[-] RedWizard@news.abolish.capital 7 points 2 weeks ago

Without knowing the methodology under which the analysis was done, we can't really say for sure, can we? Forensic identification can be done that identifies bullets to their manufacturers based on their unique elemental signatures for example. I'm sure the Iranian military is capable of performing such forensic investigations and would have familiarity with Israeli weapons compositions. But I'm just some guy on the internet, so who can say.

3

cross-posted from: https://news.abolish.capital/post/21492

Downloading my analysis from monitoring the ICE situation in Minneapolis and combining that with what I am seeing on the ground in Seattle to provide guidance on how to prepare for ICE to invade your community.

Support Mutual Aid groups in Minnisota https://www.standwithminnesota.com/

Rapid Response Networks in the Twin Cities A Guide to an Updated Model https://crimethinc.com/2026/01/15/rapid-response-networks-in-the-twin-cities-a-guide-to-an-updated-model

0:00 What are we doing here 1:05 ICE Tactics this week 17:04 Preparing for ICE 23:52 Elected Official Actions 26:34 Local police schism

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#ice #minneapolis #abolishice

1

Downloading my analysis from monitoring the ICE situation in Minneapolis and combining that with what I am seeing on the ground in Seattle to provide guidance on how to prepare for ICE to invade your community.

Support Mutual Aid groups in Minnisota https://www.standwithminnesota.com/

Rapid Response Networks in the Twin Cities A Guide to an Updated Model https://crimethinc.com/2026/01/15/rapid-response-networks-in-the-twin-cities-a-guide-to-an-updated-model

0:00 What are we doing here 1:05 ICE Tactics this week 17:04 Preparing for ICE 23:52 Elected Official Actions 26:34 Local police schism

Music: Hotline Miami 2 Wrong Number Soundtrack - Interlude

►Join my Discord community to talk Motos and more https://discord.gg/squidtips

►Support me directly with Patreon and fun perks! https://www.patreon.com/squidtips

►Use my cool custom emoji's with a channel membership https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFrmfDhZIom8coan10W819w/join

►Get great gear for 10% off with code "HRT116" at RyderGear! https://www.ryder-gear.com/

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#ice #minneapolis #abolishice

3

The handover ceremony for the first batch of rice under China's emergency food assistance program to Cuba was held on Monday local time at a grain transit warehouse of Cuba's Ministry of Domestic Trade. Attending the event were Cuban Vice Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Trade and Foreign Investment, Oscar Perez-Oliva Fraga, Minister of Domestic Trade Betsy Díaz Velázquez, Deputy Minister of Foreign Trade and Foreign Investment, Déborah Rivas Saavedra, and Chinese Ambassador to Cuba Hua Xin, among others, according to the Xinhua News Agency.

Perez-Oliva said at the ceremony that the donated supplies fully reflect China's valuable assistance to Cuba and the deep friendship between the two countries. In addition to food aid, the two sides have carried out extensive cooperation in areas such as energy, achieving rapid and effective progress. Under the current difficult circumstances, Cuba sincerely thanks the Chinese government for its support, which represents a concrete practice of building a China-Cuba community with a shared future, per Xinhua.

Ambassador Hua Xin said the assistance not only carries the profound special friendship between China and Cuba, but also demonstrates the firm conviction of the two sides to stand together through storms and challenges.

He also expressed confidence that through joint efforts, no blockade can extinguish the light of hope, and no difficulty can stop the march forward. China is willing to continue strengthening cooperation with Cuba, overcome difficulties together, and inject greater momentum into building a China-Cuba community with a shared future.

The total volume of rice assistance under this program amounts to 30,000 tons. The first batch was delivered on Monday, the second batch has already arrived smoothly at the port of Santiago de Cuba, and subsequent batches are set to be shipped shortly, according to the Xinhua report.

Global Times

14

cross-posted from: https://news.abolish.capital/post/20844

Stewart Huntington
ICT

The wave of federal immigration agents swarming the Minneapolis area might be unprecedented in law enforcement history, but the response in the Indigenous community is not.

Half a century ago, the American Indian Movement was founded on Franklin Avenue, the heart of the urban Indian diaspora in South Minneapolis, to counter overzealous municipal policing.

Today, AIM patrols are back, watching over elders, youths and aunties along the same avenue in what is now known as the city’s American Indian Cultural Corridor.

“History shows us time and time again, it doesn’t repeat, but it rhymes,” said Heather Bruegl, an activist, historian and Oneida Tribe of Wisconsin citizen who has studied the American Indian Movement. “So you can look throughout history and see different examples of what we see today happening in the past.”

And if the history rhymes, some of the names do even more. Some are the same.

Crow Bellecourt, Bad River Band of Chippewa, has been out on the recent patrols. His father, the late Clyde Bellecourt, was a founding member of AIM in 1968 along with Russel Means and Dennis Banks.

“I grew up in the movement,” said Bellecourt, executive director of the Indigenous Protector Movement, a group with AIM roots. “I always like to say, ‘I’m second-generation American Indian Movement.’ It’s, like, full circle for me.”

AIM members attend a demonstration in 2020 in Minneapolis after the death of George Floyd at the hands of police. Credit: Photo by John Arthur Anderson

The confrontations between law enforcement and protestors in Minneapolis – including the shooting of 37-year-old Renee Good –  have brought reports that Indigenous people have also been swept into custody.

A cohort of Indigenous patrollers  has now reached close to 100, Bellecourt said.

“We’re running from seven in the morning to seven in the evening,” he said. “And even more. We still have some patrollers going out until like 11 or 12 at night.”

And just like in 1968, the patrollers are on the street to help community members feel safe.

“It’s really scary here,” said Mary LaGarde, executive director of the Minneapolis American Indian Center, which operates from its base on Franklin Avenue.

Federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers have surged into the Twin Cities area to counter what the Trump administration has called corruption and criminality in area immigrant populations. At this point, there are more federal law enforcement officers in Minneapolis than metropolitan police.

The dramatic presence has prompted widespread protests and rebukes from state and local officials. There have been at least two shootings involving the federal officers.

“We woke up and we had all these ICE agents everywhere,” said Bellecourt. “They’re all over our neighborhood. I’m scared for our old people and the young ones who just wanted to catch the city bus to go to the grocery store. … I worry about them getting picked up from ICE.”

 LaGarde, White Earth Band of Chippewa, knows the feeling.

“It’s like you don’t want to leave the house,” LaGarde told ICT. “That’s how most of our people are feeling right now. Our elders are scared. Our young people, too. This is really impacting our kids.”

LaGarde said the patrols — by AIM members and other groups such as the Many Shields Warrior Society — are needed.

“it’s really important that we’re out protecting,” she said.

The numbers of volunteers out patrolling are growing.

“We have relatives coming in from South Dakota, Wisconsin and neighboring states,” Bellecourt said. Some have come from as far away as Oklahoma, he said.

Just like in the old days, AIM members are gathering along Franklin Avenue just as they gathered for occupations of Alcatraz Island in San Francisco in 1969, the Bureau of Indian Affairs headquarters  in 1972, and the Wounded Knee massacre site in 1973.

American Indian Movement leaders watch as the U.S. Department of Justice removes government forces from around Wounded Knee, South Dakota, on March 10, 1973. Shown in foreground are AIM leaders from left, Clyde Bellecourt, Dennis Banks, Russell Means and Carter Camp. Credit: AP Photo/FILE

AIM members also turned out in force in Minneapolis in 2020 after the death of George Floyd at the hands of law enforcement.

What’s different from the early years? Modern communication tools.

“We didn’t have these cell phones and all this social media back in them days,” Bellecourt said. “Everybody called on house phones and it was amazing how many people would show up. My dad called it the ‘moccasin telegraph’ and people would just call one another and, wherever they needed people to be, everyone would show up.”

They came to help the people.Then and today.

“One of the first acts that AIM did when they were forming was patrolling the streets and making sure that if their community members were stopped or pulled over by the police, that their rights were being followed, like, you know, ‘Hey, you have the right to this, you have the right to that,’” Bruegl said.

“And we see that now happening again [because] people’s rights are being violated. We see Indigenous folks, tribal members being detained,” Bruegl said. “It’s important that groups like AIM and other groups are coming out again, working in community and making sure that we’re protecting each other.”

The post ‘Full Circle’: AIM patrols back on Minneapolis streets as tensions rise appeared first on ICT.


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74

cross-posted from: https://news.abolish.capital/post/20726

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21
[-] RedWizard@news.abolish.capital 9 points 2 weeks ago

I don't think so. Who is going to over turn it, the Democrats? The Republicans?

[-] RedWizard@news.abolish.capital 12 points 2 weeks ago

I'm so fucking ready to vote. I'd vote right now if I could!

92
submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by RedWizard@news.abolish.capital to c/pravda_news@news.abolish.capital
9

What happens when you do minimal screening before hiring agents, arming them, and sending them into the streets? We’re all finding out.


The plan was never to become an ICE agent.

The plan, when I went to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Career Expo in Texas last August, was to learn what it was like to apply to be an ICE agent. Who wouldn't be curious? The event promised on-the-spot hiring for would-be deportation officers: Walk in unemployed, walk out with a sweet $50k signing bonus, a retirement account, and a license to brutalize the country's most vulnerable residents without consequence---all while wrapped in the warm glow of patriotism.

At first glance, my résumé has enough to tantalize a recruiter for America's Gestapo-in-waiting: I enlisted in the Army straight out of high school and deployed to Afghanistan twice with the 82^nd^ Airborne Division. After I got out, I spent a few years doing civilian analyst work. With a carefully arranged, skills-based résumé---one which omitted my current occupation---I figured I could maybe get through an initial interview.

The catch, however, is that there's only one "Laura Jedeed" with an internet presence, and it takes about five seconds of Googling to figure out how I feel about ICE, the Trump administration, and the country's general right-wing project. My social media pops up immediately, usually with a preview of my latest posts condemning Trump's unconstitutional, authoritarian power grab. Scroll down and you'll find articles with titles like "What I Saw in LA Wasn't an Insurrection; It Was a Police Riot" and "Inside Mike Johnson's Ties to a Far-Right Movement to Gut the Constitution." Keep going for long enough and you might even find my dossier on AntifaWatch, a right-wing website that lists alleged members of the supposed domestic terror organization. I am, to put it mildly, a less-than-ideal recruit.

In short, I figured---at least back then---that my military background would be enough to get me in the door for a good look around ICE's application process, and then even the most cursory background check would get me shown that same door with great haste.

