I could be brothers from another mother. I got the same beard going. My employees hate it and want me to shave it asap. Their rage only spurs me on to make this David Letterman esque. Sadly, I have to travel and I know I won't clear customs anywhere, except Kabul and Islamabad, given my skin tone so it will see a razor. But I'm holding on to my facial hair like grim death. What happened to the freaking black color?
 
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