ICE Is Paying Palantir $30 Million to Build ‘ImmigrationOS’ Surveillance Platform | WIRED


AI Summary Hide AI Generated Summary

ICE's New Surveillance Platform

ICE is paying Palantir $30 million to develop "ImmigrationOS," a surveillance platform enhancing its case management system. The system will reportedly allow searches based on numerous personal details. This is an addition to a 2022 contract already increased five times.

Data Sources and Capabilities

While the exact data sources remain unspecified, ImmigrationOS will reportedly leverage existing ICE data and allows searches across "hundreds of different, highly specific categories." This includes personal details like hair and eye color, scars, tattoos, and even license plate reader data, providing location tracking information. The system's capabilities were partially revealed in a 2016 privacy assessment, but details of advancements since then are unclear.

Context and Concerns

This contract comes amidst intensified deportation efforts under the Trump administration. Recent actions include deportations to El Salvador, revocation of temporary parole for over half a million people (including US citizens by error), and declaring thousands of these individuals dead in Social Security records to cut off benefits.

A federal judge temporarily blocked the revocation of parole authorizations. The White House criticized the judge's ruling.

  • ImmigrationOS raises concerns about data privacy and the potential for misuse of personal information.
  • The expansion of immigration enforcement tools has sparked criticism.
  • The situation highlights the ongoing debate around immigration policies and government surveillance practices.
Sign in to unlock more AI features Sign in with Google

“No other vendor could meet these timeframes of having the infrastructure in place to meet this urgent requirement and deliver a prototype in less than six months,” ICE says in the document.

ICE’s document does not specify the data sources Palantir would pull from to power ImmigrationOS. However, it says that Palantir could “configure” the case management system that it has provided to ICE since 2014.

Palantir has done work at various other government agencies as early as 2007. Aside from ICE, it has worked with the US Army, Air Force, Navy, Internal Revenue Service, and Federal Bureau of Investigation. As reported by WIRED, Palantir is currently helping Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) build a brand-new “mega API” at the IRS that could search for records across all the different databases that the agency maintains.

Last week, 404 Media reported that a recent version of Palantir’s case-management system for ICE allows agents to search for people based on “hundreds of different, highly specific categories,” including how a person entered the country, their current legal status, and their country of origin. It also includes a person’s hair and eye color, whether they have scars or tattoos, and their license-plate reader data, which would provide detailed location data about where that person travels by car.

These functionalities have been mentioned in a government privacy assessment published in 2016, and it’s not clear what new information may have been integrated into the case management system over the past four years.

This week’s $30 million award is an addition to an existing Palantir contract penned in 2022, originally worth about $17 million, for work on ICE’s case management system. The agency has increased the value of the contract five times prior to this month; the largest was a $19 million increase in September 2023.

The contract’s ImmigrationOS update was first documented on April 11 in a government-run database tracking federal spending. The entry had a 248-character description of the change. The five-page document ICE published Thursday, meanwhile, has a more detailed description of Palantir’s expected services for the agency.

The contract update comes as the Trump administration deputizes ICE and other government agencies to drastically escalate the tactics and scale of deportations from the US. In recent weeks, immigration authorities have arrested and detained people with student visas and green cards, and deported at least 238 people to a brutal megaprison in El Salvador, some of whom have not been able to speak with a lawyer or have due process.

As part of its efforts to push people to self-deport, DHS in late March revoked the temporary parole of more than half a million people and demanded that they self-deport in about a month, despite having been granted authorization to live in the US after fleeing dangerous or unstable situations in Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela under the so-called “CHNV parole programs.”

Last week, the Social Security Administration listed more than 6,000 of these people as dead, a tactic meant to end their financial lives. DHS, meanwhile, sent emails to an unknown number of people declaring that their parole had been revoked and demanding that they self-deport. Several US citizens, including immigration attorneys, received the email.

On Monday, a federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration’s move to revoke people’s authorization to live in the US under the CHNV programs. White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt called the judge’s ruling “rogue.”

Was this article displayed correctly? Not happy with what you see?


Share this article with your
friends and colleagues.

Facebook



Share this article with your
friends and colleagues.

Facebook