The ICE expo in the Dallas area, where my application journey began, required attendees to register for a specific time slot, presumably to prevent throngs of eager patriots from flooding the event and overwhelming the recruiters. But when I showed up at 9 a.m., the flood was notably absent: there was no line to check in and no line to go through security. I walked down nearly empty hallways, past a nearly empty drug testing station, and into the event proper, where a man directed me to a line to wait in for an interview. I took my spot at the end; there were only six people ahead of me.

While I waited, I looked around the ESports Stadium Arlington---an enormous blacked-out event space optimized for video game tournaments that has a capacity of 2,500. During my visit, there couldn't have been more than 150 people there.

Hopeful hires stood in tiny groups or found seats in the endless rows of cheap folding chairs that faced a stage ripped straight from Tron. Everything was bright-blue and lit-up and sci-fi-future angular. Above the monolithic platform hung three large monitors. The side monitors displayed static propaganda posters that urged the viewer to DEFEND THE HOMELAND and JOIN ICE TODAY, while the large central monitor played two short videos on loop: about 10 minutes of propaganda footage, again and again and again.

After about 15 minutes of waiting, an extraordinarily normal-looking middle-aged woman waved me forward. I sat across the black folding table from her on one of the uncomfortable black chairs. She asked for my name and date of birth, then whether I am over 40 (I am 38). Did I have law enforcement experience? No. Military experience? Yes. Did I retire from the military at 20+ years, or leave once my enlistment was up? The latter, I told her, then repeated my carefully rehearsed, completely true explanation for why the résumé I'd submitted had a large gap. "I had a little bit of a quarter-life crisis. Ended up going to college for part of that time, and since then I've been kind of---gig economy stuff."

She was spectacularly uninterested: "OK. And what location is your preference?"

After some dithering, I settled on my home state of New York. That was the last question; the entire process took less than six minutes. The woman took my résumé and placed the form she'd been filling out on top. "They are prioritizing current law enforcement first. They're going to adjudicate your résumé," she told me. If my application passed muster, I'd receive an email about next steps, which could arrive in the next few hours but would likely take a few days. I left, thanked her for her time, and prepared to hear back never.

The expo event was part of ICE's massive recruitment campaign for the foot soldiers it needs to execute the administration's dream of a deportation campaign large enough to shift America's demographic balance back whiteward. You've probably seen evidence of it yourself: ICE's "Defend the homeland" propaganda is ubiquitous enough to be the Uncle Sam "I Want You" poster of our day, though somewhere in there our nation lost the plot about the correct posture toward Nazis.

When Donald Trump took office, ICE numbered approximately 10,000. Despite this event's lackluster attendance, their recruitment push is reportedly going well; the agency reported 12,000 new recruits in 2025, which means the agency has more new recruits than old hands. That's the kind of growth that changes the culture of an agency.

Many of ICE's critics worry that the agency is hoovering up pro-Trump thugs---Jan. 6 insurrectionists, white nationalists, etc.---for a domestic security force loyal to the president. The truth, my experience suggests, is perhaps even scarier: ICE's recruitment push is so sloppy that the administration effectively has no idea who's joining the agency's ranks. We're all, collectively, in the dark about whom the state is arming, tasking with the most sensitive of law enforcement work, and then sending into America's streets.

And we are all, collectively, discovering just how deadly of an arrangement that really is.

At the end of my brief interview, the recruiter mentioned I could talk to a current deportation officer about what the job would be like. There was no line to talk to a deportation officer (did I mention how empty the place was?) and so I walked up, introduced myself to one of them, and asked about day-to-day duties.

I shouldn't expect to hit the streets right away, the agent told me. Odds were good I'd get a support position first---something like the Criminal Alien Program office. "Let's say a local police officer arrests someone out in the field for a DUI. Extremely common. Or beating their wife or whatever---all the typical crimes they commit," he said. (The "they" here being "undocumented immigrants," and while it's extremely difficult to measure, evidence suggests that "they" actually commit crimes at a lower rate than U.S.-born citizens.)

If the cops suspect they're dealing with an immigrant who doesn't have permanent legal status, they alert ICE, whose agents conduct interviews and run record checks.
If this preliminary investigation suggests that status, the person ends up in the Criminal Alien Program office for processing---which is where I would come in. "What you see on TV, with us arresting people and doing all kinds of crazy things, that's maybe 10 percent. The other 90 percent is essentially doing a bunch of paperwork," the agent said. "It takes a lot to remove somebody from the United States. Some people are subject to due process."

The officer ran down other departments I might end up in: Prosecutions, Removal Coordination Unit, or Detention. The point being that I should not expect to be a badass street officer on Day 1. "I have so many guys that come over to me, they're like, 'I'm gonna put cuffs on somebody. I'm gonna arrest somebody.' Well, you need to master this first and then we'll see about getting you on the field."

I told him that I was fine with office work---with my analyst background, it seemed like a better fit for my skill set anyway. His attitude shift was subtle, but instant and unmistakable; this was the wrong attitude and the wrong answer. "Just to be upfront, the goal is to put as many guns and badges out in the field as possible," he said.

The agent then told me a bit about his own background. Like me, he enlisted straight out of high school, then got out and vowed to get as far away from the violence of the military as possible. Like a lot of veterans, he had trouble assimilating into the civilian world. "After about six months, I was like, 'These people aren't like me. I want to be around like-minded people.' " He found his way into law enforcement. That was well over a decade ago---he's on his way to a very comfortable retirement, and he enjoys the work. "I like that instant gratification of Hey, that guy committed this crime, these X, Y, and Z, he's not even supposed to be here," he said.

