Crime Karoline Leavitt accuses CNN of 'encouraging violence' against agents for reports on new ICE tracking app - ICEBlock is an app that alerts users to sightings of immigration officers within a five-mile radius

https://www.foxnews.com/media/karol...e-against-agents-reports-new-ice-tracking-app
https://archive.ph/9DZAH
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White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt on Monday accused CNN of "encouraging violence" for their reporting on a new app informing people of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents' locations.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt suggested on Monday that CNN was guilty of inciting and "encouraging violence" for its reporting on ICEBlock, a new app that tracks and alerts users to the whereabouts of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers.

Daily Wire reporter Mary Margaret Olohan asked Leavitt to respond to the CNN report, considering there has been a 500% increase in assaults against ICE agents, according to recent DHS reports. Leavitt said she would need to see the segment herself but condemned CNN for airing it nevertheless.

"Surely, it sounds like this would be an incitement of further violence against our ICE officers," Leavitt said. "As you know, as you stated, there's been a 500% increase in violence against ICE agents, law enforcement officers across the country who are just simply trying to do their jobs and remove public safety threats from our communities."

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She continued, "And that's something we as Americans, including journalists at CNN, who live in many of these cities where illegal aliens are hiding and were let in from the previous administration, should be very grateful for. So we haven't seen the clip. We'll take a look at it, but certainly it's unacceptable that a major network would promote such an app that is encouraging violence against law enforcement officers who are trying to keep our country safe."

A CNN spokesperson defended the network's reporting.

"CNN reported on a publicly available app, which is generating attention across the United States, and reached out to ICE for comment prior to publication. After CNN published its reporting, ICE posted a response, which is now included in the story," the spokesperson told Fox News Digital.

The response reported by CNN came from ICE Acting Director Todd Lyons, who said ICEBlock "basically paints a target on federal law enforcement officers’ backs" and that "officers and agents are already facing a 500% increase in assaults."

The CNN reported on and aired segments on their channel featuring an interview with the app’s creator, Joshua Aaron, who said he was inspired to create ICEBlock as a way to fight back against deportation efforts which he claimed were reminiscent of Nazi Germany.

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The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) reported a 500% increase in assaults against ICE officers.(Christopher Dilts/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
"We’re literally watching history repeat itself," Aaron said.

He admitted that there is no way to verify every report but promoted "safeguards" to prevent users from "spamming" the app, such as deleting sightings every four hours, limiting reports to a five-mile radius and restricting report sightings to one every five minutes. Users on the app are anonymous.

Aaron added that the app contains a warning to not interact with law enforcement since his goal is not to incite violence.

"Please note that the use of this app is for information and notification purposes only. It is not to be used for the purposes of inciting violence or interfering with law enforcement," the warning read.
 
He admitted that there is no way to verify every report but promoted "safeguards" to prevent users from "spamming" the app, such as deleting sightings every four hours, limiting reports to a five-mile radius and restricting report sightings to one every five minutes. Users on the app are anonymous.
Couldn't this just be defeated by using a VPN?
 
"Please note that the use of this app is for information and notification purposes only. It is not to be used for the purposes of inciting violence or interfering with law enforcement," the warning read.
Yea....that warning isn't going to stop the creators of this app from going to jail. All the prosecution needs to do is prove that the creators are against ICE and they have interfering with federal officers in the bag.
The ONLY people who care about were ICE is located are people trying to avoid ICE.
 
Can this set the precedent that mere surveillance directly causes violence?

The ONLY people who care about were ICE is located are people trying to avoid ICE.
Is that illegal? When Google sends me an alert on their Maps app that people reported a cop coming up on the freeway is that illegal? Should it be?
 
Nah there have been a few videos of idiots trailing ICE around honking their horns and shit to warn illegals. They are trying to build a whole network of disruption.
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Ok point taken but that those people are committing obsteuction of justice and if they have the tracking app on their phone when they get arrested then the prosecution is going to have case against the app makers for conspiracy to obtruct justice
 
Trump could deal with this in 5 seconds. Hello. Yes, Google and Apple. If you don't take that app down, you're getting federal fines. OK. We're gonna take that app down. Because that app is objectively committing a crime, you're not allowed to aid and abet criminal. It'd be like me developing an app called Where's the Drugs? Or where the POPO?
 
Ok point taken but that those people are committing obsteuction of justice and if they have the tracking app on their phone when they get arrested then the prosecution is going to have case against the app makers for conspiracy to obtruct justice
No they won't. They explicitly won't. They absolutely cannot be held liable for the actions of someone else or for what a third party does with their app. So long as the developers aren't outright telling them to go out and do illegal shit the feds can't do shit to them as far as the law is concerned. Tracking federal agents isn't a crime in itself, same as developing apps to track flights. These sorts of apps aren't new, they've been around for years. As long as the developers keep their mouths shut and don't tell people to do illegal shit using their app the feds can't do anything. Its very much a its not what you know its what you can prove situation

The worst the feds can do is warn them not to do anything stupid and get the app pulled from the store if third parties are using it for illegal shit. Legal prosecution isn't even a remote possibility for the devs at this point

Sargon's wife's son said:
Trump could deal with this in 5 seconds. Hello. Yes, Google and Apple. If you don't take that app down, you're getting federal fines. OK. We're gonna take that app down. Because that app is objectively committing a crime, you're not allowed to aid and abet criminal. It'd be like me developing an app called Where's the Drugs? Or where the POPO?
Again, a developer cannot be held liable for the actions of a third party, the same as coca cola can't be held liable if people make molotovs out of glass coke bottles, so long as the devs don't do anything illegal themselves or actively encourage illegal activities, which they don't. Tracking is not a crime. Trump has absolutely no authority whatsoever to make such a demand or fine anybody for such a thing. Google and apples legal teams would tell him to fuck off and so would the courts
 
Trump could deal with this in 5 seconds. Hello. Yes, Google and Apple.
Pretty sure it is iOS only, at least for the moment. The OP article doesn't say, but I think I saw that somewhere. Perfect for all those illegals and their $1700 iPhones.

Edit:
Only links to the Apple App store.
 
Remember the Trump vs CNN memes? I think CNN wouldn't like it if someone do a variant of this titled "ICE agents vs CNN" to see CNN having a taste of their own medecine.
 
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