Details are still trickling in about three migrant victims, days after a Sept. 24 shooting at a Dallas Immigration and Customs Enforcement field office.

Names and nationalities of the three detainees who were shot have now been released. The shooting left one dead and two in critical condition, in what investigators described as a targeted attack against ICE personnel.

No agents were injured in the attack. Instead, the 29-year-old man shot detainees who were shackled in a van at the field office from a nearby rooftop, officials said.

A senior Department of Homeland Security official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, identified the men as Miguel Angel Garcia Medina, of Mexico; Jose Andres Bordones-Molina, of Venezuela; and Norlan Guzman-Fuentes, of El Salvador. The official provided alleged criminal histories of the detainees, but did not specify which man died, nor the extent of the other two wounded men who survived.

However, records from the Dallas County Medical Examiner indicate that Guzman-Fuentes, 37, died; officials ruled his death a homicide.

Garcia's wife, Stephany Gauffeny, told USA TODAY that her 31-year-old husband, a father of four, is hospitalized and unconscious after getting hit multiple times in the shooting, sustained injuries to the neck, stomach, tailbone and shoulder. The couple is expecting their fifth child to arrive any day.

Local advocates have decried the lack of information on the migrant victims.

What happened in the shooting?

On the morning of Sept. 24, Joshua Jahn allegedly drove to the immigration law office with a ladder and climbed to the top of the roof. Officials said he indiscriminately fired at the ICE field office using an 8mm bolt-action rifle, striking a van holding detainees in the sally port and hitting the building.

Surveillance footage released by Fox News showed shackled detainees struggling to escape from the van as the shooting unfolded. Several ICE and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agents ran to the van under fire to retrieve the injured detainees, federal officials said.

Officials later found Jahn dead from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot.

They said they recovered writings indicating Jahn sought to terrorize agents carrying out the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown. The shooting was the third targeting a Texas immigration facility.

Federal officials have increased security at ICE facilities nationwide. Attorney General Pam Bondi announced in a Sept. 26 post on X that the Justice Department would deploy agents to protect ICE facilities.

Contributing: Christopher Cann, Jeanine Santucci, Lauren Villagran, Rick Jervis and Nick Penzenstadler of USA TODAY

(This story was updated to include new information.)

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Who were the victims of the Dallas ICE facility shooting? Here's what we know.

Reporting by Eduardo Cuevas, USA TODAY / USA TODAY

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