US Immigration and Customs Enforcement is reportedly considering a unique approach to locate and track immigrants across the country. According to a procurement document reviewed by The Intercept, ICE plans to hire private bounty hunters to help with this task.
Under the plan, bounty hunters may receive "monetary bonuses" depending on their success in tracking down immigrants and reporting back to ICE. This incentive-based pricing structure is intended to encourage quick results from contractors.
ICE plans to provide bounty hunters with bundles of information on 10,000 immigrants at a time, with further assignments provided in increments of 10,000 up to 1 million. The goal is for contractors to surveil and confirm the home or work addresses of these immigrants using government-furnished case data, commercial data verification, and physical observation services.
Contractors are expected to use available surveillance tools, including those that ingest and track mobile phone location data, widely used by ICE already. Multiple verification sources will be recommended to achieve a high confidence level in the accuracy of their findings.
The plan not only involves on-the-ground monitoring but also digital surveillance. ICE says contractors can use off-the-shelf surveillance technology to confirm immigrants' addresses, including "Enhanced location research" that entails automated and manual real-time skip tracing.
Critics argue that this approach is overly invasive and authoritarian, potentially infringing on the rights of undocumented immigrants. The proposal has drawn comparisons with a plan reportedly circulated by Erik Prince, the former CEO of Blackwater, which aimed to establish a private bounty program to locate immigrants at the request of law enforcement officers.
As the US government grapples with issues of immigration and border control, this development raises questions about the role of private contractors in domestic law enforcement.
				
			Under the plan, bounty hunters may receive "monetary bonuses" depending on their success in tracking down immigrants and reporting back to ICE. This incentive-based pricing structure is intended to encourage quick results from contractors.
ICE plans to provide bounty hunters with bundles of information on 10,000 immigrants at a time, with further assignments provided in increments of 10,000 up to 1 million. The goal is for contractors to surveil and confirm the home or work addresses of these immigrants using government-furnished case data, commercial data verification, and physical observation services.
Contractors are expected to use available surveillance tools, including those that ingest and track mobile phone location data, widely used by ICE already. Multiple verification sources will be recommended to achieve a high confidence level in the accuracy of their findings.
The plan not only involves on-the-ground monitoring but also digital surveillance. ICE says contractors can use off-the-shelf surveillance technology to confirm immigrants' addresses, including "Enhanced location research" that entails automated and manual real-time skip tracing.
Critics argue that this approach is overly invasive and authoritarian, potentially infringing on the rights of undocumented immigrants. The proposal has drawn comparisons with a plan reportedly circulated by Erik Prince, the former CEO of Blackwater, which aimed to establish a private bounty program to locate immigrants at the request of law enforcement officers.
As the US government grapples with issues of immigration and border control, this development raises questions about the role of private contractors in domestic law enforcement.