
A federal grand jury has indicted three women accused of targeting a ICE agent in California, following him home from work and broadcasting his private information online.
The case exposes the dangerous escalation of anti-ICE activism, where harassment and intimidation of law enforcement officers are now celebrated on social media.
According to the indictment, the three defendants—Ashleigh Brown, 38, of Aurora, Colorado; Cynthia Raygoza, 37, of Riverside, California; and Sandra Carmona Samane, 25, of Panorama City, California—face charges of conspiracy and illegally disclosing the personal information of a federal law enforcement officer.
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Prosecutors allege the women deliberately stalked the ICE agent on August 28, trailing him from his workplace in downtown Los Angeles all the way to his residence.
During the pursuit, prosecutors say, the women livestreamed the chase on Instagram. The streams were shared across multiple accounts with names such as “ice_out_of_la,” “defendmesoamericanculture,” and “corn_maiden_design.”
By the end of the broadcast, the women had posted the agent’s home address online, essentially turning him and his family into targets.
This is not protest—it is criminal intimidation of a federal officer.
The indictment reflects a growing problem: left-wing activists using digital platforms to expose and endanger law enforcement officers.
The trend mirrors the tactics of extremist groups who claim to fight for “justice” but resort to doxing, harassment, and threats against those tasked with enforcing America’s immigration laws.
Federal prosecutors have made it clear that such behavior will not be tolerated.
Publishing the personal address of a federal law enforcement officer is a felony, one intended to prevent exactly this type of reckless endangerment.
The three women could face years in prison if convicted.
What makes this case especially disturbing is the celebratory nature of the livestreams.
Instead of simply protesting ICE policies through legal channels, the women weaponized social media to mobilize hostility against a single officer.
Their actions did not just place him at risk—they endangered his entire household.
For law enforcement agents who already face daily threats, this incident highlights the rising dangers of political extremism intersecting with online platforms.
The federal indictment underscores an urgent reality: targeting individual officers is not activism, it is lawlessness.
If America allows the doxing and harassment of its law enforcement agents to go unpunished, no officer will feel safe carrying out their duty.
In this case, the Department of Justice is signaling that crossing this line will bring serious consequences.