Anonymous 01/29/2026 (Thu) 07:56 Id: 4e5478 No.174680 del
Uncovering The Bullshit Vol 1: Beyond Signal - The Anti-Ice Files

bitchuneedsoap
With help from @astrarce

For months, online networks have tracked ICE agents in real time — logging license plates, tagging vehicles, sharing intel in private chats. Now, leaked documents reveal how the system actually works, who built it, and who's funding it. All of the following information has been forwarded to the @FBI
@FBIDirectorKash

BACKGROUND
In the wake of the Trump administration's aggressive immigration crackdown, particularly Operation Metro Surge in Minnesota, which has led to thousands of arrests since December 2025, a decentralized network of anti-ICE activists has mobilized across the state, with signs of similar tactics spreading nationally. Operating primarily through encrypted Signal channels (often neighborhood-specific "rapid response" groups with dispatchers, patrols, and relay admins), the network maintains multiple public-facing identities to coordinate observations, alerts, and responses. These include:

Isles RR (Isles Rapid Response) — A key Signal-based group focused on real-time plate checks, vehicle tailing, and alerts in Minneapolis neighborhoods like Isles/Uptown areas.
MN Community Response (or Minnesota Community Response) — An umbrella term for county-level Signal networks, rapid deployment teams, and shared resources like databases and patrol manuals, emphasizing "community networks" in every Minnesota county.
Whipple Watch — An informal monitoring action centered on the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building (Fort Snelling ICE facility in St. Paul), where volunteers track convoys, agents, and releases, often feeding intel into broader chats.

These labels function more as project tags or chat group names than formal organizations. No single headquarters, no public 501(c)(3) filings, just loose coalitions of volunteers using tools like Airtable for suspected ICE vehicle databases, Proton Drive for shared "Patrol Manuals," and emoji-coded alerts to mobilize quickly. Publicly, the networks frame their work as lawful: legal observation of federal agents, peaceful protest, community outreach, and "know your rights" support. They position themselves as modern neighborhood watches defending vulnerable residents from what they call excessive enforcement. But documents, chat logs, and on-the-ground tactics raise serious questions: Are these activities truly limited to passive observation? Or do they cross into real-time interference, obstruction, or worse? The timing is anything but coincidental. The surge in enforcement has sparked intense backlash, culminating in two high-profile fatal shootings by federal agents in Minneapolis this month alone:
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