Is ICE Using Doxxing Sites to Deport People Without Evidence?
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In recent court testimony, ICE officials confirmed they used information from anonymous websites—like Canary Mission and Betar US—to investigate, surveil, and deport pro-Palestinian students and visa holders. These aren’t law enforcement databases. They’re private, partisan doxxing sites that publish names, photos, and ideological labels with no oversight and no accountability.
According to reports from The Verge, Politico, and The Times of Israel, a “tiger team” within ICE relied on roughly 5,000 names flagged by Canary Mission. Some were pushed directly to the State Department to justify revoking visas—even when ICE couldn’t independently verify the claims.
This raises serious questions:
- Should the U.S. government base deportation decisions on anonymous allegations?
- What protections should exist to guard against ideological targeting?
- And as believers, how do we uphold justice while respecting national laws?
What are your thoughts on ICE using sites like these for immigration enforcement? Does this cross a line—or is it a necessary tool in a difficult time?
“The Lord works righteousness and justice for all who are oppressed.” – Psalm 103:6
Here’s the latest reporting on this troubling trend: