The Office of Professional Responsibility has opened more than 100 cases related to online criticism of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) employees.
ICE officials describe these cases as responses to “incidents of doxing and threats” against agency staff. The investigations target individuals who post about ICE operations or personnel.
The internal watchdog is now scrutinizing social media activity that criticizes the agency or its officers. This marks a notable shift in how the agency handles online commentary.
Critics warn the investigations may chill protected free speech. They argue some cases target lawful expressions of dissent rather than genuine threats.
ICE maintains the probes aim to protect employees from harm. The agency says doxing and threats create unsafe working environments.
Each case will be reviewed on its own merits. The Office of Professional Responsibility will determine what constitutes a violation.
The agency has not released detailed criteria for what triggers an investigation. This lack of transparency raises concerns among civil liberties groups.
More than 100 cases have been opened so far. The number may grow as the agency continues monitoring online platforms.




