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Las Vegas ice-cream truck mistaken for ICE vehicle as deportation raids unfold

This backlash has not been detained!

Las Vegas's ice cream trucks were mistaken for immigration and customs executive vehicles, and caused a horror of a large amount of illegal deportation.

Las Vegas's owner of Ice Cream Patrol, Billy Settle Myers, notices that a wise social media user is in the middle of the fire storm after blasting his truck image. Immigration suggests that it is part of an elaborate conspiracy.


Las Vegas's ice cream patrol owners noticed last week that wise social media users were in the middle of the fire storm after blasting his truck images and incorrect information. KLAS 8 News Now

“Listen to the” ice cream “truck. … They play music to make people go out. … This is actually very ill. ”The user posted with the deleted Tiktok video.

The wrong warning immediately pierced the fear that Settremyers' Sweet-Treat business was actually a federal business cover.

“Please do not use trucks for ice and border patrols since 1985,” said Setlemyers. 8 News now In the wake of a rebound.

“I'm an ice cream man, that's it.”


Co -worker
The suffering owner, Billy Settlemeyer, was left to claim, “I'm an ice cream man, that's it.” KLAS 8 News Now

His truck has a legal execution style badge on the side, and the word “ice cream patrol” is displayed. He also states that it is not affiliated with the law enforcement agency.

“I wanted to make a creative thing for my community. It's wonderful, beautiful and friendly,” said Setlemyers.

“It's safe for children. That's it.”

However, it is rumored that the settlers are expanding the moonlight as soon as the ice agent spreads immediately.

“Basically,” Las Vegas uses ice cream trucks as a cover to catch illegal aliens, “explains that the settlers say one of the posts.

Another declaration: “Ice is in Las Vegas. Keep it safe.

“They had checkpoints … some people were disguised as ice cream trucks.”

Settlemyers, a former mechanic with a truck on his own, said he was on the reception for a few days.

“I feel like a target,” said Settremyers.

“People have to stop in social media and notice. How many people watch their video, and the impact from there is dangerous.”

Confusion was developed because President Donald Trump's promised immigration continued to be deployed nationwide, including New York.

Last week alone, ice arrested about 1,200 people in major cities, including Chicago and Los Angeles.

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