Demonstrators attend an anti-ICE rally in Lewiston,
Maine on January 24, 2026. Federal officials have acknowledged
collecting information on some protesters, even as they deny maintaining
a database tracking U.S. citizens.
Joseph Prezioso/AFP via Getty Images
Last January, when federal immigration agents started an
immigration crackdown in Portland, Maine, pediatric occupational
therapist Xenia Pantos was driving using their spouse's car to work when
they saw masked federal agents and vehicles with tinted windows parked
in the road. Worried about immigrant community members, Pantos stopped
for a few minutes to observe.
Pantos told NPR they stayed at
least 10 feet away from the agents and did not interact with them, but
noticed an agent taking photos of another observer's license plate.
Hours
later, Pantos' spouse, Carly Williams, a nonprofit consultant, said she
received a call from a blocked number. A deep male voice on the other
end of the line asked for her by name and identified himself as calling
from the Department of Homeland Security.
Williams said the caller asked if anyone else drives her vehicle.
When Williams mentioned her spouse sometimes did, the caller asked
Williams if she knew her spouse had stopped at an incident that morning.
"What he basically said was, 'You should let her know to not do
that anymore because people who are doing that type of thing are getting
added to a domestic terrorist watch list,'" Williams recalled in an
interview with NPR. (While the caller referred to Pantos as "she" and
"her," Pantos uses they/them pronouns).
"That was a pretty terrifying phone call to receive, as you can imagine," Williams said.
DHS declined to comment on the couple's account when asked by NPR.
For months, Department of Homeland Security officials have repeatedly denied having a database tracking U.S. citizen protesters
or a database of "domestic terrorists", even as anecdotes like what
happened to Pantos and Williams suggest federal agents are collecting
observers' information in some capacity.
In a previously unpublicized letter
sent to members of Congress in April, recently departed acting ICE
director Todd Lyons acknowledged the agency gives itself wide latitude
to collect information on individuals suspected of potential violations
of law, including interference with ICE operations or officer safety
matters, and maintains records on people who were never arrested.
In the letter, Lyons denied that ICE maintains a database of
protesters or that DHS maintains a "separate, standalone database" of
individuals who were encountered but not arrested or detained. But he
said at protests that involved alleged criminal conduct, ICE has
collected "information to identify individuals reasonably believed to be
involved in, or directly supporting, potential violations of federal
law and to address officer safety and facility security concerns." The
letter said ICE collects "essential biographic and biometric information
and situational details."
Lyons wrote: "If individuals who
interact with ICE officers are not arrested or detained, any information
collected during those encounters is maintained consistent with
applicable law and DHS and ICE policies and is treated as an official
government record."
NPR is the first news organization to review the letter, which is dated April 21.
It was sent in response to Rep. Maxwell Frost (D-Fla.) and 11 other Democratic members of Congress who wrote to DHS in February asking questions about what data the department collects on protesters.
Civil
liberties experts told NPR Lyons' letter appears to be the clearest
official acknowledgement yet by federal immigration officials that they
may be routinely collecting and preserving information on protesters and
observers who are not arrested.
"This letter is evidence of
the fact that ICE is knowingly collecting and maintaining official
government records on any protestor or lawful observer that its agents
claim is potentially interfering with them or threatening agent safety,"
said JoAnna Suriani, a lawyer at the nonprofit legal and advocacy
organization, Protect Democracy.
Suriani is representing Pantos, Williams and other observers in Maine in a federal lawsuit
that alleges their First Amendment rights were violated by federal
agents who tried to intimidate them by recording their faces and license
plates and threatening to add them to a domestic terrorism database.
"Anyone
who has seen the videos of our clients' interactions with ICE agents
can see they aren't impeding anything and pose no threat to anyone, so
why was their information collected?" Suriani said.
Protesters photographed, filmed and threatened with charges
Since
the Trump administration's immigration crackdown began last year,
peaceful protesters and observers recording federal immigration
operations on their cell phones have been threatened with criminal
charges for impeding or interfering with law enforcement operations. However, many cases where charges were brought against activists have been dismissed or resulted in acquittals. DHS officials have also previously asserted that recording federal agents and posting the videos amounts to "doxxing" and is a threat to their safety.
Observers
in several states, including Minnesota and Tennessee, complained that
agents photographed their faces and license plates and later determined
their identities and where they lived. Federal agents have access to a
suite of surveillance tools, including facial recognition technology, and can access vehicle registration records using a car's license plate.
An activist stands outside across from what appears to
be an U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement SUV in Portland, Maine on
January 23, 2026.
Joseph Prezioso/AFP via Getty Images
A number of observers have also said their Global Entry status was revoked after interacting with federal immigration officials.
The program is run by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, another DHS
agency, and allows expedited processing for pre-approved, low-risk
travelers.
In January, a DHS official sent a memo to some
federal immigration agents temporarily assigned to Minneapolis
instructing them to collect personal information about protesters and
agitators, including license plates, identifications and images, according to CNN reporting.
Frost
told NPR he has been concerned about law enforcement tracking
protesters since he was part of the Black Lives Matter movement and
learned police were collecting information on him and other protesters.
He
said while it may be typical for law enforcement to conduct
investigations and determine if someone broke the law and then move on,
it is concerning if information on people who are exercising their
rights is kept by a large federal department.
"That's the
concern, is that we have an agency that's been tasked with immigration
enforcement having a database … relating to Americans exercising the
First Amendment, which is wrong," Frost told NPR.
