Woman Wearing Pink Beanie Faces 20 Years in Prison After Smacking FBI Agent Outside Immigration Court

CONTRA COSTA COUNTY, CALIFORNIA – Don’t hit people. And especially, don’t hit FBI agents.

That’s the lesson learned by a woman could face 20 years in prison after allegedly smacking an FBI agent and stealing his badge during a dispute likely linked to immigration and ICE activity in Concord, California–if the FBI can find her.

What happened

  • Date & place: Tuesday, June 10 2025, outside the federal immigration court on Clayton Road in Concord.
  • Incident: A woman in a black hoodie, black mask, and (in some footage) a pink beanie allegedly struck federal officers during a disturbance and stole an FBI special-agent badge before fleeing.
  • Video evidence: The FBI released surveillance and body-cam clips on its YouTube channel showing the assault and is circulating still images on Facebook and X.

Suspect description

  • Adult female, medium build
  • Wearing black hoodie, black medical-style mask; seen in some angles with a pink knit cap
  • Last seen running from the courthouse parking lot toward downtown Concord

Reward and tip line

The FBI San Francisco Field Office is offering up to $25,000 for information that leads to the woman’s identification and arrest and to recovery of the stolen badge. Anyone with information can:

  • Call 1-800-CALL-FBI (225-5324)
  • Submit tips at tips.fbi.gov
  • Contact any local FBI office, U.S. embassy, or consulate

Potential charges

According to the bureau, the suspect could face federal counts of assault on a federal officer and theft of government property—offenses that together carry penalties of up to 20 years in prison.

Context

The altercation occurred the same day protesters gathered near the courthouse over unrelated immigration-enforcement actions. The FBI has not linked the assault to any organized protest group.

The FBI urges anyone who recognizes the suspect or witnessed the incident to come forward, stressing that even small details—such as a car description or smartphone video—could be crucial to the investigation…

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