The warning notice Streever received stated that the agency’s Office of Professional Responsibility enforces laws against threats directed at personnel. Despite the ominous tone and the physical surveillance, Streever was never arrested. His email to Todd Lyons, then acting director of ICE, compared the official to Reinhard Heydrich and predicted a future of personal shame, yet the text contained no explicit call for violence. Streever argues in a federal lawsuit that the government’s reaction to his political speech constitutes intimidation.
ICE agents track online critics to their homes and hotels
David Streever returned from a family vacation to find his home visited by Department of Homeland Security agents and a federal official waiting at his New York hotel. The encounter stemmed from a scathing email he sent to a former ICE director, labeling the official a monster in a message sent after a lethal police shooting.

This incident is not an anomaly. Federal agencies are increasingly utilizing their investigative reach to track down individuals who send hostile digital correspondence to officials. While the agency asserts its mandate to investigate threats, critics contend that these house calls are designed to chill dissent and silence aggressive speech that falls short of criminal incitement. Streever’s case highlights the growing friction between federal security operations and the protected right to criticize public servants.

:fill(white):max_bytes(150000):strip_icc()/NASAFederalCreditUnion-8cbe1111331848ea8cb101f9a187abc4.jpg)


Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first!