US Lawmaker Sounds Alarm Over Plan to Hire Bounty Hunters to Track Down Undocumented Immigrants
A US congressman has expressed "grave concerns" over a plan by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to award monetary bonuses to private bounty hunters in an effort to track down undocumented immigrants. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, a Democrat from Illinois, wrote a letter to the DHS Secretary Kristi Noem stating that this outsourcing proposal raises worrying questions about accountability.
Under the plan, ICE would contract with companies interested in providing "skip tracing" services to deploy private investigators to track down immigrants living inside the US. These bounty hunters would be tasked with conducting surveillance and identifying the home addresses of undocumented individuals. They could earn bonuses based on how many immigrants they help apprehend and how quickly.
Krishnamoorthi is alarmed by the lack of oversight and accountability in this system, which he believes could lead to abuses and corruption. "Allowing private contractors to perform enforcement activities under a system of performance-based financial incentives essentially bounty hunting, outsources one of the government's most coercive powers to actors who operate with little oversight and limited public accountability," he writes.
Krishnamoorthi fears that this plan would further blur the line between federal authority and the private sector, introducing corporate profit motive into the government's chaotic domestic immigration operations. "In such a system built on quotas and cash rewards with minimal oversight, mistakes are not just possible - they are certain," he notes. The pressure to hit numbers replaces the judgment, training, and accountability that should define real law enforcement.
ICE has refused to comment on Krishnamoorthi's concerns, stating that the plan is purely for information-gathering purposes and does not constitute a formal request for proposal. However, the congressman is demanding clarification on how this system would work, including whether contractors will be required to identify themselves as agents of the federal government.
A US congressman has expressed "grave concerns" over a plan by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to award monetary bonuses to private bounty hunters in an effort to track down undocumented immigrants. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, a Democrat from Illinois, wrote a letter to the DHS Secretary Kristi Noem stating that this outsourcing proposal raises worrying questions about accountability.
Under the plan, ICE would contract with companies interested in providing "skip tracing" services to deploy private investigators to track down immigrants living inside the US. These bounty hunters would be tasked with conducting surveillance and identifying the home addresses of undocumented individuals. They could earn bonuses based on how many immigrants they help apprehend and how quickly.
Krishnamoorthi is alarmed by the lack of oversight and accountability in this system, which he believes could lead to abuses and corruption. "Allowing private contractors to perform enforcement activities under a system of performance-based financial incentives essentially bounty hunting, outsources one of the government's most coercive powers to actors who operate with little oversight and limited public accountability," he writes.
Krishnamoorthi fears that this plan would further blur the line between federal authority and the private sector, introducing corporate profit motive into the government's chaotic domestic immigration operations. "In such a system built on quotas and cash rewards with minimal oversight, mistakes are not just possible - they are certain," he notes. The pressure to hit numbers replaces the judgment, training, and accountability that should define real law enforcement.
ICE has refused to comment on Krishnamoorthi's concerns, stating that the plan is purely for information-gathering purposes and does not constitute a formal request for proposal. However, the congressman is demanding clarification on how this system would work, including whether contractors will be required to identify themselves as agents of the federal government.