冰上執法局(ICE)最高提供2.8億美元給追蹤移民的“賞金獵人”公司。
ICE Offers Up to $280M to Immigrant-Tracking 'Bounty Hunter' Firms

原始链接: https://www.wired.com/story/ice-bounty-hunter-spy-program/

美国移民及海关执法局(ICE)正在大幅扩展其备受争议的移民追踪外包计划,将相关工作外包给私人监控公司。该计划最初被定位为一个价值1.8亿美元的试点项目,现在已转变为无上限项目,单个承包商的潜在收入可达2.8125亿美元——较之前的9000万美元上限大幅增加,并保证了最初的750万美元订单。 这些公司将负责通过拍摄住宅照片、记录活动和在工作场所蹲点等方式,核实被列为驱逐出境目标人员的家庭和工作地址,每次处理5万个案件。虽然承包商将不再直接访问ICE的内部数据库,但他们将收到包含敏感个人数据的导出案件资料包。 这一转变表明ICE将此视为一项长期投资,实际上创建了一个由私人公司运营、受公共监督有限的联邦执法“事实上的分支”。国土安全部尚未就这些变化发表评论。

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原文

Immigration and Customs Enforcement is expanding plans to outsource immigrant tracking to private surveillance firms, scrapping a recent $180 million pilot proposal in favor of a no-cap program with multimillion-dollar guarantees, according to new contracting records reviewed by WIRED.

Late last month, the Intercept reported that ICE intends to hire bounty hunters and private investigators for street-level verification work. Contractors would confirm home and work addresses for people targeted for removal by—among other techniques—photographing residences, documenting comings and goings, and staking out workplaces and apartment complexes.

Those filings cast the initiative as a substantial but limited pilot program. Contractors were guaranteed as little as $250 and could earn no more than $90 million each, with the overall program capped at $180 million. That structure pointed to meaningful scale but still framed the effort as a controlled trial, not an integral component of ICE’s removal operations.

Newly released amendments dismantle that structure. ICE has removed the program’s spending cap and replaced it with dramatically higher per-vendor limits. Contractors may now earn up to $281.25 million individually and are guaranteed an initial task order worth at least $7.5 million. The shift signals to ICE’s contracting base that this is no longer an experiment, but an investment, and that the agency expects prime-tier contractors to stand up the staffing, technology, and field operations needed to function as a de facto arm of federal enforcement.

The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE, did not immediately respond to WIRED's request for comment.

The proposed scope was already large. It described contractors receiving monthly recurring batches of 50,000 cases drawn from a docket of 1.5 million people. Private investigators would confirm individuals’ locations not only through commercial data brokers and open-source research, but via in-person visits when required. The filings outline a performance-based structure with bounty-like incentives: Firms will be paid a fixed price per case, plus bonuses for speed and accuracy, with vendors expected to propose their own incentive rates.

The contract also authorizes the Department of Justice and other DHS components to issue their own orders under the program.

Previous filings hinted that private investigators might receive access to ICE’s internal case-management systems—databases that contain photos, biographical details, immigration histories, and other enforcement notes. The amended filings reverse that, stating that contractors will not be permitted inside agency systems under any circumstance. Instead, DHS will send contractors exported case packets containing a range of personal data on each target. This change limits direct exposure to federal systems, but still places large volumes of sensitive information in the hands of private surveillance firms operating outside public oversight.

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