Two radical immigration activists who stalked and harassed an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer following deportation operations in Los Angeles have been found guilty, U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli announced Friday in a major victory for law and order.
The convicted women – one from suburban Riverside, California, and another who traveled all the way from Aurora, Colorado – represent the dangerous network of so-called "ICE Watch" extremists who cross state lines specifically to target, harass, and doxx federal law enforcement officers doing their jobs.
This is what happens when the left's anti-border security rhetoric turns into real-world stalking and intimidation. These weren't peaceful protesters – they were predators who followed a federal agent, putting him and potentially his family at risk.
Trump's ICE Gets Justice
Under the Biden regime, these kinds of attacks on ICE agents were practically encouraged by Democrats who demonized immigration enforcement. But President Trump's second-term mandate is crystal clear: we protect those who protect our borders.
The fact that one stalker came all the way from Colorado shows this isn't some spontaneous local activism – it's an organized campaign to intimidate federal officers. These radical networks coordinate across state lines to harass ICE agents who are simply enforcing the laws Congress passed.
"This conviction sends a clear message: you cannot stalk, harass, or threaten federal law enforcement officers without facing serious consequences," the prosecution stated.
Patriots should remember that ICE agents are doing the hard work of removing dangerous criminal aliens from our communities. They're protecting American families, yet leftist extremists treat them like enemies of the state.
The End of Biden's Anti-ICE Era
This case perfectly illustrates the difference between Trump's America and Biden's chaos. Under Biden, ICE was neutered and agents were treated like villains. Under Trump, we're seeing justice for those who serve our nation.
Every American should ask themselves: do we want federal agents afraid to do their jobs because radical activists might stalk them home? Or do we want a justice system that protects those who protect us?
The guilty verdicts are just the beginning. It's time these anti-border extremists learned that actions have consequences.
