Tag: increases

  • The most dangerous threats CBP agents face as Trump increases enforcement

    The most dangerous threats CBP agents face as Trump increases enforcement

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    As President Donald Trump steps up border security and deportation efforts, agents with Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) are finding themselves under alarmingly sophisticated threats to their safety, an expert tells Fox News Digital.

    “The cartels are losing business. The encounters at the border are the lowest they’ve been in decades, and the cartels are not just going to give up that business quietly,” Lora Ries, director of the Heritage Foundation’s Border Security and Immigration Center, told Fox News Digital. 

    The comments come after it was reported over the weekend that CBP agents will no longer wear body cameras during field operations, a response to a post on Reddit that claimed it could help people track agents wearing the cameras with an application called BLE Radar, which uses Bluetooth to scan for such devices within a 100-yard radius.

    BORDER PATROL AGENTS TO STOP WEARING BODY CAMERAS AFTER SOCIAL MEDIA POST REVEALS ‘SECURITY RISK’

    This split shows President Trump and Border Patrol. (Qian Weizhong/VCG via Getty Images and Rebecca Noble/Getty Images)

    “Pending completion of investigation and risk mitigation, all Agents will stand down the use of their BWCs [body worn cameras] until further notice. Additional guidance and information will be disseminated as it is received,” a directive over the weekend announced.

    While the tracking of agents was presented as a way to help immigrants find soft spots on the border, it also opened up agents to threats to their safety, including from improvised explosive devices.

    Cartels could also make use of the tracking information to threaten the lives of agents, Ries noted.

    “It is possible that they could use the cameras… the low-level frequency interception to track the agents, harm the agents, and attack the agents,” Ries said.

    Ries also noted that the cameras played an important role in protecting field agents from false claims of abuse, providing key evidence they now won’t have after encounters with migrants.

    DAILY AVERAGE OF KNOWN GOTAWAYS AT SOUTHERN BORDER PLUMMETS, DOWN 93% FROM BIDEN ADMINISTRATION HIGHS

    ICE agent seen from behind in POLICE jacket

    An ICE agent monitors hundreds of asylum seekers being processed upon entering the Jacob K. Javits Federal Building on June 6, 2023, in New York City. (David Dee Delgado/Getty Images)

    “I anticipate the number of claims of abuse are about to jump to exploit this lack of camera use,” Ries said.

    When it comes to cartels, Ries noted that there have been warnings sent out that cartels could use shooters on the other side of the border to target agents.

    “I just saw a memo about potentially using a shooter on the Mexican side to shoot at our agents and our military, so we have to assume that’s being planned and use countermeasures against it,” Ries said.

    Ries also noted that cartels have in the past effectively used drones to track CBP agents, though that threat could now be lower with the increased military presence at the border.

    Aside from the threats from cartels, CBP and ICE agents also face dangers from inside the borders of the U.S., Ries noted, pointing to leaks of ICE raids as an example of something that has recently endangered agents.

    border agent on cliff searching for migrants in border area

     A U.S. Border Patrol agent stands on a cliff looking for migrants crossing the border wall near Sasabe, Arizona. (Salwan Georges/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

    “That subjects ICE agents to an ambush,” Ries said. “It’s one thing for aliens to flee, so when ICE shows up there’s no one there… worse would be if aliens stay here and attack ICE agents, that is a risk.”

    Such leaks of planned operations and technological vulnerabilities could continue to be a threat to the safety of agents as those opposed to Trump’s enforcement-driven agenda seek to undermine those plans, Ries said.

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    Countering such threats will not only take awareness and smart tactics during operations, but also help from Congress in order to secure funding to equip agents with enough resources to combat the dangers.

    “It’s technology, it’s equipment, it’s intel, and personnel… they can’t be out patrolling alone, they need to work together,” Ries said. “Congress is working, although too slowly, getting resources to CBP and ICE to continue to carry out these mass deportations. Congress needs to hurry up.”

  • Amazon increases ad spending on X in major reversal: report

    Amazon increases ad spending on X in major reversal: report

    Amazon has increased its ad spending on X, which is owned by Elon Musk, more than a year after it removed many of its advertisements from the platform, according to a report. 

    Other companies like Apple cut some or all of their spending over concerns of rising hate speech after Elon Musk, a confidante of President Donald Trump and head of the Department of Government Efficiency, bought the platform in 2022. 

    Musk has called himself a “free speech absolutist.” 

    Apple, which cut all of its spending on X in 2023, is now reevaluating, as are other brands, The Wall Street Journal reported. 

    STUART VARNEY: AMERICA’S TECH TITANS JUMPED ON THE TRUMP TRAIN

    The Amazon logo displayed outside the Amazon UK Services Ltd Warehouse Jan. 30, 2025, in Warrington, U.K. (Nathan Stirk/Getty Images) / Getty Images)

    But some companies are returning to the platform with ad buys still much lower than before Musk bought Twitter, which he renamed X, according to the Journal. 

    Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and other tech CEOs, like Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Apple head Tim Cook and Google CEO Sundar Pichai, all attended Trump’s inauguration last week, and Amazon, Meta and Apple all donated to Trump’s inaugural committee. 

    New ad revenue could be crucial for X, which is still struggling after Musk bought it for $44 billion. 

    Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos at the inauguration

    Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Google CEO Sundar Pichai and X owner Elon Musk at the inauguration.  (Saul Loeb-Pool/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “Our user growth is stagnant, revenue is unimpressive, and we’re barely breaking even,” Musk revealed in a letter this month to staff, the Journal reported, adding that Musk has denied sending the email. 

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    Last summer, X filed a federal antitrust lawsuit against the Global Alliance for Responsible Media, the World Federation of Advertisers (WFA) and GARM members CVS Health, Mars, Orsted and Unilever, alleging an illegal ad boycott of the platform. 

    FOX Business has reached out to Amazon for comment.