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Over 4,500 ICE and Border Patrol Agents Info Leaked Online!

Magnifying glass showing Homeland Security website.

A DHS whistleblower betrayed 4,500 ICE and Border Patrol agents by leaking their personal details to a doxxing website, igniting fears of deadly retaliation amid America’s border crisis.

Story Snapshot

  • DHS insider allegedly hands over names, emails, phone numbers, and résumés of 4,500 agents to ICE List founder Dominick Skinner.
  • Leak follows fatal shooting of DHS employee Renee Good, which Skinner calls the breaking point for government dissenters.
  • Agents face 8,000% surge in death threats and 1,347% rise in assaults, per DHS leaders.
  • ICE List, launched in June 2025, now lists about 10,000 individuals using AI verification.
  • Rep. Masha Blackburn pushes Protecting Law Enforcement from Doxxing Act to counter such threats.

Whistleblower Leak Exposes Agent Vulnerabilities

Dominick Skinner, an Irish national in the Netherlands, runs ICE List with a three-person team. The site launched in June 2025 during Trump administration immigration crackdowns. It initially listed 2,000 agents and staff, including 8,000 frontline enforcers. Skinner uses AI to verify identities. The platform drew one million views by October 2025. Skinner spoke to El País about operations then.

A DHS whistleblower contacted Skinner in January 2026. This followed Renee Good’s fatal shooting, a DHS worker. Skinner described it as the last straw for many insiders opposing enforcement policies. The whistleblower supplied data on 2,000 frontline agents and 2,500 support staff. Total now reaches roughly 10,000 entries, accounting for overlaps.

The leaked details include names, work emails, phone numbers, job roles, and résumé histories with past employment. Agents’ families now risk identification. DHS reports operational security breaches from public access to contact info. Internal morale suffers as dissent surfaces publicly.

Escalating Threats to Frontline Enforcers

Secretary Kristi Noem and Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin warn anti-ICE protesters against sharing agent data. DHS cites an 8,000% increase in death threats and 1,347% rise in assaults on agents. This leak amplifies dangers during heightened border enforcement. Agents patrol amid protests and activism.

Skinner told the Daily Beast his site makes case-by-case exceptions, sparing childcare workers and nurses. He frames ICE List as accountability for enforcers. Facts show agents enforce legal immigration laws, protecting American communities. Common sense demands safeguarding those upholding borders, not exposing them.

Recruitment and retention falter as threats mount. Public doxxing deters potential hires. Trump policies demand strong enforcement, yet insiders undermine it. This betrayal aligns poorly with conservative values of law, order, and protecting public servants.

Legislative Pushback and Broader Ramifications

Rep. Masha Blackburn (R-TN) introduced the Protecting Law Enforcement from Doxxing Act. It targets websites publishing federal agent identities. This responds to escalating doxxing patterns. Blackburn’s bill promises legal teeth against platforms like ICE List.

DHS and ICE offered no comment as reports emerged on January 14, 2026. No takedown efforts or investigations appear in records. Whistleblower anonymity persists. Data extraction methods remain undisclosed. Skinner controls publication from abroad, complicating enforcement.

Long-term, leaks set precedents for targeting law enforcement. Government data security reveals flaws. Conservative principles prioritize agent safety over activist agendas. Facts confirm threats are real; opinions excusing leaks ignore American common sense on rule of law.

Sources:

AOL – Personal information of 4,500 ICE agents leaked

13WHAM – Whistleblower leaks personal data of DHS and ICE agents

The Daily Beast – Personal details of Border Patrol and ICE agents leaked

MPR News – ICE using private data to intimidate observers