I do not agree with his framing, but have no trouble understanding the appeal. Hell, it's why I enlisted in the first place. Thankfully, Afghanistan beat it out of me. If I believed what he believed, I would surely do the same thing he's doing.

I thanked him for the information and time, shook his hand, and took a seat on one of those uncomfortable folding chairs. I had a few hours before my flight back to New York City, and it made more sense to hang out than to flee the building and get good and airport drunk, regardless of how desperately I would have preferred the latter. Instead, I settled in to do what everyone does at the DMV: check my phone and people-watch. The aspiring officers fall broadly into three categories: thick-necked law enforcement types who look like they do steroids but don't know how to work out, bearded spec-ops wannabes who look like they take steroids and do know how to work out, and dorks. Pencil-necked misfits. I couldn't tell whether there were more white or Hispanic people waiting for their email, but it was close. A few Black applicants rounded out the overwhelmingly male group.

I'd been sitting around for about an hour when the video suddenly stopped and a bearded man in a black suit stepped onto the stage. He did not introduce himself---we were, I gathered, supposed to already know who he was---but it became clear he's a senior agent of some sort. "I figured it would be best if I break up the same video you've been watching for the last four hours," he said, and offered to answer any questions we might have.

One person asked about work/life balance, which the agent said is possible but not the route he's chosen. Someone else wanted to know about travel opportunities and he talked about the many places he's gone as part of the job.

Every other question during the 45 minutes the agent stood onstage pertained to the hiring process or what we could expect in training. Law enforcement types seemed especially concerned about the painful parts: Would they have to get pepper sprayed again? Would they have to get shot with a taser if they'd already qualified? Yes and probably not, respectively. The agent took the opportunity to gush about ICE's new state-of-the-art semi-automatic tasers and brand-new pepper-ball guns. "It's mostly very liberal cities---San Francisco, Los Angeles---where groups will come and try to stop ICE officers from arresting somebody. They're like, 'We're going to form a human wall against you,' " he said. "When they do that, you can just pop 'em up. Let them disperse and cry about it."

When, during a moment of protracted silence, the agent threatened to put the video back on if no one had questions, I asked about harassment and doxing. "We will prosecute people to the fullest extent of the law," he assured me, "and then people like myself will go on TV and publicly talk about how that person is now in prison to dissuade other people from doing it."

As empty as the place had been when I'd arrived, it was even emptier by the time the senior agent ended the Q&A. Somebody vastly overestimated the number of Americans willing to take a job brutalizing and disappearing hard-working men and women---even with a potential $50K bonus, even in this economy.

That may have something to do with what happened to me next.

I completely missed the email when it came. I'd kept an eye on my inbox for the next few days, but I'd grown lax when nothing came through. But then, on Sept. 3, it popped up.

"Please note that this is a TENTATIVE offer only, therefore do not end your current employment," the email instructed me. It then listed a series of steps I'd need to quickly take. I had 48 hours to log onto USAJobs and fill out my Declaration for Federal Employment, then five additional days to return the forms attached to the email. Among these forms: driver's license information, an affidavit that I've never received a domestic violence conviction, and consent for a background check. And it said: "If you are declining the position, it is not necessary to complete the action items listed below."

As I mentioned, I'd missed the email, so I did exactly none of these things.

And that might have been where this all ended---an unread message sinking to the bottom of my inbox---if not for an email LabCorp sent three weeks later. "Thank you for confirming that you wish to continue with the hiring process," it read. (To be clear, I had confirmed no such thing.) "Please complete your required pre-employment drug test**.**"

The timing was unfortunate. Cannabis is legal in the state of New York, and I had partaken six days before my scheduled test. Then again, I hadn't smoked much; perhaps with hydration I could get to the next stage. Worst-case scenario, I'd waste a small piece of ICE's gargantuan budget. I traveled to my local LabCorp, peed in a cup, and waited for a call telling me I'd failed.

Nine days later, impatience got the best of me. For the first time, I logged into USAJobs and checked my application to see if my drug test had come through. What I actually saw was so implausible, so impossible, that at first I did not understand what I was looking at.

Somehow, despite never submitting any of the paperwork they sent me---not the background check or identification info, not the domestic violence affidavit, none of it---ICE had apparently offered me a job.

According to the application portal, my pre-employment activities remained pending. And yet, it also showed that I had accepted a final job offer and that my onboarding status was "EOD"---Entered On Duty, the start of an enlistment period. I moused over the exclamation mark next to "Onboarding" and a helpful pop-up appeared. "Your EOD has occurred. Welcome to ICE!"

I clicked through to my application tracking page. They'd sent my final offer on Sept. 30, it said, and I had allegedly accepted. "Welcome to Ice. ... Your duty location is New York, New York. Your EOD was on Tuesday, September 30th, 2025."

By all appearances, I was a deportation officer. Without a single signature on agency paperwork, ICE had officially hired me.

Perhaps, if I'd accepted, they would have demanded my pre-employment paperwork, done a basic screening, realized their mistake, and fired me immediately. And yet, the pending and upcoming tasks list suggested a very different outcome. My physical fitness test had been initiated on Oct. 6, it said: three days in the future. My medical check had apparently been completed on Oct. 6.

