DOJ sues states that rejected ICE requests for undercover license plates

https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/GettyImages-2230548231-1152x648-1780073944.jpg

Refusing to enable ICE

DOJ keeps accusing ICE monitoring sites of doxing, but evidence remains scarce.

The Trump administration continues to claim in lawsuits that ICE monitoring sites are doxing agents, without showing evidence that’s happening.

Most recently, the Department of Justice pointed to sites like ICEList.info and ICESpy.org in lawsuits it filed in an attempt to force four states to reverse policies blocking ICE agents from registering undercover license plates.

The DOJ alleged that the states’ policies are unconstitutional, unlawfully requiring federal officers to abide by different rules than state officers who can easily obtain undercover plates. Among risks to ICE agents denied undercover plates, the DOJ counted alleged threats of increased harassment and invasive tracking of officers, as well as the possibility that targets of ICE enforcement may more easily evade arrest.

In all the complaints, the DOJ claimed that confidential registrations also protect officers by making sure...

Copyright of this story solely belongs to arstechnica.com. To see the full text click HERE

Read more

https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/eC2Jgu7PqhAQjdHzawBZAa-1920-80.png

'Built around volcanic materials' — Turkish startup wants to make billion-dollar radar systems near…

* Volcanic minerals may allow ordinary drones to evade advanced radar detection systems * Spray-on stealth coatings could eliminate expensive composite panels from military drone manufacturing * Radar networks become less effective when drones return with dramatically weaker electronic signatures A small Turkish defense research company claims it developed a spray-applied radar-absorbing coating