Public Threat
"I'm Opening Fire"
In 2025, a community member posted on social media that if ICE agents came into his neighborhood, he would open fire, urging others to treat it as a call to action.
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Threats and violent rhetoric toward law enforcement don't "stay online." They escalate real-world risk. We support the men and women who serve — including ICE personnel — and we believe disagreement is American, but intimidation and violence are not.
Source: Department of Homeland Security Reports 2024-2026 | View Full Data →
We document how violent rhetoric aimed at law enforcement spreads — and what it costs in safety, stability, and trust. When political discourse shifts from policy disagreement to dehumanization, the psychological barriers against violence erode, leading to catastrophic outcomes for those who serve.
We do not publish addresses, doxxing links, or operational details that would endanger anyone.
Learn More About UsWhen rhetoric becomes dehumanization, bounties, doxxing, "swatting," or calls to attack officers, it pushes all of us closer to chaos.
Violent rhetoric doesn't just target "an agency." It targets human beings:
You can debate policy. You can protest. You can vote. But when rhetoric crosses into threats and intimidation, everyone loses.
Real documented incidents showing how violent rhetoric manifests in real-world danger for officers and their families.
Public Threat
In 2025, a community member posted on social media that if ICE agents came into his neighborhood, he would open fire, urging others to treat it as a call to action.
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Doxxing
Three activists followed an ICE agent from a federal building to his home, livestreamed the pursuit, and posted identifying information for all to see.
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Violence
A group showed up at a detention facility with coordinated actions — including fireworks and anti-ICE graffiti — and a responding local officer was shot.
Read Full StoryThe narrative that portrays ICE solely as a malevolent deportation force willfully ignores the agency's critical, life-saving role in public safety and national security.
HSI operations rescued dozens of victims from sexual servitude in 2025, including one operation that rescued 27 victims — 10 of them children.
Federal agents intercepted record-breaking amounts of fentanyl in 2025 — over 400 kg in one historic operation, enough to kill millions of Americans.
Agent Eric Cespedes died saving his children from a rip current. Officers regularly rescue drowning migrants — acts rarely highlighted in the discourse.
Join thousands of Americans who believe in civil discourse. Stand against violent rhetoric and intimidation.
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These organizations provide the lifeline for officers and their families — financial aid, mental health services, and a community of understanding.
Provides immediate financial assistance to families of officers killed or severely injured. Offers scholarships to children of agents to secure their future despite trauma.
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Focused on "rebuilding shattered lives" of survivors. Organizes retreats and counseling for spouses, children, and parents of fallen officers. Runs Kids Camps for children who lost a parent.
Learn More →If you believe words have consequences, help us keep this resource online and expanding. Your donation supports maintaining the public education site, content review, outreach materials, and support partnerships for affected families.
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Words have weight. When a society accepts that its guardians are "Nazis," it implicitly accepts their murder. Stand against the rhetoric. Stand with those who serve.