An illegal immigrant is now in federal custody after allegedly striking and killing Fort Bend County Sheriff's Deputy Kenneth Lewis in a hit-and-run last month, according to Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials.
On March 14, ICE agents took custody of Dennis Arguello-Acosta, the man investigators say slammed into Lewis on February 21 while the deputy had pulled over to assist drivers involved in a minor crash. Lewis died from his injuries at a nearby hospital. Arguello-Acosta fled the scene.
A law enforcement officer stopped to help strangers on the side of the road. He never came home. The man accused of killing him should never have been in the country.
The Manhunt and the Arrest
According to Breitbart, after Arguello-Acosta fled, the Federal Bureau of Investigation joined local law enforcement to track down the driver. The details of the investigation between the February 21 incident and the March 14 arrest remain sparse, but the outcome is clear: ICE agents ultimately took Arguello-Acosta into custody to prevent him from walking free.
Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Lauren Bis framed the arrest in blunt terms:
"Deputy Kenneth Lewis served his community honorably as a law enforcement officer — and he would still be with us today if it were not for this criminal illegal alien who should've never been in our country in the first place."
There is no ambiguity in that statement, and there shouldn't be. Lewis was doing the most routine, selfless kind of police work, pulling over to help at a fender bender, when an illegal immigrant's vehicle ended his life. The driver didn't stop. He ran.
ICE officials said they took Arguello-Acosta into custody specifically so that he would not be released onto the streets. He may soon face state charges.
A Preventable Death
Every crime committed by someone who should not be in the United States carries a particular sting. Not because the crime itself is categorically different from one committed by a citizen, but because the entire chain of events was avoidable. Enforce the border. Remove those who cross it illegally. Deputy Lewis goes home to his family.
That is the calculus that the open-borders crowd refuses to engage with honestly. They talk about "root causes." They talk about "comprehensive reform." They talk about everything except the man who is dead and the illegal immigrant who killed him.
Bis made the administration's posture unmistakable:
"Under President Trump, criminal illegal aliens are not welcome in the U.S."
That sentence does a lot of work, but only because the enforcement apparatus behind it is doing the work too. ICE agents tracked Arguello-Acosta down. They arrested him. They held him. This is what immigration enforcement looks like when the federal government treats it as a priority rather than a political inconvenience.
What Accountability Looks Like
The state charges that may follow will be important. Accountability for Deputy Lewis demands a full prosecution, not just an immigration hold. But the federal response here sets the tone. Arguello-Acosta is not out on bond. He is not lost in the system. He is in ICE custody.
Bis put it simply:
"ICE has arrested Arguello-Acosta to ensure that he is not free to roam on our streets and threaten public safety."
For years, Americans watched cases like this end differently. Illegal immigrants involved in serious crimes were released, shielded by sanctuary policies, or simply lost in a bureaucratic maze that seemed designed to avoid consequences. The families of victims were left to grieve while activists lectured them about compassion.
Fort Bend County is not getting a lecture. It is getting an arrest.
A Deputy Worth Remembering
Kenneth Lewis was doing what good officers do. He saw people in trouble on the road, and he stopped. That instinct, that willingness to pull over and help strangers, is the kind of quiet courage that rarely makes headlines until something goes terribly wrong.
He served his community. He protected people he didn't know. And he was killed by someone who had no legal right to be on that road, in that county, or in this country.
His service deserved better. His family deserves justice. And the American public deserves a border policy that prevents the next Deputy Lewis from becoming a headline.

