The identities of approximately 4,500 alleged agents and employees from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Border Patrol have been reportedly leaked to an online watchdog group called ICE List, as per The Independent, marking what many believe is the largest breach of department staff data ever. This massive data dump came directly from a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) whistleblower who appears fed up with the current state of affairs.
The whistleblower was reportedly spurred into action following the fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis. Good, 37, was shot multiple times through her car windshield by ICE agent Jonathan Ross, an incident that has sparked significant outrage and protests across the country. Dominick Skinner, who launched the ICE List website, confirmed that the shooting was the “last straw” for many people working within the U.S. government, suggesting deep internal dissatisfaction.
Skinner’s organization received information covering roughly 2,000 agents and 150 supervisors. Volunteer analysts working with ICE List estimate that around 80 percent of the personnel named in the leak are still actively employed by the DHS. Skinner also noted that since Good’s shooting, the public has been contributing significantly more individual reports about DHS personnel.
Skinner described receiving everything from post-it notes sent by hotel staff to actual DHS IDs passed along by bar staff, plus countless tips about agents living in certain neighborhoods
What makes this database so resilient is a clever location trick: it’s hosted entirely in the Netherlands, where Skinner resides. This means the U.S. government can’t legally compel the site to be taken offline, effectively protecting the data from immediate censorship or seizure. Before this latest alleged leak, the ICE List already held details on about 2,000 immigration staff. With the new information, the database now contains around 6,500 names.
This database lists high-profile individuals, including DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin, who is described on the site as an “ICE propagandist.” Other notable figures listed are recent Pentagon recruit Laura Loomer and Fox News host Jesse Watters. Beyond just names, the site includes descriptions, pictures, and previous employment history for those listed, and it’s even broken down by state. It also contains information regarding specific incidents, such as deportations, deaths in custody, and alleged abuses.
Naturally, the DHS is reacting strongly to this situation. Assistant Secretary McLaughlin released a statement saying that the alleged leak “would constitute 4,500 felonies.” She stated that the “disgusting doxxing of our officers put their lives and their families in serious danger.”
McLaughlin laid out some truly concerning statistics about the current climate for law enforcement. She claimed that officers are facing a 1,300 percent increase in assaults against them, a shocking 3,200 percent increase in vehicular attacks, and an absolutely terrifying 8,000 percent increase in death threats. “Their families are being threatened,” she stressed, promising that law enforcement will not back down and that “Anyone who doxxes our officers will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”
Despite the threats of legal action, Skinner is moving forward with the plan to release the verified names. He believes that both ICE and CBP are “in clear need of reform,” and he views working for either agency as a “bad move on a moral level.”
Published: Jan 14, 2026 12:30 pm