Support the ICE List — Donate

Main Page: Difference between revisions

From ICE List Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:
<div style="padding: 1em;">
<div style="padding: 1em;">


Welcome to the ICE List. We document the actions of U.S. immigration enforcement agencies across all states and territories. Our mission is to build a transparent, verifiable, public record of agents, facilities, incidents, agreements, vehicles, and contractors connected to ICE and CBP.
Agents identities come from a variety of sources, including social media scrapes, reports from our community, and those identified by the work of our team.
The ICE List is an open journalistic project, created by [https://crustnews.com Crust News], aimed at collecting and sharing information that can hold ICE members legally accountable.
----


<div style="display: flex; flex-wrap: wrap; justify-content: space-between; gap: 1.5em;">
<div style="display: flex; flex-wrap: wrap; justify-content: space-between; gap: 1.5em;">

Revision as of 04:34, 27 November 2025


 ⚠️ The ICE List Wiki Is Under Construction
We’re in the middle of major upgrades to the site. Over the next few days you’ll see changes to layout, navigation, and template structure. A far more complete and continuously updated list of agents and incidents is being built and added to the database. Expect improvements across every section as we roll out the new system.





Essential Information


Recent Incidents

Newly added or updated incident pages.

See all: See all incidents →



In the News

Older items: full news archive.


Support the ICE List

The ICE List is an independent, volunteer-driven project. We document agents, facilities, contractors and incidents to build a permanent public record.

Your support helps us cover hosting, research tools, and time spent compiling these records.

Make a one-time or monthly donation →

     Step-by-step instructions for sending us an incident with enough detail to verify and map it.
     Orientation for new volunteers, from research tasks to safety and OPSEC basics.
     Overview of ICE ERO officers, how we document them, and how to read agent pages.
     How we track detention centers, jails and other locations used in ICE operations.
     How to document license plates, markings and other details on ICE and CBP vehicles.
     What 287(g) is, how it works, and how we map local police partnerships with ICE.


State Directory

Browse state-specific portals documenting facilities, incidents, agents, and 287(g) agreements.