ICE Infrastructure Mapped by Extremists Amid Rising Doxxing and Anti-Enforcement Attacks
Executive Summary
A detailed guide to ICE facilities in the Chicago area has been published by the anarchist platform Chicago Anti-Report, naming and visually identifying buildings tied to immigration enforcement. Released just days after another radical site doxxed individual ICE agents, the coordinated campaign marks a serious escalation in targeting federal personnel and facilities. The mapping, framed as a call to resistance, adds new logistical clarity to a protest movement already engaged in sabotage, arson, and harassment.
Analysis
The release titled “A Guide to ICE Infrastructure in Chicago” is part of a larger surge in extremist action aimed at dismantling immigration enforcement through intimidation and exposure. The guide includes photographs, addresses, and operational summaries of several critical ICE-related facilities including the ISAP office, Immigration Court, Chicago Field Office, and Broadview Processing Center. Framed in stark and militant language, the publication accuses ICE of “kidnapping” migrants and provides logistical directions to buildings it alleges facilitate state violence.
This level of detail serves not only as a protest resource but also as tactical reconnaissance, allowing hostile actors to identify vulnerabilities, access points, and operational targets. The addition of an annotated map enhances the mobility and planning capabilities of groups engaged in direct action. The guide explicitly connects to the broader narrative advanced by sites like Rose City Counter-Info, which published personal details of named ICE agents days earlier under a campaign titled “No Peace for ICE Agents.”
Federal law enforcement has responded with increasing alarm. Homeland Security reports a 413% rise in assaults on officers. Simultaneously, state officials, such as Florida’s Attorney General, have introduced protective programs for agents facing threats. Yet this reactive posture struggles to match the adaptability of decentralized militant networks using online platforms to incite, organize, and document resistance.
These tactics appear to be part of a broader ideological framework—abolitionist, anti-border, and anti-state—where ICE is portrayed not as a government agency but a violent occupying force. Calls for its total destruction, sabotage of its infrastructure, and harassment of its personnel are now normalized within these activist circles. The level of strategic planning evident in the Chicago mapping suggests a shift from symbolic protest to sustained, coordinated disruption.