The portal also listed my background check as completed on Oct. 6. Had I preemptively passed? Was ICE seriously going to let me start training without finding out the first thing about me? I reached out to ICE for an explanation, but never heard back.

The only thing left for me to do was press the green "Accept" button on the home page. And maybe I should have. Maybe no one would have ever checked my name and I could have written the story of a lifetime. Or maybe the agency infamous for brutalizing and disappearing people with no regard for the law or basic human rights would have figured out exactly who I am while I was in one of their facilities with no way to escape. I'm not actually a domestic terrorist sent straight from Antifa headquarters, but to a paranoid fascist regime increasingly high on their own supply, I sure look like one on paper. Self-preservation won out.

I hit "Decline," closed my browser, and took a long, deep breath.

What are we to make of all this? To be clear, I barely applied to ICE. I skipped the steps of the application process that would have clued the agency in on my lack of fitness for the position. I made no effort to hide my public loathing of the agency, what it stands for, and the administration that runs it. And they offered me the job anyway.

It's possible that I'm an aberration---perhaps I experienced some kind of computer glitch that affected my application and no one else's. But given all of the above, it seems far more likely that ICE is running an extremely leaky ship when it comes to recruitment.

With no oversight and with ICE concealing its agents' identities, it'll be extremely difficult for us to know.

There's a temptation to take some comfort in ICE's sloppiness. There's a real argument here that an agency so inept in its recruitment will also be inept at training people and carrying out its mission. We're seeing some very sloppy police work from ICE, including an inability to do basic things like throw someone down and cuff them. On some level, all of this is a reminder that their takeover is neither total nor inevitable.

But if they missed the fact that I was an anti-ICE journalist who didn't fill out her paperwork, what else might they be missing? How many convicted domestic abusers are being given guns and sent into other people's homes? How many people with ties to white supremacist organizations are indiscriminately targeting minorities on principle, regardless of immigration status? How many rapists and pedophiles are working in ICE detention centers with direct and unsupervised access to a population that will be neither believed nor missed? How are we to trust ICE's allegedly thorough investigations of the people they detain and deport when they can't even keep their HR paperwork straight?

And if they're not going to screen me out, what hope is there of figuring out which recruit might one day turn into a trigger-happy agent who would forget that law enforcement officers are trained not to stand in front of vehicles, get jumpy, and shoot a 37-year-old woman to death on the streets of Minneapolis?

That's exactly what happened last week, and why Renee Good will never have a 38^th^ birthday, and why her children will never again be hugged by their mother.

By all appearances, the only thing ICE is screening for is a desire to work for ICE: a very specific kind of person perfectly suited for the kind of mission creep we are currently seeing. Good's murder is not an isolated incident; the American Civil Liberties Union reports a nationwide trend of ICE pointing guns at, brutalizing, and even detaining citizens who stop to film them. A Minneapolis pastor who protested ICE by chanting "We are not afraid" was detained at gunpoint by an agent who reportedly asked him: "Are you afraid now?"

I am. We all should be.

4

cross-posted from: https://news.abolish.capital/post/20330

A US spending bill approving US$300 million in cash assistance for Taiwan’s military has passed the House of Representatives and is expected to become law. On Wednesday, the House passed a two-bill government spending package that would fund the Departments of the Treasury and State through September, along with other federal agencies, bringing the total to eight of 12 annual spending bills needed by January 30, to avoid a government shutdown. The bills must now clear the Senate before they can...


From China - South China Morning Post via This RSS Feed.

[-] RedWizard@news.abolish.capital 9 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Jinping is his given name, by the way. You meant to say Xi.

Imagine if we called the president, President Donald.

15

web.archive.org

Personal Details of Thousands of Border Patrol and ICE Goons Allegedly Leaked in Huge Data Breach

Tom Latchem Lead Global CorrespondentPublished Jan. 13 2026 11:56AM EST

5 - 6 minutes


Sensitive details of around 4,500 ICE and Border Patrol employees—including almost 2,000 agents working in frontline enforcement—have allegedly been released by a Department of Homeland Security whistleblower following last week’s fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good.

The Jan. 7 killing of the mother by ICE agent Jonathan Ross in Minneapolis, Minnesota, has sparked nationwide protests and worldwide outrage, including among some DHS employees.

The alleged leak to ICE List, a self-styled “accountability initiative,” is believed to be the largest ever breach of DHS staff data. It appears to include names, work emails, telephone numbers, roles, and some resumé data, including previous jobs of federal immigration staff.

ICE List founder, Dominick Skinner, told the Daily Beast: “It is a sign that people aren’t happy within the U.S. government, clearly. The shooting [of Good] was the last straw for many people.”

Becca Good and Renee Nicole Good

Renee Good had been protesting with her wife, Rachel (L), when she was shot dead by an ICE agent. (Instagram / Renee.n.good, Getty Images / Stephen Maturen)

According to Skinner, who leads the volunteer-run website, the dataset includes about 1,800 on-the-ground agents and 150 supervisors. Early analysis by the organization suggests that around 80 per cent of the staff identified remain employed by DHS.

An initital set of the names from the leak will be posted on Tuesday night, Skinner told the Daily Beast.

He said individual reports from the public have also “spiked” “a lot” since Good’s shooting. “I’ve had hotel staff sending post-it notes, bar staff sending DHS IDs, and loads of people saying their neighbour is an agent,” he said.