ICE letter provides nuance after blanket denial
At
a February congressional hearing, Lyons denied his agency was
surveilling U.S. citizens and said: "There is no database for
protesters."
DHS has repeatedly provided a statement to the
media that says, "There is NO database of 'domestic terrorists' run by
DHS. We do of course monitor and investigate and refer all threats,
assaults and obstruction of our officers to the appropriate law
enforcement. Obstructing and assaulting law enforcement is a felony and a
federal crime. Our law enforcement methods follow the U.S.
constitution."
A mobile billboard that reads "ICE agents aren't above
Maine Law. Illegal conduct can be prosecuted" is seen on January 30,
2026 in Portland, Maine.
Scott Eisen/Getty Images North America
A department spokesperson provided that statement in response to
NPR's inquiry asking if the Lyons' letter still reflected current
policy, and again in response to a request for comment about Pantos and
Williams' account.
At a congressional hearing
last week, Secretary of Homeland Security Markwayne Mullin said his
department had used facial recognition technology on people gathered
outside of Delaney Hall, an immigration detention center in New Jersey
that has been the site of recent protests that have led to intense clashes between some individuals and federal agents. Dozens of people have been arrested in connection with the demonstrations, including some who are accused of assaulting federal officers.
"I
have zero tolerance," Mullin said in the hearing. "If you verbally
assault our officers, you go after our vehicles, you assault our
property, you assault one of our officers, we will find you, we will
arrest you."
Lyons' April letter began by saying, "U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) does not maintain any kind of
database of U.S. citizens protesting ICE activities." It also asserted
that "DHS policies and practices are designed to respect lawful protests
and constitutionally protected activities."
The letter
continued, "Where individuals decide to go beyond protected speech and
commit crimes against federal personnel and property or threaten, or
forcibly impede, assault, or interfere with lawful operations, ICE
remains steadfast in exercising its authority to investigate and
prosecute violators."
While the letter suggested personal information is only collected
if there is potential unlawful activity, Scarlet Kim, a senior staff
attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union, said the Trump
administration has set a precedent of characterizing lawful First Amendment activities as possible crimes.
"We
know that very high level officials within DHS and Lyons himself have
explicitly equated First Amendment-protected activities like video
recording, gathering information about federal agents, and sharing that
information publicly as essentially potential criminal acts that
threaten officer safety," said Kim, who is representing observers in Memphis and Minneapolis in federal lawsuits against agencies involved in immigration enforcement.
"So
their own definition of what potentially violates the law and could
trigger surveillance against an individual includes activities that are
squarely protected by the First Amendment," Kim said.
While
Lyons writes, "DHS is not creating or maintaining a separate, standalone
database for individuals encountered that haven't been arrested or
detained," Kim said the letter "strongly suggests" that even if DHS does
not have a standalone database of U.S. citizens engaged in First
Amendment-protected activities, federal agents are likely collecting and
maintaining that information in existing data systems.
"He did not deny that, essentially, that information would not be placed in other existing databases," Kim said.
The
letter from Frost and his fellow Democrats was addressed to the
Secretary of Homeland Security and asked about policies at DHS, but the
response came just from ICE, which is just one agency within the
department, raising questions about what may be happening in other parts
of the department.
The Democrats' letter questioned whether
DHS maintains or accesses information from lists or programs called
"Bluekey, Grapevine, Hummingbird, Reaper, Sandcastle, Sienna,
Slipstream, and Sparta" among others. A January article
by independent journalist Ken Klippenstein reported DHS and FBI have
secret watchlists with those code names to track anti-ICE and
pro-Palestinian protesters, as well as "Antifa."
The letter from Lyons said in response: "ICE does not maintain,
add, or access information from the programs mentioned in your letter."
Frost
told NPR he plans to continue pressing the department as he has many
more questions about how the information ICE is collecting is used and
how it is shared with other parts of DHS.
Last month, the organization FIRE, which advocates for freedom of expression, announced that it is suing DHS and ICE for access to records on whether it is maintaining a database of protesters.
Maine couple left with unanswered questions
Pantos
told NPR they had no idea their information might be collected by
federal agents when they made the decision to pull over and peacefully
observe that morning in January, and that what they had done was
protected by the First Amendment.
But after the unexpected
phone call threatening that Pantos could be added to a domestic
terrorist database, Pantos said they felt too scared to observe ICE
activity again. They worried about their family's safety.
"We
are a queer couple, which brings additional risks," Pantos said. "There
has been an ICE surge in Portland and I've felt really overwhelmed and
powerless."
In March, two months after the incident, the couple
drove to Quebec City in Pantos' car to celebrate their anniversary.
When they tried to re-enter the U.S., a Customs and Border Protection
officer pulled them aside for additional questioning and took their
phones and keys for about an hour, they said.
To their
surprise, one of the officer's first questions was to ask Williams if
she had her car registration with her, despite the fact that they were
traveling in Pantos' car. After Williams said she didn't have it with
her, the officer asked her to describe her car and to recite her license
plate number if she remembered it, according to the couple's account.
"He was clearly looking at a computer screen," Williams said,
adding that the officer "seemed to be verifying what I was saying."
The
couple told NPR that was the moment they realized their data must have
been retained in some kind of federal system after Pantos stopped to
observe federal agents in January.
"I have to think, because he
asked about Carly's vehicle when we were in my vehicle, that there is
some sort of an alert when you run our passports that brings attention
to us in a way that it didn't used to before all of this happened,"
Pantos told NPR.
"I feel really concerned about what has happened with my data and the data of so many other people," Pantos said.