California Home of Suspect Accused of Doxxing ICE Agents Raided by Authorities

On Thursday, federal officials searched the home in California of a person who is suspected of doxxing U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents.

The suspect, who was not at home at the time, was served with a search order by the Department of Homeland Security and the U.S. Secret Service in Irvine.

No one was caught.

Police told Fox News that the suspect lives with his parents and was arrested last year at an anti-Israel protest on the campus of the University of California, Irvine.

He is accused of putting up flyers in different neighborhoods in Southern California that had the names, photos, phone numbers, and addresses of ICE officers who worked in the area.

“The nice people who work for ICE agreed to do a job as police, and that’s what they’re doing.” A spokesperson for ICE, Todd Lyons, told Fox News, “They’re out there making communities safer.” “If you have a problem with the people who work for ICE, you should talk to Congress about it, change the law, or, you know, talk to me about it.” I speak for them, but I don’t put their families in danger. “Don’t put them in danger just because they’re working.”

Earlier this year, people who are against ICE started putting up signs with the personal information of HSI and ICE officers who work in and around Los Angeles and Southern California.

In Spanish, the signs said, “BE CAREFUL WITH THESE FACES.”

“These armed cops work in Southern California. ICE and HSI’s tactics make whole communities afraid and criminal because of their race. They take people from their homes and the streets, which breaks up families and neighborhoods. The signs say, “Many people have died while being locked up in jails, prisons, and detention centers.”

The posters were put up after the Trump administration started arresting and deporting criminal illegal aliens, which was a big part of Trump’s campaign.

“These weak activists are making our police targets while they protect MS-13, Tren De Aragua, and other violent gangs that traffic women and children, hold people hostage for ransom, and poison Americans with drugs that can kill them,” a Homeland Security spokesperson told Fox News at the time.

“These people will be held responsible for getting in the way of the law and justice.” This shouldn’t cause a fuss.”