PHOTOS: Anti-ICE agitators dox agents by sending warning postcards to neighbors
EXCLUSIVE: Activists and agitators opposed to enforcement of federal immigration laws have found a new, intrusive way to dox or leak personal and identifying information of ICE and CBP agents,...
By Fox News · Fox News
EXCLUSIVE : Activists and agitators opposed to enforcement of federal immigration laws have found a new, intrusive way to dox or leak personal and identifying information of ICE and CBP agents , the Department of Homeland Security exclusively told Fox News Digital Tuesday. Immigration agents continue to face an escalating 8,000% increase in death threats and a 1,300% increase in assaults since President Donald Trump took office in January 2025, according to DHS. An ICE agent living in Wake County, North Carolina, was doxxed in recent days, as evidenced by postcards sent to the officer’s neighbors with language suggesting they needed to be warned of his presence on their block. "Beware, your neighbor is an ICE agent. Immigration enforcement lives next door," the postcard said in billboard-style font festooned with a generic image of a federal agent and a mock-up of an ICE badge addressed to a resident in Raleigh. DEMOCRATIC OFFICIALS, TIKTOKERS, LIBERALS TAKE THEIR ANTI-ICE RHETORIC TO THE NEXT LEVEL The message section of the postcard shared with Fox News Digital showed what appeared to be a still shot from CCTV footage depicting a Black federal immigration agent. DHS blurred the agent’s face, which was not blurred in the original mailing. DHS Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis told Fox News Digital the doxxing only adds to threats because agents "risk their lives every single day to remove murderers, pedophiles, rapists, terrorists and gang members from American neighborhoods." Fox News Digital also noticed fine print on the doxxing postcard’s postage stamp indicating it was sent "presorted first-class," a special subset of USPS business mail that requires the sender to mail at least 500 pieces, each weighing 3.5 ounces or less. Presorted first-class also requires more than typical local "junk mail" granted presorted standard postage, which indicates at least 50 such letters or postcards. That detail indicates that hundreds of such postcards were disseminated around t…