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - JANUARY 07: A notice reading "RIP Renee, murdered by ICE" is seen next to a memorial for Renee Nicole Good on January 07, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. According to federal officials, an ICE agent shot and killed Good during a confrontation earlier today in south Minneapolis. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

Prior to the Monday’s leak, which Skinner said he received on Monday, ICE List had been in possession of details of around 2,000 federal immigration staff, including names it has chosen not to make public.

Roughly 800 of these, he said, are frontline agents or are permitted to deputise for them on the ground. The latest leak brings details of the total number of federal immigration staff in its possession to around 6,500.

Skinner said he plans to list “the majority” of names the project is able to verify, because “ICE and CBP are in clear need of reform, and I believe working for either is a bad move on a moral level.”

A person is detained by US Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) agents near a Lowe's hardware store in New Orleans, Louisiana

A Border Patrol agent detains a man following yet another brutal immigration arrest. ADAM GRAY/Adam GRAY / AFP

He added: “We will make exceptions on a case-by-case basis, the best examples of which will be those who work in childcare within the agency, and nurses. There will be more exceptions, but we will have a discussion once the team flags a position as something we need to think twice about.”

DHS has said it shields the identities of its staff and agents—who famously almost always wear masks—for their own safety. It has previously had similar projects hosted in America taken down—including the ICE tracker app, ICEBlock.

Skinner, who is Irish with American relatives, but lives in the Netherlands, where he hosts the database outside of U.S. jurisdiction, said: “We never began with the goal of creating a large database [and] first just promised to share agent names sent to us, as Kristi Noem threatened Americans would be arrested if they attempted to do so.

ICE List homepage

ICE List is hosting outside of the U.S so that it cannot be taken down by the Trump administration. ICE List

“That’s now turned into the most recent version of the database, our ICE List Wiki, where we are aiming to have a comprehensive record of incidents, where we hope to be able to record all agents on the scene, all vehicles present, the field office that sent out the agents, and any other relevant information to the incidents.”

Kristi Noem on State of the Union with Jake Tapper

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has, like the rest of the Trump administration, blamed Good for her own death, while refusing to censure Ross, or wait for the investigation to play out. CNN

It was reported on Monday that Jonathan Ross, who has worked for ICE since 2015 and served Border Patrol before that, had lied to his neighbours about what he did for a living. People reported that the 43-year-old had pretended at a 2020 neighborhood garage party that he was a botanist.

Jonathan Ross, 43, left, with family members in 2014.

Jonathan Ross photographed in 2014. Facebook

Skinner said that, since June, two federal immigration staff members identified by ICE List had reached out to say they had left their posts and had been removed from the site. “We would do the same for any who has quit and has not been identified at a raid,” he added.

He said his project was important because DHS refuses to hold its own agents accountable for violations of the law.

Businesses boarded up in parts of Minneapolis display posters of Renee Nicole Good

Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told the Daily Beast that its “law enforcement officers are on the frontlines arresting terrorists, gang members, murderers, pedophiles, and rapists,” but that “thanks to the malicious rhetoric of sanctuary politicians, they are under constant threat from violent agitators.”

She added: “Publicizing their identities puts their lives and the lives of their families at serious risk.”

6

Gavin Newsom' and his staff have quietly talked to the champion of a controversial wealth tax proposal seeking an off-ramp to defuse a looming ballot measure fight.

The conversations, reported here for the first time, have occurred intermittently for months as SEIU-UHW's ballot initiative targeting billionaires migrated from the backrooms of California politics to the center of a raging debate about Silicon Valley and income inequality, sparking tech titans' wrath and vows to move out of state.

"We've been at this for four months," Newsom said in an interview with POLITICO, describing an "all-hands" effort that has included him meeting one-on-one with SEIU-UHW's leader, Dave Regan.

A compromise does not appear imminent. A union official cast doubt on the possibility of a deal, saying the two sides do not currently have another meeting scheduled and framing a ballot fight as an inevitability.

"Healthcare workers are going to the ballot to prevent California hospitals and emergency rooms from closing," the union's chief of staff, Suzanne Jimenez, said in a statement. "Congress created a $100 billion crisis for California through HR1 last July


and California voters will solve that problem when they pass the billionaire tax act this November."

Newsom has staunchly opposed both the current proposal and earlier versions that surfaced in Sacramento, arguing they would hamstring California's tentpole industries and topple a pillar of the state's tax base. Proponents with SEIU-UHW, a major union representing more than 100,000 workers, argue the measure is the only idea commensurate with the scale of federal cuts that could lead to widespread health care job losses and hospital closures.

Officials with SEIU-UHW have said they are confident Newsom will come around


an unlikely proposition given Newsom's adamant rejection of such measures.

Yet despite the gulf between them, both Newsom and Regan have ample experience forging deals to clear labor initiatives off the ballot


including with each other. In 2022, the Newsom administration and a labor coalition that included Regan struck an agreement to raise the state's minimum wage for health care workers to $25 an hour.

Regan is one of Sacramento's most prolific practitioners of ballot measure politics, regularly filing initiatives that force affected industries to the negotiating table in hopes of averting a costly and uncertain campaign. The wealth tax proposal is one of three state initiatives SEIU-UHW has filed this cycle.

The union is still collecting signatures to qualify it for the November ballot, where it would face a fierce and well-funded opposition campaign. Nevertheless, Newsom is highly motivated to halt the initiative.

