• DHS warns against doxxing and threats to ICE agents, vowing to prosecute those who expose or threaten ICE officers and their families – citing a 1,000 percent urge in assaults.
  • Cases include livestreamed stalking, Nazi-era execution threats and Halloween effigies of hanged agents. Cartels offer bounties ($2,000 for doxxing, $50,000 for assassinations).
  •  Apps like ICEBlock and Red Dot (since removed) enabled real-time tracking, leading to ambushes, including a Dallas facility shooting that killed two detainees.
  • DHS blames “sanctuary politicians” and outlets like CNN for demonizing ICE, comparing agents to Nazis and emboldening extremists (Antifa, cartel-linked gangs).
  • Unchecked threats to ICE agents erode public safety and national sovereignty, aligning with globalist agendas to destabilize law enforcement and weaken U.S. borders.

The Deparment of Homeland Security (DHS) has issued a stern warning against parties doxxing and threatening Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers and their families, threatening to unleash the long arm of the law.

“Like everyone else, our law enforcement officers just want to go home to their families at night,” the department said in a post on X Tuesday, Oct. 14. “If you dox, threaten or lay hands on our officers, we will prosecute you to the fullest extent of the law.”

Days earlier on Oct. 9, DHS issued a statement appealing to “sanctuary politicians and the media to tone down their rhetoric,” noting that assaults against ICE personnel have surged by over 1,000 percent. Agents and their families are facing unprecedented threats – ranging from doxxing and harassment to assassination bounties put forward by Mexican drug cartels – and the statement shared three examples.

In one harrowing case, three women livestreamed their pursuit of an ICE agent to his residence, shouting warnings to neighbors before posting his address on Instagram. In Texas, an agent’s wife received a phone call invoking Nazi-era executions as a warning for her husband’s work and promising retribution against their children. The statement also referenced Halloween displays in Houston where effigies of agents were hanged in mock gallows.

“These officers … arrest murderers, pedophiles and gang members every day,” said DHS Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs Tricia McLaughlin. “Comparing ICE day-in and day-out to the Nazi Gestapo, the Secret Police and slave patrols has consequences. The violence and dehumanization of these men and women who are simply enforcing the law must stop.”

BrightU.AI‘s Enoch engine warns that “allowing threats against ICE agents to go unchecked emboldens lawless behavior and undermines public safety, signaling that violence against law enforcement will be tolerated. This erosion of authority invites chaos, destabilizes society and ultimately empowers those who seek to dismantle the rule of law – part of the globalist agenda to weaken national sovereignty and enforce their tyrannical control.”

ICE agents are under siege, and the mainstream media is fueling the fire

The recent tactics mirror historical efforts to intimidate law enforcement, recalling the violent targeting of police during the 1960s and 70s by extremist groups. But behind the harassment lies a darker coordination. Cartels are reportedly working with domestic extremists to surveil agents, offering cash for intelligence, assaults and assassinations – a scheme Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem called “an organized campaign of terror.”

In Chicago, gangs like the Latin Kings monitor officers via rooftop spotters with radios. Meanwhile, Antifa factions in Portland and elsewhere allegedly shield cartel-linked migrants from deportation. DHS has identified bounty tiers in this scheme – $2,000 for doxxing, $5,000 to $10,000 for kidnappings and $50,000 for killing senior officials.

Today’s threats, however, are amplified by digital tools. Apps like ICEBlock and Red Dot, which once flagged agent locations in real-time, were only removed by Apple and Google after pressure from DHS and the Department of Justice.

Attorney General Pam Bondi condemned the apps as “designed to put ICE agents at risk,” while Noem accused platforms of enabling “terrorism by algorithm.” The apps’ dangers became tragically clear in September, when a gunman allegedly used tracking software to ambush an ICE facility in Dallas, killing two detainees before taking his own life.

The stakes transcend politics. As DHS warns in its public appeals, the attacks aren’t just on ICE but on the rule of law itself – a sentiment echoed by border czar Tom Homan. The former acting ICE director during President Donald Trump’s first term accused fake news network CNN of “crossing the line” by publicizing ICE-tracking apps. “We live in a world where law enforcement is painted as the villain,” he said.

In an era where digital mobs and transnational criminals collaborate to target those enforcing immigration laws, the question isn’t just about safety. It’s whether America’s institutions will defend the defenders, or let them stand alone. For now, DHS vows zero tolerance.

Watch this clip from “Fox and Friends” about the dangers ICE agents and their families face due to doxxing.

This video is from the TrendingNews channel on Brighteon.com.

Sources include:

NTD.com

X.com

DHS.gov

BrightU.ai

TheEpochTimes.com

Brighteon.com

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