Bloomington police arrested 41-year-old Alexander Steven Back
November 2025 in a solicitation and sex trafficking sting known as
“Operation Creep.”
As part of that operation, which resulted in 16 arrests, officers
posed as 17-year-old girls and posted advertisements on websites that
law enforcement say are known to facilitate human trafficking.1
Admitted to joining the regime’s secret police on her social media.
Barboza changed her name to Citlali Graham online, when people called
her out for her activity, likely an attempt to hide her heritage. She
often flips between bragging about her role in immigration work, and
denying she plays any part in Trump's fascism.
Gregory Bovino has served as a Border Patrol Sector Chief and senior
enforcement strategist since 2019. He is frequently featured in national
media coverage and has been present at multiple immigration raids and
joint operations involving Border Patrol, ICE ERO, and
local police units.
Basic Details
Agency: U.S. Border Patrol
Role: Border Patrol Sector Chief / Senior
Official
Status: Active
Primary areas of activity: California, Illinois,
North Carolina
Public identity: Fully confirmed through national
media and official DHS publications
Documented Incidents
Below is an automatically updating list of incidents in which Bovino
was publicly identified or filmed on-site.
Footage of Bovino visibly supervising or actively participating in
tactical operations
Verified field video from Charlotte, North Carolina
(2025-11-18)
Notes
Bovino is listed as a public figure. His page follows the
classification rules for senior DHS personnel whose identities are
already widely published and confirmed.
Multiple Pam Briggs in/around LinkedIn stated residence of North
Richland Hills, TX. Be very careful connecting to social media not tied
to professional profile.
Dasha Bunks is an Enforcement and Removal Operations officer with ICE. She has been
employed in immigration enforcement since April 2019 and is based in
Pennsylvania.
Her work has included assignments at Berks County Prison and the
Berks County Family Shelter, facilities historically used for
immigration detention. Her LinkedIn profile lists her role under ICE
Enforcement & Removal Operations, following a brief onboarding
period with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security in 2019.
In August 2025, Dean Cain stated in an ICE recruitment
video and subsequent media interviews that he was in the process of
becoming an ICE officer. He
told Fox News he intended to be “sworn in as an ICE agent ASAP,”
and described his decision as a commitment to support ICE personnel.
News outlets also reported he had participated in ICE training
activities.
While DHS has not publicly confirmed a formal sworn position, Cain’s
involvement with ICE has been
described as an honorary or prospective role. The reporting notes that
Cain’s statements and public materials originated from his own
announcements, interviews, and participation in ICE-aligned media
campaigns.
Marcos D. Charles is a senior official within ICE, currently
serving as the Acting Executive Associate Director of
Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO). In this role, Charles
oversees national ICE enforcement and deportation operations.
In 2025, Charles has appeared publicly and has been referenced in
national reporting concerning ICE arrest operations and detention
activity across multiple states, including Minnesota, Illinois, and
Texas.
Prior to his current national leadership role, Charles served as a
senior ICE official in Massachusetts. During that period, he was
repeatedly implicated in litigation, judicial findings, and
investigative reporting concerning ICE interference with court
proceedings, unlawful civil immigration arrests, and violations of due
process protections.
Activity Prior to 2025
(Massachusetts)
While serving as a senior ICE official in Massachusetts, Charles was
associated with a series of actions that drew judicial rebuke, civil
rights litigation, and public scrutiny.
Federal and state courts examined ICE practices under his leadership,
including arrests made during court proceedings and marriage interviews,
as well as detentions found to interfere with judicial processes.
Evidence and Sources
NBC News — ICE arrest operations in Minnesota (2025)
This page documents both current leadership responsibilities and
historically documented conduct. Ongoing incidents, litigation
references, or oversight findings will be added as they emerge.
Chad Gregory Chronister is the Sheriff of Hillsborough County,
Florida, a county that plays a major role in the state’s local-federal
immigration enforcement network. Chronister has been in the Hillsborough
County Sheriff’s Office since 1992, rising through patrol, SWAT,
narcotics, intelligence, dignitary protection, and command roles before
being appointed sheriff in 2017.
Hillsborough County participates in Florida’s statewide 287(g)
framework. This creates a direct pipeline between local arrests booked
into the county jail and ICE’s immigration
enforcement system. The structure means HCSO identifies, holds, and
transfers people to ICE custody,
making Chronister’s agency an active local partner in federal
immigration actions. Florida mandates this cooperation statewide, but
Chronister’s office has been one of the most consistent and visible
contributors in the Tampa region.
Chronister is also a political figure within the Florida Republican
establishment. In late 2024, Donald Trump announced he intended to
nominate Chronister as Administrator of the Drug Enforcement
Administration. Chronister withdrew days later.
His tenure includes widely criticized policing decisions, including a
2020 operation in which his office publicized the names and mugshots of
men targeted in a park sting. Civil rights groups and policing experts
condemned the operation for targeting gay men without any public
complaint or prostitution element.
Victim report – First-hand account describing an
Arizona State Trooper identified as Kamron Debelak allegedly contacting
ICE during a vehicle accident response involving an Arizona driver.
Notes
According to the victim report, the trooper requested
identification, questioned place of birth, temporarily retained
documents, contacted ICE, and called for additional troopers and an ICE
vehicle before ultimately releasing the individual following public
confrontation.
Scott Thomas Deiseroth is identified in widely circulated body-camera
footage documenting a DUI arrest involving an ICE officer with children
present in the vehicle.1
The footage, titled “ICE Officer Gets Busted for DUI w/ Kids in Car!
BODYCAM,” shows a law-enforcement officer identified by name during the
encounter. The video has been reposted and discussed across multiple
platforms, prompting public attention regarding the officer’s employment
status and conduct at the time of the arrest.2
As of publication, no official ICE or DHS press release confirming
disciplinary action or employment consequences related to this incident
has been located.
