Breaking — Secret Memo: ICE Can Kick Down Your Door
A whistleblower disclosure reveals ICE has been secretly training agents to ignore the Fourth Amendment since May—while claiming to defend "law and order."
While others stenograph, grift, or chase the next distraction—this is the news that matters and how it’s connected.
“To see a battering ram coming to the front door of your house with a nine-year-old inside is just terrifying.”
That’s what Garrison Gibson’s family said after ICE agents smashed through his door in Minneapolis on January 11.1 When they demanded to see a judicial warrant, agents didn’t have one. Just an administrative warrant—Form I-205—signed by an ICE supervisor, not a judge.
At the time, it looked like a rogue operation. Now we know it wasn’t. It was policy.
The party of “family values” sent armed agents with a battering ram to a home with a child inside. The party of “protecting children” terrorized a nine-year-old in her own living room. The party of “law and order” did it without a legal warrant. Remember that.
The Memo
On May 12, 2025, Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons signed a memo that changed everything.2
The directive, addressed to “All ICE Personnel,” authorizes agents to forcibly enter homes using only administrative warrants—Form I-205—to arrest anyone with a final order of removal. No judicial warrant required. No judge reviews the paperwork. No neutral magistrate authorizes the intrusion into a private home.
The memo is explicit about force. If a resident refuses to open the door, agents “should use only a necessary and reasonable amount of force to enter the alien’s residence.”²
This is the Fourth Amendment being nullified by internal memo.



DHS Knows It’s Unconstitutional
The memo doesn’t just violate the Constitution. It violates DHS’s own rules—rules they wrote, rules they still use in training materials, rules that reflect decades of Supreme Court precedent. Their handbooks call warrantless home entry “the chief evil” the Fourth Amendment was designed to stop. Their training materials say administrative warrants don’t authorize entry. Even a former DHS Secretary told Congress these warrants can’t be used to enter homes.²
They know. They’ve always known. And that’s why they hid it.
The memo was never formally distributed. Despite being addressed to “All ICE Personnel,” it was shown only to select officials who then verbally briefed subordinates.² Employees who saw it were forced to read it in their supervisor’s presence, then hand it back. No notes allowed.²
Instructors at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center are now verbally training new agents to follow the memo while disregarding the written materials that contradict it.² One instructor resigned rather than teach what they understood to be unconstitutional.² Others who objected faced retaliation.²
This is why the memo has no confidentiality markings—yet was treated with “unusually strict access control.”² They knew what they were doing. They knew it couldn’t survive public scrutiny. And they trained agents to follow it anyway.
Two anonymous government officials, represented by Whistleblower Aid, finally disclosed the memo to Congress in January.² The Associated Press obtained it and verified its authenticity.3
The Response
DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin claimed everyone served with an administrative warrant has already had “full due process.”³ She said the Supreme Court has “recognized the propriety of administrative warrants”—without elaborating.³ She didn’t respond to questions about how many times ICE has entered homes under this policy.³
Translation: We’ve kicked in doors. We won’t say how many. And we don’t answer to you.
ICE has already arrested at least 170 U.S. citizens in recent months.² They’ve raided wrong addresses—traumatizing families, seizing phones and cash, then leaving.² And they’re recruiting 10,000 new agents to carry out this policy.²
They wrap themselves in the Constitution while shredding it. They chant “law and order” while breaking into American homes without legal warrant.
The Fourth Amendment was written specifically to prevent government agents from entering your home without judicial approval. DHS’s own handbook calls it “the chief evil” the Constitution was designed to stop. And by internal memo—no legislation, no court ruling, no public debate—they’ve decided it doesn’t apply to them.
So what happens now?
What Comes Next
Lawsuits are coming. More will follow. All the way to the Supreme Court.
Here’s the prediction: They’ll rubber-stamp it.
If they strike it down, everything ICE has done under it gets called into question. It would validate the protests—including Renee Good when an ICE agent shot her in the head. It would cause the “moral justification” behind ICE’s cruelty to crumble and expose the agency for what it is: a roving gang of fascist thugs who believe Constitutional protections only apply to the “right people.”
