Dem state lawmaker launches site to impede ICE operations, target officers
A far-left New Mexico lawmaker is facing backlash after unveiling a controversial website that allows users to track and report Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) activity across the state — a move that legal experts warn could border on federal obstruction of justice.
State Rep. Marianna Anaya (D–Albuquerque) announced the launch of Aguas, a website she says has been in development for months and is designed to “document ICE activity” and “report missing people.” But the project’s premise — encouraging the public to upload photos, videos, and detailed descriptions of federal enforcement actions — has drawn immediate criticism and concern that it could tip off illegal immigrants and criminal suspects to evade arrest.
According to Anaya, her office created the platform so people could “anonymously upload a picture, a video, and a brief description of what they saw and where.” She told local media that all user data would be “scrubbed of metadata” and that “everything that you see on the Aguas website is publicly available.”
However, critics note that such a site effectively crowdsources surveillance of federal officers, a move that could expose their identities, compromise ongoing investigations, and endanger public safety.
Anaya insisted the website is “not to be used for any kind of harassment or interfering with law enforcement,” but its very purpose — to track ICE arrests and movements — raises legal red flags. Under 8 U.S.C. §1324, it is a federal offense to aid, abet, conceal, or harbor an illegal alien or to obstruct federal agents in carrying out immigration enforcement. The law also prohibits anyone from providing information or assistance intended to help individuals evade detection or apprehension by ICE.
Despite these serious concerns, Anaya is framing the effort as a “community resource.” “You do have rights,” she said, claiming the website offers legal and informational tools “if you are approached by anyone.”
The site’s operators admit that the posted submissions are unverified, and that “the only way in which we would change that to something that was verified” would be through confirmation from “community partners.” In other words, the platform relies on activist groups — not law enforcement — to validate reports of ICE activity.
The website also includes a feature to “report missing people,” but given its political slant and the lack of verification standards, the site’s accuracy and intent remain questionable.
Anaya is the same lawmaker who compared ICE detention facilities in New Mexico to a “concentration camp,” blasted as an antisemitic statement that trivializes the Holocaust.
National observers quickly condemned the project. Libs of TikTok posted on X: “New Mexico State Rep. Marianna Anaya (D) just launched a website to track ICE agents’ movements and operations across New Mexico. Impeding ICE operations is a CRIME.”
Indeed, if users employ the site to warn targets of pending ICE operations or to help criminal aliens evade arrest, it could constitute obstruction of justice or aiding and abetting under federal law — crimes punishable by prison time.
In a state already struggling with border-related crime and drug trafficking, Rep. Anaya’s website blurs the line between “community activism” and active interference with federal immigration enforcement — a distinction that could soon attract attention not only from voters, but from federal prosecutors.
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