A courtroom sketch of a defendant in orange.
Carlos Ivan Mendoza Hernandez arrived in a wheelchair at federal court in Sacramento on Monday, April 20, 2026. (Sketch by Vicki Behringer/Special for Stocktonia)

SACRAMENTO — A man who was shot multiple times during an arrest by immigration officers in Central California pleaded not guilty on Monday to federal charges that he rammed his vehicle into two agents, prosecutors said.

A federal grand jury on Friday indicted Carlos Ivan Mendoza Hernández, who has dual citizenship in El Salvador and Mexico, on two counts of assaulting a federal officer with a deadly weapon and one count of damaging government property.

Patrick Kolasinski, one of his lawyers, has said that Mendoza Hernández panicked and tried to flee when Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents blocked his car and that he did not intend to run over anyone. Kolasinski also disputed claims by officials that his client was a suspected gang member wanted in El Salvador for questioning in relation to a murder.

A man and woman at a baby shower.
Carlos Ivan Mendoza Hernández, seen with fiancee Cindy at a baby shower for their now-2-year-old daughter, was shot by ICE agents during a traffic stop in Patterson, Calif., on April 7. He was later charged with assault on an officer. (Photo courtesy of Patrick Kolasinski)

Salvadoran court documents show he was acquitted of murder in El Salvador and Mendoza Hernández has denied ever being in a gang, his lawyer has said. He came to the U.S. in 2019 and has no criminal record, Kolasinski has said.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office said Monday that Mendoza Hernández has requested a jury trial. A status conference was set for July 27.

Mendoza Hernández is recovering after several surgeries for multiple gunshot wounds, including one to the jaw, his attorney said.

The Department of Homeland Security has said ICE officers fired defensive shots at Mendoza Hernández after he tried to drive into them. DHS said the officers were conducting an enforcement stop targeting Mendoza Hernández, 36, on April 7 in Patterson, a city about 75 miles southeast of San Francisco.

It was part of a series of shootings that have occurred during the Trump administration’s aggressive push to detain and deport immigrants in the country illegally. It is also among those where questions have been raised to federal officials about the circumstances, since in some shootings, video evidence contradicted immigration officials’ initial accounts.