Two wannabe anti-ICE influencers have been found guilty of stalking an unidentified Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent at his California home and livestreaming the event on Instagram.

Cynthia Raygoza, 38, of Riverside, and Ashleigh Brown, 38, of Aurora, Colorado, were found guilty by a Los Angeles federal jury on Friday of stalking the ICE agent by following him to his home last year.

In August of 2025, Brown and Raygoza livestreamed themselves on social media following the ICE agent from the LA field office to his home, provided directions as they followed him, and encouraged others to share the livestream, US Attorney Bill Essayli wrote on X.

Once at the agent’s home they hopped out wearing masks and “began yelling and shouting” to bystanders “neighbor is ICE,” “la migra lives here,” and “ICE lives on your street and you should know,” Essayli added.

The two women also allegedly shouted racial slurs at the victim’s wife. The victim’s children also witnessed the incident.

“We thank the jury for bringing justice to these agitators who violated the law and endangered the safety of this federal officer and his family,” the First Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California said. 

“Peaceful protests are protected by the Constitution, political violence and unlawful intimidation are not.


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The two anti-ICE agistators each face up to five years in federal prison. 

Their sentencing hearing has been set for June 8.

The stalking of the ICE agent came at a time when attacks against immigration officers had exploded across the nation.

In September, an anti-ICE gunman opened fire on federal officers at a Dallas field office.

Shooter Joshua Jahn meticulously plotted the attack and took aim from a rooftop of a nearby building before firing with a Nazi battle rifle at a van near the ICE office.

The same ICE facility was targeted with a bomb threat a month earlier when a man named Bratton Dean Wilkinson, 36, arrived at the entrance of the Dallas Field Office claiming to have a bomb in his backpack and brandishing what he said was a detonator on his wrist.

At the time, the Department of Homeland Security said that there had been a 1,000% increase in assaults against ICE officers.

Last summer, the City of Angels was torn apart by anti-ICE rioting, which resulted in dozens of charges from the Los Angeles DA and is expected to cost more than $32 million in emergency response and property damage costs.



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