Beyond his belief that such a tax would harm California's finances, sidelining the idea could help Newsom avert a home-state backlash ahead of an expected 2028 presidential run while bolstering his credibility in Silicon Valley. The governor has deep industry ties that stretch back to his days as an innovation-touting mayor of San Francisco.

In his interview with POLITICO, Newsom said the drumbeat of wealthy tech players making moves to exit California vindicated his warnings about the ballot measure's downsides.

"This is my fear. It's just what I warned against. It's happening," Newsom said.

Opponents of the wealth tax include Ron Conway, an investor and prominent San Francisco political figure who is close with Newsom. Conway has donated $100,000 to an opposition campaign run by political consultants who have previously worked for Newsom.

At the same time, the governor is under mounting pressure from labor unions and other Democratic allies to find more revenue sources as California braces for the full impact of federal cuts.

6


UKIP leader Nick Tenconi (Image: James Manning)

A NEW party logo proposed by the UK Independence Party (Ukip) has been slammed for being strikingly similar to a Nazi symbol.

The party has bid to replace its purple and yellow logo featuring a gold pound sign with a black and white symbol that appears to mirror the Iron Cross -- a military medal in the Kingdom of Prussia and Nazi Germany.

The logo, which will need to be approved by the Electoral Commission, also features a shield and spear as well as a slogan branding the party "the new right".

The similarity to the Iron Cross has been picked up on by scores of people on social media.

However, the party has claimed the emblem features "the holy lance, the Eucharist and the Cross Pattée" adding it is "outright offensive" to suggest the logo is a "Nazi symbol".

Angus Pargas-Wyatt, director of political engagement at Total Politics, posted on Twitter/X: "UKIP has submitted an application to the Electoral Commission to change its official logo. And it's ever so slightly concerning..."

Sunder Katwala, the director of the British Future think tank, added on BlueSky: "Ukip have submitted a new logo and slogan to the Electoral Commission, swapping the £ pound sterling symbol for a cross, that looks very much like it is modelled on the Iron Cross used by Prussia & Germany 1871-1918 and Hitler's Nazi regime from 1933-45."

The logo has appeared already at protests on supporters' flags but has now been officially proposed to the Electoral Commission.

If approved, it could be used on ballot papers for General Elections.

NEW: @UKIP has submitted an application to the Electoral Commission to change its official logo.

And it's ever so slightly concerning... 👀 pic.twitter.com/Ux6yYe7Nb9


Angus Parsad-Wyatt (@anguswyatt) January 12, 2026

Another user said: "Ukip go completely mask off. The cross is obviously the huge red flags but a f****** weapon on a political party logo?

"Don't forget the axe and sticks is the reason we call these vermin fascists."

The Eurosceptic, far-right party used to be led by Nigel Farage and gained two MPs in the 2010s, but has rarely made headlines since the UK left the EU.

READ MORE: SNP MP to host Greenland minister in Westminster amid Donald Trump threats

They are now led by Nick Tenconi, the chief operating officer of Turning Point UK, an organisation set up to promote right-wing politics in UK schools and universities.

In October last year, a planned demonstration by Ukip was banned by the Met Police from taking place in an area with a large Muslim population.

The gathering had been due to take place in east London and had been billed as a demo to "reclaim Whitechapel from the Islamists".

A Ukip spokesperson said: "Our new logo features the holy lance, the Eucharist and the Cross Pattée, to show UKIP's commitment to reinstate Christianity into the heart of government.

"The Templar Cross/Cross Pattée is a powerful Christian symbol that symbolises spiritual victory and sacrifice.

"The Cross Pattée has been featured throughout British history and is used as the Victoria Cross, sits on the crown of our monarch, and is also found within the Parliamentary logo. Are critics suggesting that the King, Parliament and our war heroes are all Nazis?

"It is outright offensive, ignorant and Christophobic to suggest that the Cross Pattée is a 'Nazi symbol'. The Cross Pattée is displayed throughout Christian religious texts and these efforts to slander us with vile allegations is simply religious bigotry and discrimination."

[-] RedWizard@news.abolish.capital 7 points 3 weeks ago

It’s absurd how easily it works.

Yeah, it seems to have worked well on you. If you ever want to explore your own bias and unravel the propaganda you've been poisoned with, there are resources and spaces available to do that.

[-] RedWizard@news.abolish.capital 11 points 3 weeks ago

fed They want violence so martial law can be declared. Sharing this article actually promotes their agenda.

[-] RedWizard@news.abolish.capital 7 points 3 weeks ago

In sorry, the idea that injunctions would prevent this is laughable. In many states the state police are directly collaborating with ICE. What procedure are you even imagining? You want the deportations so long as it's done so in a professional way? The legal system is dead, only it's ghost remains and this regime doesn't believe in ghosts.

[-] RedWizard@news.abolish.capital 9 points 3 weeks ago

The only opposition they represent is being opposed to the peoples will and desires. They are fascists defending fascism. They always have been.

[-] RedWizard@news.abolish.capital 9 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago)

Yeah, but you have to ask why the conditions exist to begin with. The idea that Maduro, or the Chavistas are to blame here ignores reality. You can be a Venezuelan and also reject the reality that created the conditions which forced you to leave. In some cases those same Venezuelans fled, like some Cubans had also done, because the system being implemented to root out the neocolonial apparatus impacted them due to their material ties to that system. Meaning, some of these people were reaping rewards as servants of the neocolonial apparatus, while working people in the country suffered.

