
A Department of Homeland Security insider has allegedly leaked personal information of 4,500 federal immigration agents to a doxxing website, marking one of the largest known breaches of law enforcement personnel data in recent history.
Story Overview
- DHS whistleblower provided personal data on 4,500 ICE and Border Patrol agents to anti-immigration enforcement website
- Leak occurred following fatal shooting of Renee Good in Minneapolis, described as “the last straw” for government insiders
- ICE List website uses AI verification to selectively publish agent information while making exceptions for certain roles
- Agents already face 8,000% increase in death threats and 1,347% rise in assaults amid current enforcement operations
The Whistleblower’s Digital Weapon
The ICE List website launched in June 2025 as Trump administration immigration enforcement reached peak intensity. Founded by Dominick Skinner, an Irish citizen operating from the Netherlands, the site has evolved into a sophisticated operation managed by three people using artificial intelligence to verify agent identities. The platform has already logged over one million views, transforming from a simple directory into what critics consider a dangerous doxxing operation targeting federal law enforcement.
Skinner’s operation demonstrates calculated precision rather than indiscriminate information dumping. The site makes exceptions for certain DHS roles, deliberately excluding personnel in positions like childcare workers and nurses. This selective approach suggests the leak targets frontline enforcement agents specifically, revealing an ideological motivation rather than wholesale government transparency.
Fatal Shooting Triggers Internal Revolt
The recent fatal shooting of Renee Good in Minneapolis served as the catalyst for the massive data breach. According to Skinner, this incident represented “the last straw” for disgruntled DHS employees. The whistleblower allegedly provided personal information on approximately 2,000 frontline immigration enforcement agents and 2,500 personnel in supporting roles, effectively doubling the website’s database overnight.
This internal rebellion exposes dangerous fractures within America’s immigration enforcement apparatus. When federal employees actively undermine their own agencies by exposing colleagues to potential violence, it signals a breakdown in institutional loyalty that threatens national security operations. The timing coinciding with the Minneapolis shooting suggests coordinated resistance rather than spontaneous whistleblowing.
Escalating Violence Against Federal Agents
ICE agents already operate in an increasingly hostile environment, facing an 8,000% increase in death threats and a 1,347% surge in physical assaults during current enforcement operations. These statistics predate the latest leak, meaning 4,500 additional agents now face exponentially greater risks. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem and Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin previously warned about protesters targeting agents through doxxing campaigns.
Personal information of 4,500 ICE and Border Patrol agents is leaked online
…HOW IS THIS POSSIBLE IN AMERICA WITH STRONG CYBER SECURITY MEASURES??…
ICE List website says it was leaked information about federal agents after shooting of Renee Good in Minneapolis
INDEPENDENT… pic.twitter.com/o8R7El07c2
— www.Jonny Clock1977.us (@JonnyClock1977) January 14, 2026
The deliberate exposure of agent identities crosses a dangerous line from political protest to potential incitement of violence. Unlike corporate executives or elected officials who accept public scrutiny as part of their roles, federal law enforcement officers rely on operational security to protect themselves and their families. This breach transforms every affected agent into a potential target.
Congressional Response and Legal Implications
Representative Marsha Blackburn introduced the Protecting Law Enforcement from Doxxing Act in 2025, anticipating exactly this type of coordinated attack on federal agents. The legislation reflects growing recognition that traditional privacy protections prove inadequate against sophisticated doxxing operations that combine insider access with artificial intelligence verification systems.
DHS officials declined comment on the specific leak, but their silence speaks volumes about the agency’s vulnerability to internal threats. When a federal employee can access and distribute personal information of thousands of colleagues without immediate detection, it reveals systemic security failures that extend far beyond immigration enforcement. The breach raises questions about background checks, access controls, and monitoring systems designed to prevent exactly this type of insider threat.
Sources:
Report: Whistleblower leaks personal data of 4500 DHS and ICE agents to doxxing website – KATV
Report: Whistleblower leaks personal data of 4500 DHS and ICE agents to doxxing website – WSET
ICE List: ICE data leak breach whistleblower – Times Now News
UW report finds DOL allowed ICE agencies to access data – KOMO News
Personal details of thousands of Border Patrol and ICE agents allegedly leaked – The Daily Beast
Personal information of 4,500 ICE agents leaked – AOL