Evidence and Sources
Body-camera footage identifying Scott Thomas Deiseroth during a DUI
arrest involving children in the vehicle.3
Public discussion and redistribution of the footage across social
platforms and video aggregators.4
Brown County has longstanding arrangements to hold federal inmates,
and in 2025 the sheriff’s office updated its agreement to include
individuals in ICE custody. According to local reporting, Brown County
Jail held *ICE safekeepers* under this updated agreement, though Delain
stated that none were held long-term in general population. Delain was
quoted explaining that the safekeepers could originate from anywhere in
the state or country and that the county does not have space for
extended ICE detainee stays. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}
Mark Farish was identified as participating in an ICE enforcement
action at the Albemarle County General District Court in
Charlottesville, Virginia, on April 22, 2025. During the operation, ICE
agents detained individuals inside or immediately outside the courthouse
shortly after court proceedings concluded.
Video footage of the incident shows federal immigration agents
conducting the arrests in a public courthouse setting. The enforcement
action drew public criticism from local residents, legal advocates, and
elected officials, who raised concerns about immigration arrests
connected to routine court appearances.12
Farish’s presence at the scene has been identified through publicly
available video evidence.
Video footage documenting the April 22, 2025 ICE courthouse arrests
in Charlottesville, Virginia, showing Mark Farish present during the
operation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-9PfxyOXm4w
VPM News reporting on ICE detentions at the Albemarle County
courthouse on April 22, 2025.3
AP News reporting on courthouse immigration arrests and resulting
criticism.4
Role: Associate Director, Office of Professional Responsibility
Location: Washington, D.C.
Status: Active
Verification: Verified
Career
Fenton has served in senior leadership within ICE’s Office of
Professional Responsibility, the division responsible for internal
investigations, professional conduct reviews, and compliance with agency
policies.1
Office of Professional
Responsibility
The Office of Professional Responsibility investigates allegations of
misconduct by ICE personnel and oversees compliance with internal
standards. As Associate Director, Fenton plays a central role in
managing these oversight functions and responding to external
accountability inquiries.2
Congressional
Correspondence and Oversight
In 2025, members of the U.S. Congress addressed formal correspondence
to ICE leadership, including Associate Director Fenton, requesting
explanations and internal review related to ICE enforcement actions and
operational conduct.3
Evidence and Sources
ICE press release confirming Jennifer M. Fenton’s appointment as
Associate Director of the Office of Professional Responsibility.4
ICE Office of Professional Responsibility overview and mandate.5
Congressional correspondence requesting internal review and
accountability from ICE OPR leadership.6
TRAC immigration data shows that Judge Danielle H. Garten granted
0% asylum across 188 asylum decisions,
with only 2.7% of respondents receiving any form of
relief and 97.3% receiving no relief. In the national
asylum system, judges typically grant asylum at much higher rates, and
even the lowest-granting judges usually show at least minimal approval
rates across large caseloads.
A 0% grant rate across 188 cases falls outside the
range of normal statistical variation documented in government and
academic studies of asylum adjudication. Rates below approximately
2–3% are considered extreme outliers nationally, and a
consistent 0% over this number of cases is viewed by researchers as
statistically implausible without the influence of external or systemic
factors.
Gibson was born in Clark County, Washington, and later became active
in right-wing street politics in the Pacific Northwest. He founded
Patriot Prayer in 2016 and has since organized or appeared at numerous
demonstrations characterized by confrontation with counter-protesters,
including anti-fascist groups and immigration rights activists.
Patriot Prayer events have frequently drawn participation from other
far-right organizations, including the Proud Boys, and have resulted in
repeated clashes with counter-protesters in Portland and surrounding
areas.
ICE-Related Provocation
Gibson has been repeatedly documented appearing at or near
demonstrations connected to ICE operations or immigration enforcement,
where he has engaged in behavior described by media and law enforcement
sources as antagonistic or provocative toward protesters opposing
ICE.
Reporting has also documented close contact between Gibson and
Portland police during periods of heightened protest activity related to
immigration enforcement, raising public scrutiny over coordination and
information-sharing during demonstrations.
Legal History
Gibson was indicted in 2019 on felony riot charges stemming from a
May Day confrontation in Portland involving Patriot Prayer and
anti-fascist protesters. Although he was ultimately acquitted in 2022,
the presiding judge acknowledged his presence and conduct during the
confrontation while ruling that his actions constituted protected speech
under Oregon law.
Evidence and Sources
Reuters – [1(https://www.reuters.com/world/us/facebook-removes-pages-right-wing-group-patriot-prayer-after-portland-unrest-2020-09-04/)
Facebook removes pages of right-wing group Patriot Prayer after Portland
unrest] – documents Joey Gibson’s leadership of Patriot Prayer and
repeated confrontations during Portland protests, including
demonstrations tied to immigration enforcement.
Willamette Week – [2(https://www.wweek.com/news/courts/2019/02/14/texts-between-portland-police-and-patriot-prayer-ringleader-joey-gibson-show-warm-exchange/)
Texts Between Portland Police and Patriot Prayer Ringleader Joey Gibson
Show Warm Exchange] – details Gibson’s coordination and presence during
confrontational protest activity in Portland.
NBC News – [3(https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/disturbing-texts-between-oregon-police-far-right-group-prompt-n969021)
“Disturbing” texts between Oregon police and far-right group prompt
investigation] – covers Gibson’s role in far-right street protests and
scrutiny over police communications during demonstrations.
OPB – [4(https://www.opb.org/article/2020/09/04/facebook-removes-patriot-prayer-founder-joey-gibson-pages/)
Facebook removes Patriot Prayer founder Joey Gibson’s pages] – reporting
on Gibson’s organizing role in Portland protests amid unrest tied to
policing and federal enforcement.
The Oregonian – [5(https://www.oregonlive.com/crime/2019/08/joey-gibson-faces-felony-charge-in-fight-at-ne-portlands-cider-riot.html)
Joey Gibson faces felony charge in fight at NE Portland’s Cider Riot] –
documents Gibson’s presence and conduct during violent confrontations
with counter-protesters in Portland.
