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ICE Tapped IRS Tax Records for Immigration Enforcement, But Says Data Went Unused

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Court filings reveal ICE accessed IRS taxpayer information to identify thousands of undocumented immigrants with deportation orders, though officials claim the data never actually led to removals. A lawsuit challenges whether the practice violates tax code protections.

Federal immigration officials got their hands on IRS taxpayer information during President Donald Trump's administration deportation push, but now they're saying the data just sat there collecting digital dust. According to court filings, they accessed it but never actually used it to deport anyone. Whether you buy that explanation likely depends on how much you trust government agencies to resist using data they've already gone to the trouble of obtaining.

How ICE Cross-Referenced Tax Records

In documents filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Massachusetts, Immigration and Customs Enforcement laid out exactly what happened. The agency cross-referenced taxpayer records with a list of 1.2 million undocumented immigrants who had final removal orders, successfully identifying approximately 33,000 updated addresses in the process.

Richard S. Fitzgerald, assistant director of Homeland Security Investigations, explained the current status: "The IRS data is currently residing on the HSI lead architect's government-issued computer." He added that "at this juncture, only the lead architect has access to the IRS data."

The Data Nobody Used (Supposedly)

Here's where it gets interesting. ICE insists that although its technology office reviewed the information, it was never entered into enforcement databases or used to actually deport individuals. This despite the fact that teams responsible for removal operations had access to it. It's a bit like keeping a loaded gun in your desk drawer and claiming you never thought about using it.

Brian Peltier, head of technology strategy at the Social Security Administration, clarified that his agency only shares address data that doesn't originate from tax sources or directly from "claimants, claimant representatives, United States Postal Service reports."

The filings emerged from a lawsuit brought by the Community Economic Development Center of Southeastern Massachusetts, which is fighting to stop the federal government from sharing taxpayer data with immigration authorities. The organization argues the practice violates tax code protections.

Political Backlash and Economic Concerns

Earlier this month, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) went after President Trump's immigration policies hard, accusing ICE of targeting low-risk immigrants and claiming elites were misusing $170 billion from public programs to fund what she called secret police operations.

The economic implications are sobering. A recent study found Trump's immigration measures could shrink the U.S. workforce by 6.8 million by 2028 and 15.7 million by 2035, potentially reducing GDP by trillions and hammering critical sectors like healthcare, agriculture, and manufacturing.

The administration hasn't exactly been subtle about its intentions. Earlier this year, it imposed $6.1 billion in fines on immigrants who ignored deportation orders while simultaneously offering a $1,000 "exit bonus" to encourage self-deportation. Trump directed ICE to launch what he called "the single largest Mass Deportation Program in History," targeting major cities.

Nationwide protests erupted in response, prompting the deployment of National Guard troops and Marines to maintain order.

ICE Tapped IRS Tax Records for Immigration Enforcement, But Says Data Went Unused

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Court filings reveal ICE accessed IRS taxpayer information to identify thousands of undocumented immigrants with deportation orders, though officials claim the data never actually led to removals. A lawsuit challenges whether the practice violates tax code protections.

Federal immigration officials got their hands on IRS taxpayer information during President Donald Trump's administration deportation push, but now they're saying the data just sat there collecting digital dust. According to court filings, they accessed it but never actually used it to deport anyone. Whether you buy that explanation likely depends on how much you trust government agencies to resist using data they've already gone to the trouble of obtaining.

How ICE Cross-Referenced Tax Records

In documents filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Massachusetts, Immigration and Customs Enforcement laid out exactly what happened. The agency cross-referenced taxpayer records with a list of 1.2 million undocumented immigrants who had final removal orders, successfully identifying approximately 33,000 updated addresses in the process.

Richard S. Fitzgerald, assistant director of Homeland Security Investigations, explained the current status: "The IRS data is currently residing on the HSI lead architect's government-issued computer." He added that "at this juncture, only the lead architect has access to the IRS data."

The Data Nobody Used (Supposedly)

Here's where it gets interesting. ICE insists that although its technology office reviewed the information, it was never entered into enforcement databases or used to actually deport individuals. This despite the fact that teams responsible for removal operations had access to it. It's a bit like keeping a loaded gun in your desk drawer and claiming you never thought about using it.

Brian Peltier, head of technology strategy at the Social Security Administration, clarified that his agency only shares address data that doesn't originate from tax sources or directly from "claimants, claimant representatives, United States Postal Service reports."

The filings emerged from a lawsuit brought by the Community Economic Development Center of Southeastern Massachusetts, which is fighting to stop the federal government from sharing taxpayer data with immigration authorities. The organization argues the practice violates tax code protections.

Political Backlash and Economic Concerns

Earlier this month, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) went after President Trump's immigration policies hard, accusing ICE of targeting low-risk immigrants and claiming elites were misusing $170 billion from public programs to fund what she called secret police operations.

The economic implications are sobering. A recent study found Trump's immigration measures could shrink the U.S. workforce by 6.8 million by 2028 and 15.7 million by 2035, potentially reducing GDP by trillions and hammering critical sectors like healthcare, agriculture, and manufacturing.

The administration hasn't exactly been subtle about its intentions. Earlier this year, it imposed $6.1 billion in fines on immigrants who ignored deportation orders while simultaneously offering a $1,000 "exit bonus" to encourage self-deportation. Trump directed ICE to launch what he called "the single largest Mass Deportation Program in History," targeting major cities.

Nationwide protests erupted in response, prompting the deployment of National Guard troops and Marines to maintain order.