Report a Raid

Contents

If you witness or hear about an ICE raid, it needs to be documented. Raids often happen quietly, off the books, or with little media attention. That’s on purpose. They depend on silence, fear, and chaos. Reporting a raid helps us map patterns, identify agents, and warn others in the area.

What to Look For

  • Unmarked vehicles or vans near apartment complexes, trailer parks, or work sites
  • Officers in plain clothes, often wearing ICE badges or bulletproof vests
  • Sudden activity around early morning hours (between 4–8 a.m.)
  • People being stopped, questioned, or taken away without explanation
  • Blocked entrances, detained family members, or neighborhood lockdowns

What to Send Us

  • Photos or video (ONLY if it’s safe to take them)
  • Date, time, and exact location of the raid
  • Description of what happened (number of officers, what was said, who they targeted)
  • License plate numbers or vehicle descriptions
  • Any names or badge numbers you can safely record

You can submit anonymously. Your safety comes first. Do not engage with agents or put yourself at risk to get information.

What We Do With It

We use your report to:

  • Track ICE activity in specific cities and neighborhoods
  • Link agents to incidents
  • Create public warnings or alerts
  • Build the case history for local field offices

We may also share it with legal aid groups working to protect impacted communities.

What Not to Do

  • Do not follow ICE vehicles
  • Do not try to intervene directly
  • Do not post faces of undocumented individuals on social media
  • Do not submit false or exaggerated reports

This system only works if people stay safe and honest.

Spread the Word

If you saw a raid, someone else probably did too. Let them know they can report it here. This is how we watch the watchers.

Every raid report matters. It tells a story they’re trying to erase.