Holani is identified in sworn federal court filings as a Deportation
Officer with ICE ERO. According to a declaration submitted pursuant to
28 U.S.C. § 1746, she is assigned to the ERO office in West Valley City,
Utah, and has served on Temporary Duty Yonder (TDY) assignments in the
Oregon area.
Evidence and Sources
Federal court declaration signed by Destiny Holani identifying her
as a Deportation Officer with ICE ERO, assigned to West Valley City,
Utah, with TDY service in Oregon.
media/Court_Declaration.png
Photograph showing an armed federal officer wearing ERO-identifying
equipment consistent with ICE ERO field operations.
Homan began his federal career in 1984 as a
Border Patrol agent, later transitioning to
investigative and supervisory roles within the former Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS). After the creation of the Department of
Homeland Security, Homan became a senior official within ICE, rising
through the ranks of Enforcement and Removal Operations
(ERO).
From January 2017 to June 2018, Homan served as
Acting Director of ICE, overseeing nationwide
immigration enforcement operations, detention, and removals. During this
period, ICE significantly expanded interior enforcement actions
following executive orders issued in early 2017.
After leaving ICE, Homan remained active in immigration policy as a
commentator, advisor, and political appointee,
including serving as a senior fellow at the Heritage
Foundation and later being appointed as a border and
immigration policy advisor during subsequent Republican
administrations and campaigns.
Public Statements and Policy
Role
Homan is widely known for his public defense of aggressive
immigration enforcement policies, including large-scale deportations,
expanded detention capacity, and opposition to sanctuary policies. He
has appeared frequently in national media defending ICE operations and
enforcement priorities.
His tenure and public advocacy have made him a central figure in
debates surrounding U.S. immigration enforcement, civil rights, and
executive authority.
Evidence and Sources
ICE Leadership Records – Acting Director of ICE
(2017–2018)
Department of Homeland Security – career history
and public statements
Congressional testimony – appearances before U.S.
House and Senate committees
Media profiles – extensive coverage of ICE
enforcement policy during tenure
Notes
Role and dates are fully verified through official DHS and
congressional records.
Individual operational incidents are documented separately and will
auto-populate if linked.
David Kim is an Assistant Chief Patrol Agent with U.S. Border
Patrol’s El Centro Sector in California.1 In
CBP public communications, Kim is repeatedly quoted in his official
capacity regarding enforcement activity and operational outcomes in the
El Centro Sector area of responsibility.23
Kim has also been identified by name and title in independent
reporting describing El Centro Sector operations conducted away from the
immediate border region, including operations described as testing the
sector’s ability to operate at greater distance from its home area.4
Public Activity and Media
Presence
FOX 11 Los Angeles
reporting (June 2025)
Kim was interviewed by FOX 11 Los Angeles in a report describing
Border Patrol activity in the Los Angeles area in coordination with
immigration enforcement operations, in which he is identified as
“Assistant Chief David Kim” from Border Patrol’s El Centro Sector.5 In the same reporting, Kim comments
on operational activity in Los Angeles County and describes enforcement
conditions in “sanctuary” jurisdictions.6
FOX 11 Los Angeles
reporting (July 2025)
FOX 11 Los Angeles later featured Kim in reporting on an arrest
operation in downtown Los Angeles, again identifying him as “Assistant
Chief David Kim” from U.S. Border Patrol’s El Centro Sector and quoting
him on tactics and operational posture.7
Statements
on enforcement posture and operations beyond the border region
In reporting focused on El Centro Sector activity and a lawsuit
regarding arrests in Kern County, Kim is quoted describing the operation
as a “proof of concept” and as testing capabilities related to operating
at greater distance from the sector’s home area.8
CBP Public Communications
Local media
releases quoting Kim (selected examples)
Kim has been quoted by CBP in multiple El Centro Sector local media
releases, generally framing arrests and interdictions as public-safety
actions.
Quoted by CBP following an arrest described as involving a
self-admitted “Sureño” gang member, identified in the release as
“Assistant Chief Patrol David Kim.”9
Quoted by CBP in a release describing arrests of a previously
convicted sex offender and a person described as gang-affiliated;
identified in the release as “Assistant Chief Patrol Agent David Kim.”10
Quoted by CBP in a local media release describing a rescue operation
by Border Patrol agents; identified as “Assistant Chief Patrol Agent
David Kim.”11
Community engagement
(Citizens’ Academy)
Kim is quoted in a CBP local media release concerning an El Centro
Sector Citizens’ Academy graduation event, in which he describes the
program as an opportunity to engage with the community and explain
Border Patrol work.12
Additional Public Reporting
Border Patrol
pursuit policy reporting (2019)
Kim is identified as an assistant chief patrol agent for the El
Centro sector in investigative reporting on Border Patrol vehicle
pursuits, and is quoted discussing how agents weigh risks during
pursuits.13
Evidence and Sources
FOX 11 Los Angeles reporting identifying Kim as “Assistant Chief
David Kim” from Border Patrol’s El Centro Sector (June 2025; July
2025).1415
CBP local media releases quoting Kim as “Assistant Chief Patrol
Agent” / “Assistant Chief Patrol.”16171819
inewsource reporting quoting Kim regarding operations conducted away
from the immediate border region.20
ProPublica investigative reporting identifying Kim as an assistant
chief patrol agent for El Centro sector and quoting him on pursuit
decision-making.21
Notes
Additional details pending verification, including prior
assignments, training background, and any public records confirming
dates of service or promotions.
