A group of foreign agents with leftist views is exposing confidential information of over 4,500 past and current Department of Homeland Security agents on a website similar to Wikipedia.
The ICE List Wiki showcases images, locations, and roles of employees from various agencies, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Customs and Border Protection, and Homeland Security Investigations, along with details about their fieldwork.
This website highlights different agents, showing their photos and field information. A man named Dominic Skinner, an Irish citizen residing in the Netherlands, reportedly founded the site. Interestingly, the ICE List Wiki is said to be hosted on servers located in Iceland.
Skinner claims that a whistleblower within DHS leaked the personal details of 4,500 federal employees to the site, with about half of these individuals having profiles on the platform so far.
According to reports, two individuals listed on the site have reached out, indicating they are no longer affiliated with ICE.
Skinner, who also oversees a Substack publication called Crust News, contends that the site serves as a resource for journalists and the public to keep an eye on ICE operations. However, he has not responded to requests for further comment.
The ICE List Wiki also documents 377 “incident reports” contributed by volunteers, detailing specific ICE operations. For instance, there are reports from 2025 in Brooklyn that note the presence of agents at certain locations and the vehicles associated with them.
In total, the site lists 1,142 license plates from vehicles purportedly involved in ICE activities. Each entry provides the plate number, car make and model, registration state, and the related ICE division.
The rationale for tracking these vehicles is that they represent the most visible aspect of deportation operations, suggesting that awareness of such documentation is crucial.
There are even tips on how to identify ICE vehicles, such as observing parked cars near homes or workplaces, and seeing the same car repeatedly, which the site claims might indicate ICE surveillance.
Attempts to get comments from the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice have gone unanswered.





