HyperLocal Loop
Jul 16, 2026
The Your

Close to home. Always in the loop.

DHS Reports 3,300% Surge In Vehicle Attacks On ICE Officers

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has reported a 3,300% increase in vehicle attacks against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers. According to DHS, the surge in attacks is fueled by anti-ICE rhetoric from sanctuary politicians, activists, and media outlets.

Incidents and Statistics

DHS cited 68 reported vehicle attacks against ICE officers from January 21, 2025, through January 24, 2026, compared to two during the same period a year earlier. The department also reported 114 vehicle attacks against U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers, a 124% increase from the prior year.

Acting Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis called on sanctuary politicians, activists, and media outlets to reduce their rhetoric against ICE, stating that the dangerous smears and hoaxes spread by these groups put ICE officers’ lives at risk. Bis emphasized that ICE officers are facing a significant increase in vehicle attacks by illegal immigrants and anti-ICE agitators.

Response and Controversy

The report comes as ICE faces a separate national dispute over vehicle stops. President Donald Trump urged ICE agents to resume the tactic, calling traffic stops one of ICE’s most important crime-fighting tools. The temporary restriction on vehicle stops preserved exceptions for serious criminal targets and joint operations involving judicial warrants.

DHS highlighted several incidents, including an April 2 incident in Baltimore where a Honduran national, identified as an illegal immigrant, slammed on his brakes while trying to evade arrest, causing a multi-car collision that injured two ICE officers.


Original reporting: WBAP News/Talk (Dallas-Fort Worth) — read the source article.

OBBM Network Editorial Staff

[email protected]

Editorial team behind OBBM Network — independent, hyper-local journalism syndicated through HyperLocalLoop and OBBM Network TV.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent News

Trending

Community News

Quick Start Deal

Get Loop-Ready in One Move

A low-commitment monthly bundle that keeps your business in front of local audiences across HyperLocal Loop and the OBBM Network.

$350 Per Month
What's Included
  • DataPulse · 1,000 Matches Identify and retarget anonymous visitors to your site
  • Banner Ads Geo-targeted display placement across HyperLocal Loop
  • Video Ad Airs on your Local OBBM Channel
  • Business Advertorial A featured sponsored article telling your story
Questions about any of this? Ask Ben →
Get Started
Secure checkout · Cancel anytime
§ 04 · Choose Your Package

Three levels. Up to 60% off.

Every Patriot Package is priced at over 40% off standard AdRevv list rates — and the discount deepens as you scale, up to 60% off at the Enterprise tier.

Tier I · Local
The Patriot
For local & regional brands launching with the network.
List Price: $835/mo
$500/mo
★ Save $335 — 40% Off
Monthly Allotment
  • Audio: 10,000Podcast impressions
  • Video: 10,000Streaming TV impressions
  • Banners: 50,000HyperLocal Loop geo-targeted banner impressions
  • DataPulse: First 1,000visitor matches included
  • City or regional geo-targeting via AdServe
  • Real-time campaign reporting
Start The Patriot
Tier III · National
The Enterprise
For national brands ready to dominate the network.
List Price: $5,065/mo
$2026/mo
★ Save $3,039 — 60% Off
Monthly Allotment
  • Audio: 14,000Podcast impressions
  • Video: 10,000Streaming TV impressions
  • Banners: 100,000HyperLocal Loop geo-targeted impressions
  • DataPulse: 5,000visitor matches included
  • LeadEngine: 20,000actionable buyer-intent contacts
  • Host Endorsements: 9podcast host-read spots
  • National geo-targeting + dedicated campaign manager
  • Priority creative production support
★ Bonus Included
Free 1-Year Freedom Chamber Membership
Faith, Family & Freedom business community at freedomchamber.net.
Start Enterprise

Need a custom configuration? Build your own package →