[1(https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/local-media-release/el-centro-sector-border-patrol-held-citizens-academy-graduation)
El Centro Sector Border Patrol Held Citizens’ Academy Graduation], U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP), 30 Oct 2015.↩︎
[2(https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/local-media-release/border-patrol-agents-arrest-sure-o-gang-member-2)
Border Patrol Agents Arrest “Sureño” Gang Member], CBP, 11 Feb 2019.↩︎
[3(https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/local-media-release/border-patrol-arrests-sex-offender-and-known-gang-member)
Border Patrol Arrests Sex Offender and Known Gang Member], CBP, 2 Apr
2018.↩︎
[4(https://inewsource.org/2025/03/14/lawsuit-border-patrol-el-centro-chief-kern-county-operation/)
inewsource talked to El Centro’s Border Patrol chief now being sued over
Bakersfield arrests. Here’s what he said], inewsource, 14 Mar 2025.↩︎
[5(https://www.foxla.com/news/border-patrol-ice-los-angeles-immigration-raids)
Border Patrol says California, LA 'sanctuary' policies force public
patrols], FOX 11 Los Angeles, 18 Jun 2025.↩︎
[6(https://www.foxla.com/news/border-patrol-arrests-man-anti-ice-t-shirt)
Border Patrol arrests man accused of spitting on agent in Los Angeles],
FOX 11 Los Angeles, 29 Jul 2025.↩︎
[8(https://features.propublica.org/border-crashes/death-injuries-in-high-speed-border-patrol-chases/)
Trapped in a Deadly Chase], ProPublica (with reporting published in
partnership), 4 Apr 2019.↩︎
William Krejci is a federal law enforcement officer assigned to the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in New York.
He has been repeatedly identified in enforcement actions and
crowd-control operations connected to immigration enforcement activity
at and around 26 Federal Plaza, a central site for
ICE-related arrests and protests.
Krejci has appeared alongside ICE and Federal
Protective Service personnel during protest responses, perimeter
enforcement, and detainment operations linked to immigration court
activity.
Krejci was present during the September 18, 2025 enforcement
operation at 26 Federal Plaza that resulted in the arrest of 11
New York City and State elected officials. Video evidence and
contemporaneous reporting place DHS personnel inside and outside the
federal building enforcing dispersal orders and facilitating
arrests.
Krejci was part of the federal enforcement presence responsible for
maintaining interior and exterior security zones during the operation.
The arrests followed a sit-in protest by elected officials who had been
denied access to ICE-controlled areas of the facility.
Crowd Control and Protest
Response
Footage from multiple demonstrations at and around Federal Plaza
shows Krejci participating in coordinated crowd-control actions
involving:
Establishment of secured perimeters around the federal building
Enforcement of dispersal orders during protests
Coordination with ICE and FPS officers during heightened protest
activity
These actions occurred in the context of immigration court operations
and enforcement-related vehicle movements.
Evidence and Sources
Video footage documenting DHS and ICE enforcement activity at
Federal Plaza
Brandon Kridler was recently hired again as a detention officer for
the NORTH LAKE PROCESSING CENTER in Baldwin, Michigan. He works for The
GEO Group, Inc. & is encouraging others to apply.
GEO Group began accepting federal detainees at the Northern Michigan
facility on June 16. If operated at full capacity, it’s poised to be the
largest detention facility in the Midwest.
Baldwin is hundreds of miles from any international border or federal
immigration court, a rural Michigan village on the outskirts of the
Manistee National Forest will serve as a temporary residence for
thousands of detainees awaiting a final decision on their legal status
in the US.
Patrick J. Lechleitner is a former senior executive with U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). He served as Acting Director
of ICE from July 2023 until February 2024, following the resignation of
Director Tae Johnson.12
Lechleitner spent more than two decades at ICE, primarily within
Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO), where he held multiple
leadership roles prior to becoming Acting Director.3
Career
Lechleitner joined ICE in the early 2000s and rose through the ranks
of Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO). He served as Executive
Associate Director for ERO, overseeing ICE’s civil immigration
enforcement programs nationwide.4
In July 2023, he was designated Acting Director of ICE. During his
tenure, he oversaw agency operations during a period of heightened
political scrutiny of immigration enforcement and border policy.5
Lechleitner retired from ICE in early 2024 following the appointment
of a new acting leadership structure.6
Patrick J. Lechleitner – Wikipedia: 1(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_J._Lechleitner)↩︎
ICE press release announcing Acting Director appointment,
July 2023: 2(https://www.ice.gov/news/releases/patrick-j-lechleitner-named-acting-director-ice)↩︎
ICE press materials noting leadership transition, February
2024↩︎
Todd Lyons is a senior executive with U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE). Publicly available professional records confirm his
employment with ICE and indicate that he holds a director-level
leadership role within the agency.1
Further biographical details, including date of birth and early
career history, have not yet been independently verified.
Career
Lyons serves in a senior leadership capacity within ICE. His current
role as ICE Director is reflected in his professional profile and public
employment history.2
Additional details regarding his appointment, tenure, and specific
responsibilities remain pending verification through independent
reporting or official government sources.
Razmik Madoyan is a Supervisory Special Agent with Homeland Security
Investigations (HSI), a directorate of U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE). According to professional profiles and public
records, Madoyan has served in investigative, supervisory, and
international liaison roles within DHS for more than a decade.
He has been visually identified in video footage published by the
Los Angeles Times documenting an ICE arrest inside a Los
Angeles courthouse, an enforcement context that has drawn public
scrutiny due to its location and visibility.1
Additional video circulated online shows ICE agents involved in the
same courthouse enforcement action being confronted by members of the
public, further confirming Madoyan’s presence during the operation.
Education
According to professional networking profiles, Madoyan attended the
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) between 1999 and 2001,
where he studied psychology.
He later earned a master’s degree in forensic science and technology
from National University (2005–2007).
Professional Background
Early Career
Prior to federal service, Madoyan worked as a security guard and
museum store clerk at the Norton Simon Museum in Pasadena, California
(1998–2001).
He served in the U.S. Army as a Healthcare Specialist (Medic), with
deployments including Germany and Iraq (2002–2005).
Following military service, he worked as a counselor with the U.S.
Department of Veterans Affairs in Los Angeles County (2006–2007).
Homeland Security
Investigations
According to publicly available professional profiles, Madoyan has
worked with Homeland Security Investigations since approximately
2007.
