Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents have reportedly been instructed to no longer perform traffic stops after officers fatally shot two drivers in Texas and Maine within a week.The guidance marks a major policy shift in the Trump administration’s sweeping efforts to swiftly arrest and deport tens of thousands of people under a government-wide mass deportation campaign.New guidance for ICE’s Enforcement and Removal Operations officers reportedly instructs agents to work with partner agencies to perform the stops if executing a criminal warrant, according to sources speaking to CNN and CBS.“We are always evaluating our procedures to keep our officers safe and criminals off our streets. We will not disclose or discuss law enforcement tactics,” a spokesperson for ICE told The Independent.Joan Sebastian Guerrero, a 28-year-old Colombian man living in Maine, was at least the 11th person fatally shot by federal immigration agents since the beginning of Donald Trump’s second administration. Less than one week earlier, agents killed Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, a 52-year-old father of three children who was shot in his car on his way to work in Houston.Homeland Security has routinely justified shootings with claims that an arrest target has tried to run over agents only for evidence to emerge that contradicts the government’s statements. The administration’s initial statements in the wake of Salgado Araujo’s shooting have also come under intense scrutiny after witnesses disputed the government’s official narrative.Agents have shot at least 20 people within the last year, and nearly all of them were in their cars.This is a developing story