A routine stop turned violent when a desperate driver tried to blast his way out of a U.S. Border Patrol checkpoint, leaving a federal agent injured and a courtroom reckoning months later. The sentence is now in, raising sharp questions about risk, responsibility, and how far someone will go to avoid arrest.
The August 1, 2023 encounter on U.S. Highway 57 began like countless inspections. A Border Patrol canine alerted agents to something suspicious in the trunk of 26-year-old Kevin Dominguez’s sedan, shifting the tone from routine to urgent within seconds.
When agents opened the trunk and found an undocumented person concealed inside, Dominguez made a split-second decision that reshaped his future. He threw the car into reverse, struck a federal agent, and sped away from the checkpoint in a frantic attempt to escape.
He did not get far. Arrested shortly afterward, Dominguez faced federal charges for assaulting a federal officer and unlawfully transporting an individual. Prosecutors argued that in those chaotic seconds, he gambled with two lives—the agent’s and the hidden passenger’s.
The injured officer ultimately recovered, but the courtroom focus remained on the gravity of the act. The judge emphasized that striking a federal agent while fleeing law enforcement could not be minimized as panic or poor judgment.
Dominguez was sentenced to 18 months in federal prison, followed by supervised release. The punishment, the court said, was meant to send a broader message: violence at a checkpoint, even in desperation, carries consequences that extend well beyond a single moment on a remote border road.