Shots fired, driver hurt and held after truck rams into Coast Guard base
in California
[October 25, 2025]
By KATHY McCORMACK
A truck driver who backed into a U.S. Coast Guard base in the San
Francisco Bay Area — the site of earlier protests against federal
immigration agents — was shot by law enforcement officers and wounded,
authorities said Friday.
The driver was held for a mental health evaluation after “attempting to
weaponize the vehicle to ram into Coast Guard Base Alameda ” on Thursday
night, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security posted on X. The FBI
later said the driver was in custody.
A bystander was struck by a “fragment,” treated at a hospital and
released, the Department of Homeland Security statement said. It did not
elaborate.
No Coast Guard personnel were hurt, it said. Officers issued “multiple
verbal commands” to stop, but the driver failed to comply, “suddenly
accelerating backwards at a high rate of speed directly toward them,”
the statement said.
“When the vehicle’s actions posed a direct threat to the safety of Coast
Guard and security personnel, law enforcement officers discharged
several rounds of defensive live fire," it said.
The driver was wounded in the stomach and was expected to survive, the
statement said.
The FBI was investigating. It sent evidence, crisis management and bomb
technician teams to the scene.
“At this time, the incident appears to be isolated, and there is no
known current threat to the public,” FBI spokesperson Cameron Polan in
San Francisco said in a statement.

No other details were immediately released.
Video from the scene showed what appeared to be a U-Haul truck trying to
back into the base.
“U-Haul is assisting law enforcement to meet any investigative needs
they have,” company spokesperson Jeff Lockridge said in a statement.
Coast Guard Island is a 67-acre (27-hectare) human-made island formed in
1913 in the Oakland Estuary between Oakland and Alameda. It is federally
owned, does not allow visits from the general public without an escort
or specific government identification, and it has been home to the
current base, Base Alameda, since 2012, according to a Coast Guard
document from 2016.
Base Alameda provides a variety of services for Coast Guard activities
throughout the West Coast.
Earlier Thursday, protesters had assembled at the island, with many
singing hymns and carrying signs saying, “Protect our neighbors” and “No
ICE or troops in the Bay,” a reference to U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement and the National Guard.
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Police officers examine a U-Haul truck involved in a shooting at the
entrance to Coast Guard Base Alameda, according to an officer at the
scene, Friday, Oct. 24, 2025, in Oakland, Calif. (AP Photo/Noah
Berger)

Hours earlier, President Donald Trump had called off a planned surge of
federal agents into San Francisco to quell crime. Mayor Daniel Lurie and
Gov. Gavin Newsom said it was unnecessary because crime is on the
decline.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents began arriving at the Coast
Guard base in the region earlier Thursday for a possible ramp up of
immigration enforcement, a move that drew several hundred protesters.
Trump said he backed off after speaking to the mayor and several
prominent business leaders who said they’re working hard to clean up the
city.
U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said Friday during a
news conference in Minneapolis that she had discussed the incident with
Trump and suggested the president could change his mind about holding
off a federal enforcement surge in the Bay Area if more violence occurs.
If they “don’t figure out how to protect our law enforcement officers
and protect our Coast Guard members, that we would be forced to come in
and protect those individuals,” she said.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement informed Alameda County Sheriff
Yesenia Sanchez that the operation had been called off for the entire
Bay Area, a nine-county region of about 8 million people, Sgt. Roberto
Morales, a spokesman for the sheriff, said Friday.
That decision was in contrast to others made by Trump to send the
military into Democratic-run cities over fierce resistance from mayors
and governors.
The deployment of National Guard troops on the streets of Washington
faced challenges in two courts on Friday — one in the nation’s capital
and another in West Virginia — while across the country a judge in
Portland, Oregon, was considering whether to let Trump deploy troops
there. Deployment remains blocked in the Chicago area.
___
Associated Press writers Olga R. Rodriguez in San Francisco and Audrey
McAvoy in Honolulu contributed.
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