Democratic plan to reform ICE ignores multi-agency blob

Democrats in Congress are pushing reforms to curb Immigration and Customs Enforcement amid public outcry over recent incidents, but their efforts may fall short by focusing solely on ICE. A growing involvement of agents from other federal agencies has created what critics call a singular 'blob' of law enforcement operating under the Trump administration. This shift raises serious questions about accountability and oversight.

In mid-October 2025, a patrol of federal agents in New York City's Chinatown highlighted a new reality in U.S. immigration enforcement. Observers noted agents in unmarked vests labeled simply 'POLICE' or 'Federal Agent,' including one from the Internal Revenue Service's Criminal Investigation division, typically focused on tax crimes rather than patrols targeting suspected immigrants. A source confirmed the operation involved dozens of personnel from ICE, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the FBI, and the IRS, among others. This is no isolated case; according to Cato Institute data from September 2025, 28,390 federal law enforcement officers were detailed to ICE's Enforcement and Removal Operations as of August 2025. While 17,500 came from ICE's Homeland Security Investigations or Customs and Border Protection, over 10,000 hailed from unrelated agencies: 1,771 from the IRS (84% of its special agents), 3,417 from the DEA (70%), plus thousands from the FBI, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and even the State Department's Diplomatic Security Service. Such deployments divert resources from core tasks like investigating financial crimes and drug trafficking, but they also blur lines of accountability. Agents often go unidentified, complicating oversight. Last week, in the arrest of journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort, Attorney General Pam Bondi referred only to 'federal agents.' A video showed an agent in a DEA vest peering through Fort's window, with others' affiliations unclear. This comes amid horror over the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, spurring Democratic calls for a Department of Homeland Security inspector general probe into ICE's use of force, mandatory body cameras, mask limits, and a funding freeze. Yet these measures target ICE and CBP specifically, potentially missing DEA or Justice Department agents—like those from the ATF or U.S. Marshals—now integrated into the same operations. Critics argue this forms a de facto national police force, directed by the White House for immigration crackdowns, speech suppression, and city occupations. ICE's hiring surge has effectively tripled its Enforcement and Removal Operations workforce without new recruits, drawing from existing federal pools. Figures for a 3,000-agent surge to the Twin Cities include 2,000 ICE personnel, but details on borrowed agents remain undisclosed. Without transparency on reassignments, locations, and roles, holding this amorphous force accountable proves challenging.

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