- DHS creation: Established post-9/11 to safeguard America, homeland, and values; led data collection for monitoring terrorists.
- Trump administration directive: Directed DHS parts to assist ICE in achieving 1 million deportations in first year.
- Scott Shuchart quote: Former ICE assistant director notes criminal investigative technologies repurposed for deportations, including tracking grandmothers.
- Surveillance technologies listed: Include geolocation, facial recognition, DNA testing, eye scans, spyware, license plate cameras, credit reports.
- AI and mobile tools: AI cross-references datasets; mobile apps provide field agents instant information access.
- Data brokers and vendors: Proliferation enables easy surveillance; private firms like AT&T, Palantir, Clearview AI secure multimillion-dollar contracts.
- Lobbying ties: Some contractors hired lobbyists connected to White House amid ICE ambitions.
- Oversight concerns from officials: Former DHS privacy officer Deborah Fleischaker reports sidelined safeguards, reduced oversight, and novel rule-breaking practices.
The Department of Homeland Security was created in the wake of the 9/11 attacks with a mission to “safeguard the American people, our homeland, and our values”. It was at the forefront of the huge data collection apparatus the US government built to monitor and locate suspected terrorists.
Under the Trump administration, large parts of America’s biggest domestic law enforcement and intelligence agency have been directed to help its Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents reach a target of 1mn deportations in the president’s first year.
“Technologies used and managed for criminal investigative purposes are being repurposed, in part, to track down grandmas to deport,” says Scott Shuchart, a former ICE assistant director who left in January.
Thousands of contracts and documents outline the contours of DHS’s surveillance capabilities: geolocation, facial recognition, DNA testing, eye scans, spyware, licence plate cameras, credit reports and more. AI tools cross_**-**_reference datasets, while mobile apps give field agents information at their fingertips.
At the same time, the proliferation of data brokers and digital, “open_**-source” intelligence has made surveillance easier than ever. Unlike the government programmes revealed by Edward Snowden over a decade ago, DHS has not needed to build extensive in-**_house capabilities — vendors now offer sweeping tools at relatively low cost.
A wide array of private corporations, from global powerhouses to niche start_**-**_ups, have secured hundreds of millions of dollars in government contracts, including AT&T, Thomson Reuters, Palantir and Clearview AI. Some have hired lobbyists with ties to the White House to capitalise on ICE’s growing ambitions.
Individual surveillance technologies should be understood within the “mass surveillance context”, says Emily Tucker, a professor at Georgetown Law School. “All this stuff is being used together.”
Former officials say internal safeguards have been sidelined. “There’s less oversight and more willingness to break the rules,” says Deborah Fleischaker, who served as DHS’s privacy officer and ICE chief of staff under Biden.
“Things are just unbound,” she adds. “People are doing things that have never been done before, in ways that have never been done before, with fewer safeguards in place.”

