A Mexican man living in the United States has admitted in court to impersonating a Border Patrol agent and following federal immigration officers in a fake government truck. Jamie Ernesto Alvarez-Gonzalez, who overstayed his tourist visa, pleaded guilty to one count of impersonating a federal agent and three counts of illegally possessing firearms in a Southern California court.
According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of California, Alvarez-Gonzalez followed a Border Patrol agent while driving through a neighborhood in San Diego. He had modified his black Ford F-150, the same model used by undercover federal officers, to look like an official vehicle. The license plate frame had “federal truck” written on it, misspelled, and a Border Patrol sticker was placed on the windshield.
To make the truck look more real, he installed non-working radio antennae on the roof and hung handcuffs from the rearview mirror. The Associated Press reports that the disguise worked well enough that the Border Patrol agent he was following ended his mission, believing other agents were already responding to the area.
Alvarez-Gonzalez had a fake FBI badge and called in “reinforcements” to harass departing agents
When real agents confronted him, Alvarez-Gonzalez shouted obscenities and told them to leave the Linda Vista community. Shortly after, three other cars arrived and joined in, harassing the agents and chasing them on the highway as they left. This case is part of a broader national conversation about holding immigration enforcement agencies accountable.
Prosecutors said Alvarez-Gonzalez had made a recording where he boasted about actively looking for federal agents carrying out immigration enforcement work and said he had brought in his “reinforcements.” He also had a fake FBI badge on him at the time.
Alvarez-Gonzalez had originally entered the United States on a tourist visa decades ago and never left, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said. He has been living in the country illegally since then. His guilty plea covers one count of impersonating a federal agent and three counts of illegally possessing firearms.
The case was brought by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of California. Immigration enforcement tensions have also spilled into other areas of public life, including a California student’s lawsuit over ICE-related abuse at his school.
Federal authorities have not publicly stated what exactly motivated Alvarez-Gonzalez to follow and interfere with Border Patrol agents, but the charges reflect the serious nature of his actions, which directly disrupted active immigration enforcement missions.
Published: Apr 29, 2026 10:30 am