So, for example, a study out of Lancet Global Health estimates that US sanctions applied to Venezuela cause the deaths of more than 564,000 people each year. More than half of the dead are children under the age of 5.

Mortality effects ranged from 8·4 log points (95% CI 3·9–13·0) for children younger than 5 years to 2·4 log points (0·9–4·0) for individuals aged 60–80 years. We estimated that unilateral sanctions were associated with an annual toll of 564 258 deaths (95% CI 367 838–760 677), similar to the global mortality burden associated with armed conflict.

So, I fully understand why people would leave. The other thing that your statement also seems to not acknowledge the class character of those who are fleeing. A 2007 Reuters article talks about the initial class character of those fleeing:

As populist President Hugo Chavez tightens his grip on the oil-producing country, wealthy and middle class citizens [emphasis mine] are fleeing, just as their counterparts did soon after Fidel Castro seized power in Havana more than 40 years ago.

Those wealthy and middle class citizens being referenced in Cuba were plantation owners, managers, and operators of American corporate interest in the country. This wasn't all that different for Venezuela. From the same article:

"If you have young children, you want out. If you have assets that have been seized, or may be seized, you want out as quickly as possible," Roett added. "If you have land that will be expropriated, leave sooner than later. As the alta (upper) bourgeoisie becomes more and more of a target, you want to leave before Hugo Chavez shuts the door [emphasis mine]."

"upper bourgeoisie", those are not my words, those are the words of Riordan Roett, director of Latin American studies at Johns Hopkins University, who was interviewed by Routers for this story. The class character of those leaving in the Chavez era isn't even being obscured from you here, it is stated rather mater-of-factually. The destination for many of these people were places like the US and Europe, according to IUSSP:

These emigrants were predominantly members of Venezuela’s middle and upper classes, including businesspeople, highly skilled professionals—especially former oil industry employees—and first or second-generation descendants of immigrants to Venezuela. Their primary destinations included the United States, Spain, Italy, and Portugal (Freitez 2011). These outflows were predominantly female (55%), with a mean age of about 28.2 years.

But as time marches on, and the sanctions ramp up, the class character of those leaving also changes, and that class character comes with it different destinations. By 2016, when the poorer band of people within the country decided to leave, many of them fled to nearby countries, and often were binational which likely eased the process of moving, again IUSSP:

The onset of the crisis (2014-2017) marked a shift from highly skilled labor migration to family migration. The Venezuelan diaspora increased from 800,000 nationals abroad in 2014 to 2 million in 2017. The average age of these additional 1.21 million migrants dropped to its lowest level in 2015 (24.9 years for men and 25.4 years for women), and about 26% were under 15 years of age. These outflows largely consisted of entire families, often binational, seeking nearby destinations. Countries such as Colombia, Chile, Peru, and Ecuador emerged as primary destinations for Venezuelans. The incipient crisis also prompted a large number of young men to migrate; for the first time, the number of migrating men surpassed that of women (102 men per 100 women).

So I'm not shocked to see that many of the Venezuelans you encounter in Europe might be celebrating the kidnaping of Maduro, who, to them, very likely represents the early changes that drove them, or their parents, out of Venezuela. You don't, however, encounter the droves of people living in the region who left the country afterward. They might have a different understanding.

It's worth noting that, the sanctions as applied to Venezuela are not unique, and have some very specific timing. They follow a very similar pattern to many other sanctions handed out by the US over the years. They have the same kind of impact on the population from country to country. Access to food and medical care enter into a crisis state. This was true in Nicaragua, Syria, and Venezuela. They all have the same clear goal, regime change. This isn't the stated goal, but as was the case in Nicaragua, Syria, and Ukraine, these sanctions are only ever lifted once existing leaders and governments fall.

Specifically, in the case of Venezuela, you can see that these sanctions seem to have a very specific timing. Francisco Rodriguez, a Venezuelan opposition economist, in his study "Sanctions, Economic Statecraft, and Venezuela’s Crisis", find a pattern in Venezuela's oil production that highlights the direct impact of sanctions on the industry.

He notes that, joint ventures with foreign multinationals were the driving force behind the stabilization of oil output in 2008 to 2015. The economic sanctions explicitly hit these joint ventures:

these joint ventures became islands of productivity in the country’s oil sector and generated pockets of growth that contributed to the stabilization of output in the 2008–2015 period. It would be these joint ventures with foreign multinationals that would be particularly hit by the 2017–2020 sanctions.

Industry analysis at the time were predicting that Venezuela's oil output would recover by 2017. This would indicate that there were no economic factors within Venezuela itself that prevented oil production. The failure to recover seems to be a direct result of US sanctions:

oil industry analysts were predicting a stabilization of Venezuelan oil output, and economic analysts were predicting modest economic growth fueled by the recovery of oil prices as late as mid-2017.24 The severe decline in oil production was completely unforeseen even by the forecast models that took full account of the well-known decline in investment at the time

He concludes that "economic sanctions and other actions of economic statecraft aimed at the Venezuelan government have strongly impacted the country’s economic and humanitarian conditions” and that “it is hard to deny that they have had a sizable negative impact on living conditions in the country”.

This all really calls into question the idea that the Chavistas are at fault for the conditions under which people live in the country. One has to wonder what the country would be like if these sanctions were never imposed at all.

[-] RedWizard@news.abolish.capital 8 points 1 month ago

This has been a great early Christmas gift!

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