Democrat lawmaker introduces bill to ‘digitally unmask’ anonymous ICE agents

A Maryland Democrat has announced his intention to introduce a bill to “digitally unmask” immigration agents.

Proposed by Maryland state Del. David Moon, the bill would make it possible to “unmask” any U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent allegedly “involved in violent or unconstitutional misconduct.”

“I’m introducing a bill to ‘digitally unmask’ anonymous ICE agents involved in violent or unconstitutional misconduct,” Moon announced in a tweet earlier this month.

“Maryland would use widely available technology to preserve identifying data so victims can seek justice in court for serious, credible cases,” his tweet continued.

According to Fox News, the bill would specifically “establish a process allowing courts to order the preservation and disclosure of digital information that could identify federal agents accused of violent or unconstitutional misconduct, targeting cases in which agents operate without visible identification during enforcement actions.”

The type of “identifying digital data” that would be preserved includes license plate numbers, cell tower data, cell phone data, facial recognition data, GPS data, and more.

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The only saving grace for critics of the bill is that it “limits access to that data to serious cases, requiring a court order issued in a civil lawsuit alleging violations of constitutional rights or in a criminal proceeding involving the alleged misconduct,” according to Fox News.

If passed and signed into law, the bill would go into effect on Oct. 1 of this year.

Despite the saving grace, critics fired back with fury on X, falsely accusing Moon of trying to dox all ICE agents.

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All this comes amid a report filed Monday about an Irish man who’s been leaking the identities of ICE agents since last year and refuses to stop until the Trump administration stops deporting illegal alien murderers and rapists.

Dominick Skinner is his name, and according to The Irish Times, “his website Ice List has received millions of views, been targeted by hacking attacks and been dropped by internet service providers several times.”

“If they disband ICE, maybe I would stop collecting names, but I’d certainly pass on all the names to attorney generals or whoever might want them,” Skinnier told the Times.

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He was reportedly triggered into becoming an anti-ICE loon after Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem threatened last year to arrest any American who doxes ICE agents.

“So I just reshared that and said, ‘that’s cool, I’m not in the US – so send them to me, and I’ll do it,'” he said. “And then that kind of went viral. By that night, we had private investigators messaging me. By the next week, we had a framework on how to work it.”

Skinner is reportedly being aided in his unscrupulous actions by shameless snitches who send him information from the states.

“This morning, I had someone who works at a Starbucks where ICE agents were getting coffee,” Skinner recalled. “They told me the names that were written on the cups.”

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Vivek Saxena

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