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The Right to Record Is Not “Domestic Terrorism”

1/28/2026

 
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A woman in Maine was using her cellphone on Friday to record the public actions of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents.
 
When one agent began taking pictures of her and her car, she said: “It’s not illegal to record.”
 
“Exactly, that’s what we’re doing,” the agent replied.
 
“So why are you taking my information down?” she asked him.
 
“Because we have a nice little database,” he replied. “And now you’re considered a domestic terrorist, so have fun with that."
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This is consistent with a report by Ken Klippenstein on his independent news site that a federal law enforcement official told him that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has ordered immigration officers to collect information on anyone video-recording ICE agents at work. The official told Klippenstein that intelligence agents use this data to perform a “work-up” on targets that likely includes running their license plates and criminal history checks, and even analyzing their social media profiles.
 
Why is the federal government building intelligence files on Americans engaged in activity that is plainly protected by the First Amendment? Will Americans in this database suddenly find themselves facing legal restrictions, such as appearing on a “No Fly” list, barring them from air travel?
 
That would run counter to rulings by seven federal circuits that have recognized Americans’ “right to record” – the right to hold up a smartphone and make a video of law enforcement in action. One of those – the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals – noted that “recording police encounters creates information that contributes to discussion about governmental affairs.”
 
Yet DHS Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs Tricia McLaughlin said that “videotaping ICE law enforcement and posting photos and videos of them online” is a crime, and that “we will prosecute those who illegally harass ICE agents to the fullest extent of the law.”
 
DHS Secretary Kristi Noem seems to have a similar view. After the shooting of Renée Good, Noem connected her to  “domestic terrorism.” And McLaughlin labeled Alex Pretti – slain by agents after he filmed them – as also committing an “act of domestic terrorism.” 
 
Preemptively labeling Good and Pretti as terrorists when official investigations have hardly begun seems counterproductive. And the current administration would do well to remember the Biden Administration, which linked parents who got into heated discussions at school board meetings and “radical traditional Catholics” to “domestic terrorism.” Remember, too, that the Woodrow Wilson administration freely labeled Americans as “disloyal” and worse if they criticized America’s participation in World War I.
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History has been unkind to every administration that has tried to stretch charged words like “terrorism” to cover lawful dissent. The Trump Administration would do well to make a clean break with these broad-brush depictions of Americans exercising their First Amendment rights. Let us hope that such a break will be part of President Trump’s recently announced “reset” of his administration’s immigration enforcement policy.

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