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  3. /DHS says ICE has 'no relationship' with spyware maker Paragon Solutions
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DHS says ICE has 'no relationship' with spyware maker Paragon Solutions

NPR Topics: News1h ago6 min readOriginal source →
DHS says ICE has 'no relationship' with spyware maker Paragon Solutions

TL;DR

The Department of Homeland Security stated that Immigration and Customs Enforcement has 'no relationship' with Paragon Solutions, a spyware maker. This clarification follows concerns about ICE's contract with the company and its compliance with a 2023 executive order.

Key points

  • DHS claims ICE has no relationship with Paragon Solutions
  • ICE reactivated a contract with Paragon Solutions last year
  • Concerns about compliance with a 2023 executive order
  • Questions raised about the use of commercial spyware
  • Privacy advocates worry about surveillance implications

Mentioned in this story

Department of Homeland SecurityImmigration and Customs EnforcementParagon Solutions

Why it matters

The clarification from DHS highlights ongoing concerns about privacy and the use of surveillance technology by government agencies.

File image dated May 7, 2025 in Newark, New Jersey, shows a badge hanging over the uniform of an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent.
File image dated May 7, 2025 in Newark, New Jersey, shows a badge hanging over the uniform of an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent.

File image dated May 7, 2025 in Newark, New Jersey, shows a badge hanging over the uniform of an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent. Timothy A. Clary/AFPAFP via Getty Images

Timothy A. Clary/AFPAFP via Getty Images

Immigration and Customs Enforcement reactivated a previously paused contract with spyware maker Paragon Solutions last year, which raised questions about whether the agency was using commercial spyware to remotely hack into cell phones and if the deal complied with a 2023 executive order.

Privacy and civil rights advocates are worried the Trump administration could be persuaded to also lift restrictions placed on NSO Group, an Israeli company that makes the powerful spyware Pegasus that researchers say can turn a phone into a recording device in addition to accessing its contents.
Privacy and civil rights advocates are worried the Trump administration could be persuaded to also lift restrictions placed on NSO Group, an Israeli company that makes the powerful spyware Pegasus that researchers say can turn a phone into a recording device in addition to accessing its contents.

Technology

What we know about how the U.S. government uses spyware (and what we don't)

But now the Department of Homeland Security says ICE has no current contract or relationship with the Israeli-founded company, which is best known for making a spyware tool called Graphite that can be used to remotely infiltrate devices and access encrypted messages without targets needing to click a link.

"ICE has no relationship with Paragon Solutions, Inc. or with the company that acquired them," DHS said in a statement to NPR.

ICE first entered into a contract with the U.S. subsidiary of Paragon Solutions in 2024 for an unspecified product. But the Biden administration swiftly put the contract on hold to decide whether it complied with a 2023 executive order barring federal agencies from purchasing commercial spyware that poses a significant security risk to the U.S. or risk of misuse by foreign governments.

Governments have targeted opponents with spyware

Foreign governments have repeatedly used commercial spyware to spy on political rivals, journalists, human rights workers and other members of civil society. American politicians and officials have also been targeted, which prompted the Biden administration to take steps to push back on the industry.

Paragon Solutions' Graphite tool was central to a government spying scandal in Italy that first came to light early last year after Meta-owned WhatsApp found some 90 users of its messaging app, including journalists and activists, had been targeted with Graphite in various countries.

Researchers at The Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto and Italian prosecutors have confirmed Italian journalists and activists were among those targeted with Graphite. Paragon Solutions told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz in June 2025 that it ended its contract with Italian intelligence agencies after Italian authorities declined the company's help to determine whether the tool had been used against a journalist.

Paragon Solutions' founders include former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak.

In late 2024, Israeli mediareported that an American private equity firm, AE Industrial Partners, had acquired Paragon Solutions to merge it with REDLattice, a cybersecurity company controlled by the same firm.

Two ICE agents film the press using smartphones in the hallway outside the immigration court at 26 Federal Plaza in New York USA on July 11 2025. The Department of Homeland Security has been acquiring new tools to identify people and monitor them.
Two ICE agents film the press using smartphones in the hallway outside the immigration court at 26 Federal Plaza in New York USA on July 11 2025. The Department of Homeland Security has been acquiring new tools to identify people and monitor them.