The fascist majority on the Supreme Court will not allow that. Six of its nine justices came through the Federalist Society pipeline—the same infrastructure that spent fifty years capturing the judiciary. The Federalist Society didn’t capture the courts to restrain the president. They captured them to unleash him.
That’s not pessimism. That’s diagnosis. And it’s why the fight can’t just be in the courts.
The Call
This isn’t an isolated incident. We track stories like this using the fascism syndrome—ten indicators that a democracy is sliding into fascism—so you don’t lose the thread in the daily chaos:
Erosion of due process: The Fourth Amendment—the right to be secure in your home—gutted by internal memo. No legislation. No court ruling. Just agency fiat.
Normalization of political violence: Battering rams. Tactical gear. Rifles drawn. “Necessary and reasonable force” to enter your home without a judge’s approval.
Capture of the state: Agents trained to follow verbal orders that contradict written law. Whistleblowers retaliated against. Instructors who refuse to teach unconstitutional policy forced out.
Secret memo authorizing force. Secret training to ignore the law. Secret authority to break down your door. That’s not law enforcement. That’s occupation. That’s fascism.
But naming the disease is only half the job.
We built this publication to equip you with the tools to fight back—the frameworks, the messaging, the strategies that actually work. See the links below. But we can only keep doing this with your help. If this matters to you, please consider becoming a paid subscriber. You keep the fight alive.
Fighting Fascism: How We Push Back and Win — The strategic playbook for reclaiming power
The Trump Regime Messaging Guide — How to talk to people who’ve been captured by the machine
The Freedom Illusion — How we got here, and the counter-ideology that gets us out
Paul Bloom, “ICE busts door, Minneapolis family demands judicial warrant“, Fox 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul, January 14, 2026.
Local investigative report on the Garrison Gibson arrest, including family footage of the raid. Documents the battering ram used to enter the home, the nine-year-old child inside, and Gibson’s status as a compliant individual attending regular ICE check-ins. Includes attorney Mark Proksch’s statement calling the warrantless entry “an egregious violation of the Fourth Amendment.”
Whistleblower Aid, “Anonymous Whistleblower Disclosure: Secretive DHS memo authorizes ICE to illegally enter homes without a judicial warrant“, Whistleblower Aid, January 7, 2026.
The primary source document: a 24-page disclosure representing two anonymous U.S. government officials. Contains the actual May 12, 2025 memo from Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons, along with extensive legal analysis showing the policy contradicts DHS’s own training materials, Congressional Research Service findings, and decades of Fourth Amendment precedent. Documents the secretive rollout—employees forced to read and return the memo without notes—and retaliation against those who objected. Key quotes from DHS’s own materials:
DHS 2025 Legal Training Handbook: “The physical entry of the home is the chief evil against which the wording of the Fourth Amendment is directed.” Warrantless home arrest is “typically a violation of the Fourth Amendment.”
ICE Fugitive Operations Handbook (2023): “Neither a Warrant for Arrest of Alien (I-200) nor a Warrant of Removal (I-205) authorizes officers to enter the target’s residence.”
ERO Training Handbook: “A warrant of removal/deportation does NOT alone authorize a Fourth Amendment search of any kind.”
Secretary Michael Chertoff to Congress (2007): “A warrant of removal is administrative in nature and does not grant the same authority to enter dwellings as a judicially approved search or arrest warrant.”
Rebecca Santana, “Immigration officers assert sweeping power to enter homes without a judge’s warrant, memo says“, Associated Press, January 21, 2026.
AP obtained and verified the memo and whistleblower complaint. Documents DHS’s non-response to questions about how often this authority has been used. Includes expert commentary from Professor Lindsay Nash of Cardozo School of Law, who said the memo “flies in the face” of what the Fourth Amendment protects: “There’s an enormous potential for overreach, for mistakes, and we’ve seen that those can happen with very, very serious consequences.”



Yeah, I hate to admit it but I guess the 2A crowd had a point. However, where can you hit one of those human tanks? The only place I can see is in the ear!
So, now we are going to have a conflict between the “castle doctrine” and the ICEtapo. This should get the 2A crazies hackles up. Except most of the 2A boys are obviously in ICE.