Facebook closes the page that the Justice Department says was used to molest ICE agents

The US Justice Department said on Tuesday that Meta had fulfilled its request to remove a page on its Facebook platform, which the agency said was being used to molest ICE agents in Chicago. In an X post, Prosecutor General Pam Bond said the page was part [...]
In an X post, Prosecutor General Pam Bond said the site was part of an attempt to “dominate and target” approximately 200 immigration and Customs officers who have arrived in the city, as part of President Donald Trump's campaign to implement the immigration law. Doxim is sharing personal information about people on the internet.
A Meta spokesman confirmed that the company had removed the page from the Facebook platform for our <x0-stepping policies against co-ordinated damage”, Telegraphed.
Apple earlier this month removed applications that allowed users to trace the movements of ICE agents, following pressure from the Trump administration.
Google has also made similar applications unavailable. The administration has threatened to prosecute components of tracking applications.
ICE was central to Trump's severe immigration agenda. Her agents have regularly raided and arrested migrants, and rights advocates say freedom of speech and regular legal process are often being violated.
The administration has confirmed that left-wing protesters have regularly harassed and intervened with ICE agents. Bond gave no evidence in her post at X for specific incidents related to the Facebook page.
Meta and other technological firms have been trying to improve their relationship with Trump since he won re-election in November.
The company contributed $1m to the president's inauguration fund and removed its diversity and fact verification programmes.
Meta also agreed to pay Trump $25m to resolve a lawsuit on suspending his accounts following the US Capitol attack on January 6, 2021.
The presence of ICE in Chicago has been resisted by the city's Democrat mayor, Brandon Johnson, and the Democrat Governor of Illinois, JB Pritsker.
Earlier this month, Johnson signed an order banning ICE agents from using the city's owned properties as a preparation area for operations, and local businesses have placed signs declaring their premises are forbidden to ICE. /Periscope












