Anti-ICE Terrorist Worked at Dallas Law Firm
A partner at the firm once stated that Song was "not running around terrorizing people."
Benjamin Hanil Song, who was recently captured by the FBI after allegedly staging an attack on an Alvarado ICE facility, worked for his father’s Dallas law firm as recently as two years ago.
Benjamin Song, along with at least fourteen others, were arrested earlier this month in connection with an alleged organized attack against ICE facility officers. Song himself was charged with three counts of attempted murder of federal agents and three counts of discharging a firearm in relation to a crime of violence.
Ten assailants charged in the July 7th complaint fled from the detention center but were apprehended by additional responding law enforcement officers. Song, however, was not located by law enforcement officers that night. As alleged, the location data associated with Song’s cellular telephone indicates that his phone was located within several hundred meters of the Prairieland Detention Center from late in the evening of July 4, 2025, until after dark on July 5, the day after the shooting.
Song was later found after two of his friends helped hide him while the FBI was hunting him down.
As recently as 2023 Benjamin Song was working for a local Dallas law firm where his father was a partner. Song was a medical records clerk for personal injury cases. In a 2023 case against Ben Song, one of the partners at the law firm Song worked at stated that Song was “not a vigilante” and said that he was not “moonlighting, running around terrorizing people.” It seems this statement by the partner did not age well as Song would go on to shoot a police officer in the neck.
Current Revolt, along with Kelly Neidert of Texas Coalition For Kids, a group combating child indoctrination, recently visited the Dallas law firm seeking comments from Song’s father and the partner who made the earlier assurances. The aim was to better understand the dynamics that led to Song’s violent actions and examine whether this incident is an isolated event or part of a broader pattern. Indeed, there is growing evidence to suggest that Song’s violent behavior may be linked to larger networks of leftist-affiliated insurrectionist groups operating nationwide, groups that law enforcement officials are increasingly concerned may be attempting to wage what many people are saying is a “low-effort civil war” against the federal government.