His reported roles include:
Special Agent (2007–2020)
Group Supervisor (2020–2022)
Assistant Attaché, U.S. Embassy Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
(2022–2024)
Group Supervisor (from January 2025)
In his attaché role, Madoyan represented the Department of Homeland
Security in international engagements related to cultural property
protection and antiquities trafficking.
Cultural Property and
Antiquities Work
Madoyan is cited in multiple academic and professional publications
related to the investigation and prevention of illicit antiquities
trafficking.
He has been identified as an author or contributor on topics
including:
Forensic detection of ancient pigments and photoluminescence
X-ray fluorescence analysis of historic materials
Postmortem changes and forensic indicators
Counter-trafficking of cultural artifacts, including Syrian
mosaics
In a 2023 professional program hosted in Qatar, Madoyan is identified
as Assistant Attaché for the Department of Homeland Security at the U.S.
Embassy in Abu Dhabi, where he presented on the trafficking of
antiquities and cultural heritage protection.
He has also been mentioned in reporting and academic discussions
related to the repatriation of Cambodian artifacts from U.S. museums and
other cultural property cases.
Publicly Identified
Enforcement Activity
On August 13, 2025, the Los Angeles Times published video
footage showing ICE agents conducting an arrest inside a Los Angeles
courthouse.2 Madoyan was identified on scene
during the operation.
The enforcement action occurred in a public courthouse setting, a
location that has been the subject of legal and policy debate regarding
immigration enforcement practices.
Legal and Court Records
Madoyan is listed as a signatory on court documents in federal
proceedings, including an out-of-district warrant filed in United
States v. Singh (2:21-mj-04027), Central District of
California.
Evidence and Sources
Los Angeles Times video footage documenting an ICE
courthouse arrest in Los Angeles and identifying Razmik Madoyan on
scene.3
Professional networking profiles detailing education and DHS/HSI
employment history.
Academic publications and conference materials citing Madoyan in the
context of forensic science and cultural property protection.
Federal court records listing Madoyan as a signatory in enforcement
proceedings.
Notes
This page documents verified employment history, public
identification in enforcement activity, and professional publications.
Additional incident-level details may be added as they are independently
verified.
David Mason is a federal law enforcement officer associated with U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and based in
or around Memphis, Tennessee. Publicly available information places
Mason in the Memphis area, a region that has seen sustained immigration
enforcement activity and cooperation with federal agencies.
At present, no official ICE biography or court filings have been
located that provide detailed information about Mason’s rank, unit
assignment, or operational role.
Employment and Public
Identification
Open-source material indicates that Mason is associated with ICE and
operates in Tennessee, with Memphis identified as his primary area of
residence or activity.
This section will be updated when corroborating documentation becomes
available.
Publicly Identified
Enforcement Activity
As of this writing, no independently verified media reporting, court
records, or video evidence has been identified that directly links Mason
to a specific enforcement action, arrest, or incident.
This page is intended to serve as a reference point should
incident-level documentation emerge.
Evidence and Sources
Open-source identification linking David Mason to immigration
enforcement activity in Memphis, Tennessee.
No additional public records or media sources confirmed at time of
publication.
Notes
This profile may be expanded as additional evidence or incident
documentation becomes available.
MN-3476 is an unidentified ICE agent depicted in
incident footage from Minneapolis, Minnesota. The agent’s identity has
not been confirmed by ICE or through publicly verifiable documentation
as of publication.
This page uses the identifier MN-3476 as a placeholder name for
tracking purposes. Do not add a personal name unless supported by a
reliable source or strong OSINT confirmation consistent with ICE List
verification standards.
Arian S. Moore (also identified in records we have obtained as Arian
Storm Moore) is a federal law enforcement officer associated with U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Public
records place Moore in Louisiana, and he has been identified as one of
the ICE agents involved in the enforcement operation that culminated in
the killing of Silverio Villegas González in Franklin Park, Illinois, in
September 2025.
Public reporting did not confirm Moore’s involvement in the pursuit
phase of the operation, and ICE would not present his information to the
public. At present, no public evidence establishes which agent
discharged the fatal weapon.
Publicly Identified
Enforcement Activity
Pursuit of Silverio
Villegas González
On September 12, 2025, ICE agents conducted a targeted enforcement
operation in Franklin Park, Illinois, during which Silverio Villegas
González was chased and ultimately shot and killed by an ICE
officer.
Moore is one of two agents involved in the pursuit of Villegas
González. Available reporting and official statements do not
specify which agent fired the fatal shot, and no such
determination has been made public by ICE or the Department of Homeland
Security. Our team have also been unable to confirm which agent fired
shots during the incident.
This page documents Moore’s confirmed presence during the
operation, not responsibility for the use of lethal force.
Incident Context
The killing of Villegas González occurred during a vehicle-related
enforcement encounter. ICE has stated that agents perceived a threat
during the operation, while family members, community advocates, and
elected officials have called for independent investigation and
transparency.
The incident has drawn national scrutiny and remains under
investigation by federal authorities.
NC-0017 appeared in a recorded incident involving the detention of a
U.S. citizen teenager outside a grocery store in Charlotte on November
18, 2025. Facial features are visible, but identity is not yet
confirmed.
Jesse is an ICE agent working currently in the Denver metro area.
Pre-Trump he was working as a deportation agent based out of Grand
Junction, CO primarily doing deportation flight escorts.
He started off working at the detention facility in Aurora but has
since started floating between two fields offices doing what he
describes as “training guys on doing prosecutions and doing
prosecutions”. He’s scheduled to go next month to a 3 week training that
his wife describes as “out of town” and “something he’s been trying to
get into for a while”.
Jesse is an outspoken Trump supporter and has, on several occasions,
openly expressed his support of “rounding up the illegals”. He seems to
have deactivated his Facebook but his Instagram remains live but private
under his first and middle names.
Chris Nocco, the Sheriff of Pasco County, Florida (a suburban county
just north of Tampa, FL) is controversial on numerous allegations of
harassing residents in his county with an intelligence unit, and has
been sued in court before for violations of civil liberties against his
own county residents. Nocco is another proud cooperating sheriff,
working with ICE in Florida under 287(g).
