Kristi Noem Says Americans Should Be Prepared to Prove Their Citizenship as ICE Intensifies Nationwide Raids — “Targeted Enforcement” Could Include ID Checks

Kristi Noem Says Americans Should Be Prepared to Prove Their Citizenship as ICE Intensifies Nationwide Raids — “Targeted Enforcement” Could Include ID Checks

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem addressed questions about U.S. citizens’ obligations to prove their identity as Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) ramps up enforcement operations in cities nationwide. Speaking outside the White House on Thursday, Jan. 15, Noem said targeted enforcement efforts may require individuals near criminal operations to verify who they are.

“In every situation, we are doing targeted enforcement,” Noem, the former governor of North Dakota, said. “If we are on a target and doing an operation, there may be individuals surrounding that criminal that we may be asking who they are and why they’re there and having them validate their identity. That’s what we’ve always done in asking people who they are so that we know who’s in those surroundings.”

Noem emphasized that if ICE determines someone may be breaking the law, that person can be detained “until we’ve run that processing.”

The remarks come amid renewed scrutiny of ICE operations under President Donald Trump’s second term. Since Trump returned to office in 2025, a controversial mass deportation effort has been underway. In recent weeks, incidents have intensified public attention: a Texas detainee died in ICE custody on Jan. 3, Minneapolis resident Renee Nicole Good was shot four times by ICE agents on Jan. 7 and later pronounced dead, a 21-year-old anti-ICE protester was permanently blinded on Jan. 9, and a Venezuelan man was shot in the leg during a struggle with officers on Jan. 14. Videos circulating on social media have captured clashes with protesters, confrontations with vehicles, and agents approaching homes.

Trump has also threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act in Minnesota to suppress anti-ICE protests using military force.

Data obtained by the University of California, Berkeley’s Deportation Data Project indicates that nearly 75,000 people arrested by ICE during the first nine months of Trump’s second term had no criminal record, with roughly one-third of all arrestees falling into this category. While the dataset does not differentiate between minor and violent offenses for those with prior convictions, public reporting suggests U.S. citizens have been among those detained. ProPublica identified over 170 cases in which U.S. citizens were caught up in raids or protests during that period.

High-profile critics have emerged, including podcaster Joe Rogan, who has over 20 million YouTube subscribers and regularly tops Spotify’s podcast charts. On the Jan. 13 episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, Rogan said, “Most people believe law enforcement is necessary and that criminals should be arrested — but many of those same people also believe ICE is operating illegally.” He continued, “Those same people that believe that might also believe that once someone is here, they should be able to stay in this country and ICE is operating illegally and we shouldn’t have militarized groups of people roaming the streets just showing up with masks on, snatching people up, some of them U.S. citizens, and shipping them to countries they didn’t even come from.”

Rogan drew historical comparisons, adding, “I can also see the point of view of the people that say, ‘Yeah, but you don’t want militarized people in the streets just roaming around snatching people up, many of which turn out to actually be U.S. citizens that just don’t have their papers on them.’ Are we really going to be the Gestapo? ‘Where’s your papers?’ Is that what we’ve come to?”

The combination of targeted enforcement, controversial incidents, and public criticism underscores the heightened tension surrounding ICE operations and the broader debate over immigration enforcement under the Trump administration.

Tags

About Author

Zane Clark

Zane Clark is a writer whose interest in national affairs began at age 11, during a birthday ride in a 1966 Piper 180C that sparked an early curiosity about history and current events. That first moment of perspective grew into a lasting fascination with the people, conflicts, and decisions influencing the nation’s direction. Today, Zane brings clear, informed storytelling to Altitude Post, covering everything from major events to the individuals helping shape the country’s future. When he’s not writing, he’s researching history, following current developments, spotting aircraft, attending airshows or exploring the stories behind the headlines.

Latest Posts

Tags