Photo by Paul Goyette, Chicago, USA (20250912_2444), CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons. Across the country, anti-ICE training programs are emerging, in some cases with explicit or implicit support from local Democratic governments. At first glance, training designed to help people avoid law enforcement and help criminals escape would appear illegal. In practice, however, the legal landscape is more complex. In Oregon, parents and teachers have formed neighborhood networks to monitor Immigration and Customs Enforcement activity near schools. Participants position themselves around school zones and neighborhoods and use text chains, whistles, and social media to alert communities when ICE agents are nearby. Some groups maintain online accounts that post the locations of ICE operations and track vehicles believed to be used by federal agents. Similar…

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