So doxxing cops. Headline is misleading.
Why is it a problem? They aren't doing anything they should be worried about the public knowing, right? Right?
Militias want to firebomb their homes.
Key incidents:
• California (Sep 2025): Three women indicted for following ICE agent home, livestreaming, shouting “ICE lives here,” posting address on Instagram.
• Texas: ICE officer’s spouse received threatening call about husband’s job.
• Portland: Anarchist groups doxxed officers’ names, photos, home addresses, spouses/children; DHS condemned as enabling threats.
• San Diego: Man arrested for doxxing ICE attorney, posting home address, urging “swat” her and family.
• Broader: 8,000% surge in death threats includes family targeting; stalking/doxxing via social media/websites. DHS links rise to anti-ICE rhetoric; some claims disputed in court.
https://www.dhs.gov/news/2025/10/09/dhs-condemns-dangerous-d...
> They aren't doing anything they should be worried about the public knowing
Maybe you live in a Republican state and have less exposure to the left but here in NYC people plainly and openly want to stop ICE because it enforces immigration law.
... or share real-time information on enforcement activity. The administration claims the accounts are engaged in doxing and endanger officer safety, but they have also targeted social media users seemingly doing nothing more than expressing anger at the government.
\1 masked goon squads are for questionable dictatorships.\2 US citizens are free to say "the police are over there"
\3 US citizens are free to express angaer at their government.
> US citizens are free to say "the police are over there"
Sending realtime updates to anarchist militias in Signal groups that have written documents on things like “dearresting” and “black block” techniques isn’t quite the same thing as I’m sure you’re aware.
18 U.S.C. § 111 makes it a crime to forcibly assault, resist, oppose, impede, intimidate, or interfere with federal officers (including ICE agents). Penalties include fines and prison time; it escalates to felony if a weapon or injury is involved.
Related laws include obstruction of justice (e.g., 18 U.S.C. § 1505) and harboring (8 U.S.C. § 1324). Peaceful observation or recording in public is generally allowed if it doesn’t obstruct operations.
These officers are in danger. You mentioned you’re concerned about squads of goons. Reading about the violence these men are subject to - are you really?
JumpCrisscross•1h ago