FAQ

Contents

What is the ICE List?

The ICE List is a public archive of ICE agents, collaborators, detention facilities, private contractors, and the systems behind U.S. immigration enforcement. It exists to document names, track patterns, and hold institutions accountable.

Is this legal?

Yes. All information is sourced from public records, news reports, legal filings, FOIA documents, or verified submissions. The First Amendment protects the right to publish public-interest information about public officials and institutions.

Are you doxxing people?

No. We do not publish private addresses, phone numbers, or family details. We publish workplace affiliations, government roles, and actions taken in public capacity. If an ICE agent arrests someone in the street, that is not private conduct.

Why are you doing this?

Because the U.S. government relies on secrecy and silence to commit harm. The more invisible the system, the less accountable it becomes. This project exists to name names, expose infrastructure, and prevent history from being buried.

What if someone is wrongly listed?

We have a takedown and correction process. Anyone can submit a correction request with evidence. We don’t guarantee removal, but we review every claim seriously.

Can I submit something anonymously?

Yes. Anonymity is protected. We review all submissions before publishing, but you do not need to identify yourself to contribute.

How do you verify submissions?

We check against public sources, cross-reference names, and label entries clearly: Confirmed, Alleged, or Under Review. We do not publish wild claims without verification.

Can ICE shut this down?

Not without violating constitutional protections. They can try. They won’t succeed.

How can I help?

Check out the How You Can Help and Volunteer Roles pages. There’s always something you can do.

Is this connected to a larger group?

Not officially. We collaborate with legal workers, journalists, researchers, and activists. This is a grassroots project. It belongs to everyone who refuses to stay silent.

Where can I learn more?

Start with the About the ICE List page. Then dive into the names, facilities, crimes, and programs. This system isn’t hidden. It’s just never been mapped like this before.