Photos, names and personal details of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents are being posted on fliers in a bid to dox federal agents carrying out mass deportation raids.
The notices resembling Wanted Posters have appeared in Los Angeles and show the agents' faces, ages, their phone numbers and what part of city they're in as part of a growing plot to interfere in immigration raids, Fox News reported.
In Spanish, the banners read, 'CAREFUL WITH THESE FACES.'
'These armed agents work in Southern California. ICE and HSI racially terrorize and criminalize entire communities with their policies.
'They kidnap people from their homes and from the streets, separating families and fracturing communities. Many people have died while locked up in jails, prisons, and detention centers.'
The tactic immediately came under fire as the identity of agents is sensitive and protected. The media who will often blur the faces of agents to protect their identity.
Additionally, ICE isn't alone in the recent immigration arrests. Other federal partners, like the FBI, DEA and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), have also been assisting.
Pro-immigrant activists have been working to disrupt President Donald Trump's plan for the 'largest deportation in history.'
At migrant round-ups across the country, activists with mega phones and loud speakers have been showing up during ICE raids.

Anti-ICE activists have started putting up posters, according to Fox News, with names and phone numbers of ICE and HSI officers working in the LA area
In the Denver area, the activists could be heard shouting, 'DO NOT SPEAK,' in both English and Spanish to migrants who were being lead away in handcuffs, according to a video posted to Instagram by the Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition.
Over the mega phones, activists will broadcast the legal rights of the migrants, instructing them they don't have to speak to federal agents and that officials must have a warrant to come into their home.
Deportations are being impacted by what the activists are doing, according to Trump's Border Czar Tom Homan, who complained that migrants knew their rights in Chicago - keeping arrests numbers lower than he wanted.
'For instance, Chicago—very well-educated,' Homan told CNN. 'They‘ve been educated on how to how to defy ICE, how to hide from ICE. I‘ve seen many pamphlets from many NGOs: 'Here‘s how you escape ICE from arresting you. Here‘s what you need to do.'
'They call it "Know Your Rights." I call it ‘how to escape arrest,"' he added.
Legal information is being distributed on so called 'red cards' across the country.
In Dallas, Texas, Oaklawn Methodist Church laminated notes the size of a credit card are handed out, and apply to both US citizens and migrants.
On one side, the cards list a migrant's legal rights in Spanish, including not opening the door to law enforcement and not signing any paperwork.

Federal agents with the New York City Fugitive Operations Team arrests a illegal migrant during a targeted enforcement operation, January 28, 2025, in New York City, New Yor

So called 'red cards" with legal rights, are being handed out across the nation in an effort to stop federal agents from violating the legal rights of the migrants
Migrants are further instructed to slide the card under the door to waiting ICE agents, who in case cases across the country, have simply shown up to home and arrested people they did not have a warrant for.
The back side of the car, in English, reads: 'I do not wish to speak with you, answer your questions or sign or hand you any documents based on my 5th Amendment rights under the United States Constitution.
'I do not give you permission to enter my home bases on my 4th Amendment rights.'
In the San Diego area, a young woman identified as 'Jasmine' by a local station, stopped ICE from entering her home but reading her legal rights off her phone.
'I do not give you any permission to enter my home based on my 4th Amendment,' she can be heard saying as she recorded.
Agents were there for her uncle, who the woman admits is in the country illegally, however, she insists everyone else living there is mostly a US citizen.
'He was like, "If you guys don't come out in the next five minutes, we're taking all of you guys," Jasmine claims ICE told her.
She also claimed the agents showed her an agency 'administrative warrant,' however, it had not been signed by a judge.
Eventually the agents left without arresting anyone after Jasmine started reading them her rights.