Anarchist Network Publishes Personal Data of ICE Agents in Portland, Amplifying Anti-Immigration Enforcement Harassment Campaigns
Executive Summary
A post originally published on Rose City Counter Info on September 19, 2025, and later reposted on Unravel on October 7, 2025, under the title “Unmasking I.C.E.” publicly identified two Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents in Portland, Oregon, labeling them “kidnappers” and urging readers to harass them. The post included photographs, names, and printable posters encouraging public targeting. This incident represents a continuation of far-left anarchist and anti-border campaigns that use doxxing and intimidation tactics to undermine federal immigration enforcement and generate localized pressure against ICE operations.
Key Judgments
1. The publication of ICE agents’ personal information represents an escalation in anarchist “doxxing” tactics aimed at deterring immigration enforcement through intimidation.
Evidence: The post names two Portland-based agents, details alleged prior enforcement activity, and encourages readers to print and distribute posters with their names and faces, urging “no peace, no safety.”
2. This incident aligns with a broader nationwide resurgence of “Chinga La Migra” and anti-ICE campaigns within anarchist and abolitionist ecosystems.
Evidence: The post explicitly invokes “Chinga la Migra,” a slogan historically associated with the 2018–2020 anarchist campaign that targeted ICE contractors, field offices, and private security firms through direct actions and online harassment.
3. By normalizing personalized targeting of government employees, these networks blur the line between protest and vigilantism, increasing physical and reputational risks to law enforcement personnel.
Evidence: The Portland post’s call for “no peace, no safety” echoes prior anarchist messages that preceded physical harassment of ICE staff and property vandalism in Seattle, Denver, and Phoenix.
Analysis
The Unmasking I.C.E. communiqué represents a deliberate escalation in anti-ICE activism through the public exposure of individual agents. The doxxing strategy is rooted in the logic of deterrence—using reputational harm, social pressure, and potential physical confrontation to obstruct immigration enforcement operations. By distributing personalized posters and labeling agents as “kidnappers” and “Gestapo,” the network is explicitly attempting to dehumanize its targets, framing them as legitimate subjects for public reprisal rather than as civil servants.
This tactic has precedent within the broader anarchist information ecosystem. Rose City Counter Info operates within the Noblogs federation, a cluster of counter-information sites that host anonymous communiqués advocating sabotage, harassment, and direct action. Posts from similar platforms—such as Unravel and It’s Going Down—have in recent months targeted private contractors, landlords, and law enforcement personnel under the banners of “Stop Cop City” and “Chinga la Migra.”
Portland remains a particularly active node in this network due to its entrenched anarchist presence and history of violent clashes between far-left militants and law enforcement since 2020. The reemergence of anti-ICE doxxing reflects renewed coordination between anti-border and anti-police movements that share overlapping ideology and media infrastructure. While such posts often stop short of explicitly calling for violence, their exhortations to deny “peace” and “safety” create conditions conducive to harassment or physical intimidation.
Operationally, these doxxing campaigns can have tangible effects: increased security burdens for targeted personnel, deterrence of community cooperation with ICE, and potential secondary targeting of family members or associated businesses. The blending of local surveillance (spotting agents “around town”) with digital publication illustrates the hybrid intelligence-gathering tactics of decentralized extremist networks that merge online and offline activism.
Federal and local agencies may need to coordinate proactive threat mitigation and digital monitoring, as such posts often precede broader waves of harassment or low-level vandalism near federal facilities. The ongoing normalization of personalized targeting campaigns poses growing risks to public-sector employees beyond ICE, especially those connected to law enforcement, corrections, or border management.
Sources
Unravel – UNMASKING I.C.E. – Portland, OR