A trio of anti-ICE influencers allegedly stalked an immigration enforcement officer back to his California home, then doxxed him in an Instagram livestream, sources told The Post, amid a surge of violence against ICE agents nationwide.
Cynthia Raygoza, Sandra Carmona Samane and Ashleigh Brown were indicted by a grand jury for posting footage revealing the unidentified ICE agent’s personal home address outside Los Angeles and screaming “ICE lives on your street and you should know,” according to a federal criminal complaint that has not yet been made public.
During a court hearing Thursday at which one of the suspects was denied bail, other anti-ICE agitators also disrupted proceedings, prompting three more arrests, added a courthouse source with direct knowledge of the ruckus.
The three females had tailed the officer on Aug. 28 in a black sedan from the Los Angeles ICE field office to his home — before hopping out wearing masks and beginning to film him and his wife in their driveway.
They “began yelling and shouting” shouting out the personal home address and later threatening to throw a coffee cup at him during their Instagram livestream, according to the complaint filed in US District Court for the Central District of California on Sept. 5.
At one point, the women can be overheard on the livestream shouting “la migra lives here” and “ICE lives on your street and you should know,” the complaint noted.
The Instagram accounts — “ice_out_ofla,” “defendmesoamericanculture” and “corn_maiden_design” — subsequently scrubbed the footage. The three face up to 10 years in prison and potential fines, if convicted.
The indictment — which alleges two counts for conspiracy and disclosing personal information of a federal agent — was handed down on the same day that an anti-ICE gunman opened fire on federal officers at a Dallas field office.
Shooter Joshua Jahn meticulously plotted the attack and took aim from a rooftop of a nearby building before firing with a Nazi battle rifle at a van near the ICE office Wednesday morning.
One of the gunman’s bullets was inscribed with the words “ANTI ICE,” according to photos released the same day by FBI Director Kash Patel.
A handwritten note recovered by investigators also read, “Hopefully this will give ICE agents real terror, to think, ‘is there a sniper with AP [armor piercing] rounds on that roof?’”
But the only victims of his attack were three detained migrants, one of whom was killed. Two others were rushed to the hospital in critical condition.
Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin in a Sept. 16 statement slammed California Democrats for pushing the legislation, noting that its comparisons to federal officers as “secret police” likened them to the Gestapo.
“We urge Governor Newsom to condemn this rhetoric and veto this bill,” McLaughlin had said. “Our federal law enforcement officers face a 1000% increase in assaults against them, unprecedented online doxing, and are having cars used as weapons against them.”
“Once again sanctuary politicians are trying to outlaw officers wearing masks to protect themselves from being doxed and targeted by known and suspected terrorist sympathizers,” she added. “The men and women at CBP, ICE, and all of our federal law enforcement agencies put their lives on the line every day to arrest violent criminal illegal aliens to protect and defend the lives of American citizens.”
Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom still went on to sign a series of bills banning masking statewide last week — including for ICE officers and other federal agents who keep their identities concealed during operations.
On Friday, LA acting US Attorney Bill Essayli declared the law “unconstitutional” and said “the state lacks jurisdiction to interfere with federal law enforcement.”
“I have directed federal agencies to disregard this state law and adhere to federal law and agency policies,” he added, posting a letter he penned authorizing the move on X.
The City of Angels was torn apart by anti-ICE rioting in June, which resulted in dozens of charges from the Los Angeles DA and is expected to cost more than $32 million in emergency response and property damage costs.