Thomas Parsons is a U.S. Border Patrol agent whose identity became
public following documentation and reporting related to a federal
immigration enforcement incident in Evanston, Illinois. He operated
alongside Donahue,
Timothy during interior enforcement activity conducted far outside
the traditional border zone.
Parsons appears to be a line-level agent rather than a supervisory
official. His public profile is tied to documented field activity and
incident evidence rather than official agency communications or media
appearances.
On October 31, 2025, federal immigration agents were involved in a
confrontation in Evanston, Illinois following a vehicle crash involving
a marked Border Patrol vehicle. Video footage from the scene shows
agents drawing firearms on bystanders and using force against a
handcuffed individual.
Thomas Parsons has been identified as one of the agents present
during the incident, where he was seen assaulting a citizen he had
pinned to the ground. Publicly available video, vehicle records, and
incident documentation place him at the scene alongside Timothy
Donahue. He is associated with enforcement actions occurring
immediately after the crash and during the restraint of the detained
individual.
The incident has been widely circulated online and cited by civil
rights advocates and accountability projects as an example of aggressive
interior immigration enforcement tactics.
Parsons’s activity in Illinois occurred as part of expanded interior
immigration enforcement operations in the Chicago metropolitan area.
These operations have drawn criticism for the deployment of armed
federal agents, vehicle-based interdictions, and use-of-force incidents
in residential neighborhoods.
Additional details regarding Parsons’s service history, training
background, prior assignments, and any internal disciplinary proceedings
have not been publicly disclosed or independently verified.
Ricky Patel was identified as one of the arresting ICE agents
involved in the detention of Newark Mayor Ras Baraka on December 22,
2025, outside Delaney Hall in Newark, New Jersey.
Video footage of the incident shows federal immigration agents
arresting the mayor during a public protest related to immigration
detention operations at the facility. Patel’s presence and participation
in the arrest have been established through publicly available video
evidence documenting the enforcement action.
There are multiple federal law enforcement employees with the
name "Robert Patterson". The original data dump indicated this dead
LinkedIn URL belonged to an agent named "Rob Patterson" working as a
"Criminal Investigator" in the "Greater Seattle Area"1.
Eyewitness testimony from family member of Jose Campoyo
Video footage reviewed and archived by ICE List investigators
Notes
Phillips was observed drawing a rifle before engaging, pointing
the weapon at civilians, and physically assaulting a detainee.
Additional documentation pending.
Sarah Ruth Saldaña (born 1951 in Corpus Christi, Texas) is an
American attorney and former senior federal official who served as the
fourth Director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) from
December 23, 2014 to January 20, 2017 under President Barack Obama.1
She was the first Latina and second woman to hold the post. Prior to
her appointment as ICE Director, Saldaña served as the United States
Attorney for the Northern District of Texas, having previously worked as
an Assistant U.S. Attorney and in private legal practice.23
Saldaña earned her associate degree from Del Mar College, a B.S. from
Texas A&I University, and a J.D. from Southern Methodist University.
She began her federal career in civil service roles and later
transitioned to private practice and federal prosecution before becoming
U.S. Attorney and then ICE Director.4
Career
Saldaña’s legal career included work as a federal prosecutor,
including Deputy Criminal Chief for the Major Fraud and Public
Corruption Section for the Northern District of Texas. In 2011 she
became U.S. Attorney for the Northern District, overseeing a staff of
over 200 employees.5
She was nominated and confirmed as ICE Director in late 2014, where
she led the agency with a workforce of roughly 20,000 and a budget of
approximately $6 billion, enforcing federal laws related to border
control, customs, trade, and immigration for nearly three years.67
During her tenure, Saldaña testified before Congress on enforcement
policies and oversaw ICE operations across the United States and
internationally. She retired from government service in January 2017
following the transition of presidential administrations.8
Evidence and Sources
Saldaña, Sarah. *Wikipedia*, updated recently: Sarah Saldaña served
as Director of ICE 2014–2017. 9
[Sarah R. Saldaña Biography
(DHS)](https://www.congress.gov/114/meeting/house/103652/witnesses/HHRG-114-GO06-Bio-SaldanaS-20150617.pdf?utm_source=chatgpt.com)↩︎
[Director Sarah R. Saldaña retires from government
service](https://www.ice.gov/news/releases/director-sarah-r-saldana-retires-government-service?utm_source=chatgpt.com)↩︎
According to her LinkedIn profile, Schaffer has been employed by the
Transportation Security Administration since
August 2006, initially serving as a
Transportation Security Officer based in Hebron,
Kentucky.
In September 2022, she assumed the role of
Master Transportation Security Instructor, continuing
her service with TSA in a training and instructional capacity. Her
current role is listed as based in Hebron, Kentucky,
with professional ties to the Cincinnati, Ohio region.
A photograph of an individual wearing CBP Border Patrol tactical
gear with visible “Border Patrol Federal Agent” identification.
Civilian photographs and screenshots from a dating application
profile using the name “Sergio,” listing residence in Belen, New Mexico,
and civilian occupations.
At this time, the materials support documentation of appearance and
public self-representation, but do not establish a confirmed legal
identity.
Photograph showing an individual wearing CBP Border Patrol agent
insignia and tactical equipment.
Screenshots of a dating application profile using the name “Sergio,”
including personal photographs and biographical information.
No official CBP employment confirmation or court filings located at
time of page creation.
Notes
This page documents publicly available images and
self-representation. Identity, legal name, and employment status have
not been independently verified. Page subject to update upon
confirmation.
Darren Shackelford is a Deportation Officer with ICE, assigned to
enforcement operations in Michigan. He began his role with ICE in
October 2025 and is based in the Detroit area.
Prior to joining ICE, Shackelford spent over a decade working in
local law enforcement with Jackson County, Michigan. His previous roles
included Deputy Sheriff, Enforcement Officer, and Bench Warrant Officer.
His duties included warrant execution, custody transfers, probation
violation enforcement, and field training responsibilities.
