DALLAS — Federal prosecutors told jurors Tuesday that a shooting outside a Texas immigration detention center last year was carried out by members of antifa, opening a closely watched trial that lawyers for the accused say seeks to wrongly punish a group of political demonstrators.
Nine people have pleaded not guilty over their alleged involvement in what prosecutors called an attack on the Prairieland Detention Center near Dallas last July, when a police officer was shot in the neck and wounded.
Eight of the nine face a charge of providing material support to terrorists, which follows President Donald Trump's order to designate the decentralized movement known as antifa as a domestic terrorist organization. Most of the defendants also face multiple charges, including attempted murder of a law officer.
Lawyers for the defendants say the accused were not members of antifa and were instead taking part in a ''noise demonstration" that included fireworks on July 4, 2025, to show support for immigrants inside the center.
''Make no mistake, there's nothing peaceful about what happened on July Fourth,'' prosecutor Shawn Smith told jurors.
The trial is expected to last upward of three weeks. Several defendants face up to live in prison if convicted.
According to the indictment, a group of people clad in black and wearing masks, some carrying firearms and wearing body armor, shot fireworks toward the center and vandalized vehicles and a guard shed. Then, as local officers responded, one person yelled, ''get to the rifles'' and opened fire, striking the officer, the indictment said.
Smith said that while it was defendant Benjamin Song who opened fire, several other defendants are also charged with attempted murder of a law officer and discharging a firearm because it was foreseeable from the group's planning that that could happen. Song's attorney did not give an opening statement Tuesday.