ICE Caught Apparently Using Private Facebook Data to Hunt Suspects (UPDATED)
UPDATE, 3/27, 10:12 AM: The Intercept published a major correction to its report on Monday which claimed that the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency was using private Facebook data to track immigrants. The site said that, because of editing errors, it had incorrectly asserted that ICE had used Facebook to target an immigrant in a particular case.
“The documents reported on in the story do not establish that the target of the investigation was an immigrant or that the individual was being pursued for immigration violations. The target of the investigation was, according to the documents, based in the New York metropolitan area, while several of the ICE agents on the emails were based in New Mexico,” the correction read in part.
In addition, Facebook told The Intercept that the case it had written about stemmed from a legal request regarding an active child predator, and that “ICE did not identify any immigration law violations in connection with its data request to Facebook in this case.”
Immigration officials have been using Facebook data to identify when and where immigrants logged onto their accounts, according to a new report in The Intercept.