His LinkedIn profile lists additional certifications and
responsibilities during his county service, including work as a Field
Training Officer and Taser Instructor.
Sheahan was born in Curtice, Ohio, and grew up on a family horse
farm. She graduated from Genoa Area High School in 2015 and attended
Ohio State University, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in public
affairs, public management, leadership, and policy with a minor in
community and business leadership in 2019. During college she was active
in leadership programs and competitive athletics.
:contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
Career
Before joining ICE, Sheahan held several political and public
administration roles:
Political Director for then-Governor Kristi Noem (South
Dakota) (2021–2024), where she coordinated political strategy
and support operations. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
Executive Director, South Dakota Republican Party
(2023–2024). :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
Secretary, Louisiana Department of Wildlife and
Fisheries (January 2024–March 2025), overseeing enforcement and
regulatory divisions and instituting operational programs, including a
Special Operations Group to support statewide public safety efforts.
:contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
In March 2025, DHS Secretary Noem selected Sheahan as Deputy
Director of ICE, placing her in a top leadership position
within the agency alongside acting ICE Director Todd Lyons.
:contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}
Notable Context
Sheahan’s appointment to a senior ICE leadership role has attracted
media and public attention due to her relatively young age and atypical
background for a federal law enforcement executive. Some commentators
have noted her previous state agency and political experience, while
others have highlighted the absence of traditional immigration
enforcement experience prior to the role.
:contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
Evidence and Sources
ICE Official Leadership Page – confirms current
position and title. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}
Homeland Security Today – announcement of
appointment. :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}
Biographical Summary – personal background and
education information. :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}
Media Coverage – commentary on qualifications and
public reaction. :contentReference[oaicite:10]{index=10}
Notes
Additional verification (education documents, official federal bio)
may be added when available.
Dean Smith is identified as an agent with the U.S. Department of
Homeland Security through a publicly accessible professional networking
profile.1 The profile lists his position as
“Agent” at Homeland Security and places him in Saratoga County, New
York.
As of publication, no public-facing DHS or ICE press releases, court
records, or media reporting have been located that further detail
Smith’s specific role, operational unit, or enforcement activities.
Employment Information
According to the professional profile, Smith is employed as an agent
with Homeland Security and is based in Saratoga County, New York.2 No additional employment history,
rank, or division is publicly listed.
Evidence and Sources
Professional networking profile identifying Dean Smith as an “Agent”
at Homeland Security, based in Saratoga County, New York.3
Notes
This page documents employment identification only. Additional
verification, including agency subdivision, duties, or involvement in
enforcement actions, is pending further public records or reporting.
Southerland is identified as serving in a full-time Special Agent
role with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. His publicly listed
employment history reflects ongoing federal service rather than a
private-sector or advisory role.1
Public Presence
Southerland maintains a public professional profile and engages with
posts related to retirements and career transitions of colleagues within
federal service, indicating active participation in DHS professional
networks.2
Evidence and Sources
LinkedIn profile confirming name, role, employer, and geographic
location.3
Stevens began his position as an OPLA Legal Intern in May 2025. OPLA
attorneys and interns work directly alongside ICE officers and agents,
providing legal support for immigration enforcement actions, removal
proceedings, and agency litigation.
Prior to his role at ICE, Stevens worked as a Law Clerk at Watts and
Pepicelli, P.C., and previously held an Alumni Engagement Intern
position at St. Bonaventure University.
Complaint from ICE list
submission: "Agent bypassed a security a gate without a warrant, then
came on to the property without a warrant, then intimidated and sent
warnings to my family and just left, my young daughter was home at the
time and I was not unfortunately.”
Zeke Unger is an ICE-affiliated consultant based in California who
has been repeatedly quoted in local and national media as a spokesperson
for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Unger regularly provides
official ICE statements in response to reporting on arrests, detention
operations, and immigration enforcement activity.1
Rather than being identified in reporting as a field arresting
officer, Unger is most often cited in his capacity as an ICE
representative responding to media inquiries and public criticism of
enforcement actions.2
Background
Publicly available professional profiles describe Unger as having
worked previously as a bounty hunter prior to his involvement in
immigration enforcement–related consulting and communications work.3 His background outside of federal
employment has been referenced in reporting that characterizes him as a
non-sworn consultant rather than a career enforcement officer.
Unger’s prior experience is relevant to his later public-facing role,
as his media appearances and statements typically focus on defending
enforcement actions rather than describing direct participation in
arrests or field operations.
Public Statements and Media
Role
Unger has been quoted by multiple news outlets issuing ICE responses
to reporting on immigration raids, courthouse arrests, and interior
enforcement actions in California. His statements commonly emphasize
that ICE operations are “targeted,” that individuals arrested are
described as having prior criminal convictions or immigration
violations, and that ICE agents are acting within federal authority.45
In several instances, Unger’s statements appear in articles covering
enforcement actions that generated community protest or legal scrutiny,
with his quotes presented as ICE’s official response to criticism.6
Role as ICE Spokesperson
Across reporting, Unger functions as a consistent media contact for
ICE in California, issuing standardized responses on behalf of the
agency. His repeated use as a quoted source suggests he serves as a
designated communications officer or spokesperson rather than an
operational lead.7
Evidence and Sources
Los Angeles Times articles quoting Zeke Unger as an ICE Deportation
Officer responding to enforcement reporting.8
Associated Press reporting citing Unger as an ICE spokesperson in
California.9
San Francisco Chronicle coverage quoting Unger on ICE arrest
operations.10
NBC Bay Area reporting including statements attributed to Unger on
behalf of ICE.11
Notes
Unger’s role appears primarily communications-facing. No public
reporting reviewed to date identifies him as leading specific arrest
operations or tactical actions.
Dominick Vitale is an ICE Deportation Officer assigned to the New
York Field Office. Publicly available footage and eyewitness reports
place him at several high-visibility enforcement actions at 26
Federal Plaza, a frequent site of protests and community
resistance to ICE operations.
Vitale has appeared repeatedly in tactical teams conducting arrests
at or around the facility and has been photographed alongside ERO
officers during crowd-control actions.
Federal Plaza Operations
Role in the Arrest of 11
Politicians
Vitale was present during the widely documented operation in which
11 New York politicians were detained at Federal Plaza
while protesting outside the ICE field office. Video evidence shows ICE
and DHS personnel pushing back protesters, establishing an expanded
security perimeter, and facilitating the arrests. Vitale was part of the
enforcement group responsible for maintaining the line, physically
moving protesters, and securing the area for transport vehicles.
When incident pages for these events are created, they should be
linked here.
Crowd Suppression and
Perimeter Control
Multiple separate protests at Federal Plaza show Vitale participating
in coordinated pushes to disperse civilian demonstrators. These actions
typically involved:
Establishing a moving perimeter around ICE transport vans
Direct physical engagement with protesters attempting to block
vehicle movement
Coordination with DHS FPS officers when larger crowds formed
These operations occurred across several dates and were captured in
both social media footage and press photography.
Evidence and Sources
Photographs and videos from Federal Plaza protest crackdowns
Footage documenting the arrest of 11 New York politicians
Publicly accessible social media posts from witnesses and
journalists
Image uploaded as: DominickVitale.png
Notes
Additional details pending verification, including earlier career
history and specific deployment records.
Caleb Vitello was born and raised in Buffalo, New York. He holds a
Bachelor of Science degree in psychology from the State University of
New York at Buffalo.1
Career
Vitello is a career official with U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) and a member of the Senior Executive Service. Prior to
his appointment as Acting Director, he served as Assistant Director for
the Office of Firearms and Tactical Programs, overseeing firearms
policy, training standards, equipment, and tactical guidance for ICE
personnel.2
He has also served as Chief of Staff for Enforcement and Removal
Operations and as Director of the National Fugitive Operations
Program.3
On January 20, 2025, Vitello was appointed Acting Director of ICE.
His tenure ended in February 2025 following internal leadership changes
and pressure to increase enforcement activity.4
According to reporting by the Associated Press, a Department of
Homeland Security spokesperson stated that Vitello would continue
overseeing enforcement operations following his reassignment.5
George Ward is a federal law enforcement officer who has publicly
identified himself as working for U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE). His
employment is disclosed on a publicly accessible social media profile,
which lists his employer as ICE and indicates residence in Fairfax,
Virginia.
At present, no official agency biography or court filings have been
located that further detail Ward’s specific role, unit assignment, or
operational responsibilities within ICE.
Employment and Public
Identification
Ward’s Facebook profile lists his employer as “U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement.” The profile further indicates:
Current residence: Fairfax, Virginia
Place of origin: Wyandotte, Michigan
The profile does not list educational history or specific job titles
within ICE. No contradictory public records have been identified as of
this writing.
Publicly Identified
Enforcement Activity
As of now, no independently verified media reporting, court records,
or video evidence has been located that places Ward at a specific
enforcement action, arrest, or incident.
This section will be updated if and when incident-level documentation
is identified and verified.
Evidence and Sources
Public Facebook profile identifying employment with U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (screenshot archived).
No additional public records or media sources confirmed at time of
publication.
Notes
Employment status is based on self-disclosed information from a
public social media profile and is therefore marked as unverified
pending corroboration.
No allegations of misconduct are asserted or implied on this
page.
Additional documentation (court records, media reporting, incident
linkage) may expand this profile.
Warmingham began his federal law enforcement career in August
2008 as a Border Patrol Agent in Texas, where
he was assigned to patrol duties within the Cotulla Border Patrol
Station’s area of responsibility. His role included enforcement of U.S.
immigration and naturalization laws in South Texas.
In March 2011, Warmingham transitioned to the
United States Border Patrol station in Ajo, Arizona,
where he has served as a Journeyman Border Patrol
Agent. His responsibilities have included routine border
enforcement operations and related federal duties.
Warmingham is currently listed as a Federal Agent
with the Department of Homeland Security, Office of Inspector
General, where he has been employed continuously since
August 2008, according to publicly available
professional records.
Evidence and Sources
LinkedIn profile – Steven Warmingham, Border Patrol
Agent at Department of Homeland Security, Office of Inspector
General.
(Profile lists continuous federal service from August 2008 to present, including assignments in Texas and Arizona.)
Notes
Employment history is verified via LinkedIn.
No public disciplinary actions, complaints, or incident reports have
yet been linked to this agent within ICE List.
Page may be expanded if incident reporting, litigation, or
additional documentation becomes available.
Jesse Watters is a media personality whose commentary frequently
reinforces or amplifies pro-ICE narratives. His coverage often frames
immigration enforcement as necessary, under-supported, or insufficiently
aggressive, and routinely portrays migrants as threats or destabilizing
forces. Because this style of messaging directly supports ICE operations
and public justification for intensified enforcement, his output is
documented on the ICE List as part of the broader propaganda ecosystem
surrounding U.S. immigration control.
Gene Way was just hired at the NORTH LAKE PROCESSING CENTER in
Baldwin, Michigan. He works for The GEO Group, Inc. as a Detention
Officer.
GEO Group began accepting federal detainees at the Northern Michigan
facility on June 16. If operated at full capacity, it’s poised to be the
largest detention facility in the Midwest.
Baldwin is hundreds of miles from any international border or federal
immigration court, a rural Michigan village on the outskirts of the
Manistee National Forest will serve as a temporary residence for
thousands of detainees awaiting a final decision on their legal status
in the US.
Multiple outlets reported that Portage County’s 287(g) agreements
were signed in March 2025 and described the scope as expanding
cooperation with ICE through deputized/trained deputies under ICE
oversight. (See sources above.)
Sheriff Zuchowski drew national attention in September 2024 after
social media remarks that civil rights organizations and news outlets
characterized as voter intimidation; the posts were later removed. (See
AP and ACLU of Ohio sources above.)