Immigration

Immigration agents have new technology to identify and track people

Then, last August, under the Trump administration, ICE reactivated the Paragon Solutions contract. In response, Democratic lawmakers sent DHS a series of questions about the contract and ICE's use of spyware.

But a notice on the Paragon Solutions contract on a federal procurement website says the contract was closed out Jan. 20.

"ICE has not entered another contract with Paragon Solutions, Inc," DHS told NPR in a statement. The department declined to clarify whether or not ICE still has access to Paragon-developed tools, such as through a third party.

Neither REDLattice nor AE Industrial Partners responded to requests for comment on Friday.

ICE has acknowledged using spyware

The news of the terminated relationship between ICE and Paragon Solutions comes after ICE's departing acting Director Todd Lyons responded to questions from Democratic lawmakers in an April 1 letter in which he acknowledged he had approved ICE's Homeland Security Investigations team to use a commercial spyware tool in its efforts to disrupt foreign terrorist organizations and fentanyl traffickers.

A man hold his phone up next to a Border Patrol agent dressed in fatigues and resting one arm on a vehicle parked at the curb.
A man hold his phone up next to a Border Patrol agent dressed in fatigues and resting one arm on a vehicle parked at the curb.

Technology

ICE acknowledges it is using powerful spyware

"In response to the unprecedented lethality of fentanyl and the exploitation of digital platforms by transnational criminal organizations, I approved HSI's procurement and operational use of cutting-edge technological tools that address the specific challenges posed by the Foreign Terrorist Organizations' thriving exploitation of encrypted communication platforms," Lyons wrote.

His letter said he had certified that use of the tool was in compliance with the 2023 executive order on government use of commercial spyware.

When NPR asked DHS if ICE agents still had access to Paragon-developed tools or the tool that Lyons referenced in his letter, the department provided a statement saying: "DHS is not going to confirm or deny law enforcement capabilities or methods. Under President Trump, ICE is using all lawful tools to remove dangerous criminal illegal aliens from the U.S."

DHS declined to answer a question asking if ICE is using a different spyware vendor.

Privacy advocates say questions still loom over government surveillance

The growing arsenal of surveillance technology that ICE agents are using to track immigrants as well as protesters has raised alarm among privacy and civil liberties advocates.

ICE has spun a massive surveillance web. We talked to people caught in it
ICE has spun a massive surveillance web. We talked to people caught in it

National

ICE has spun a massive surveillance web. We talked to people caught in it

Advocates told NPR they still had questions about how to interpret DHS statements about its terminated relationship with Paragon Solutions, especially given that it remains unknown if the agency can access the company's tools.

"It's promising that they don't seem to be re-upping the contract immediately," said Maria Villegas Bravo, an attorney with the nonprofit Electronic Privacy Information Center. "I'm always wary of vaguely worded non-association statements, though."

Julie Mao, deputy director of Just Futures Law, which is suing under the Freedom of Information Act for access to records associated with ICE's Paragon Solutions contract, called DHS's latest statements "a half measure and a red herring," given Lyons' letter last month acknowledging use of a commercial spyware tool.

"If it's not Paragon spyware, then what company and spyware does ICE use? And how does ICE use it?" Mao told NPR in an email. "The agency should provide a full account of its surveillance technologies to the American public."

Q&A

What did DHS say about ICE's relationship with Paragon Solutions?

DHS stated that ICE has 'no relationship' with Paragon Solutions, a spyware manufacturer.

Why was ICE's contract with Paragon Solutions controversial?

The contract raised concerns about ICE potentially using commercial spyware to hack into cell phones and whether it complied with a 2023 executive order.

What are the implications of ICE using spyware like Paragon Solutions?

Using spyware could lead to significant privacy and civil rights concerns, especially regarding unauthorized surveillance of individuals.

What is the background of Paragon Solutions in relation to ICE?

Paragon Solutions is a spyware maker that had a previously paused contract with ICE, which was reactivated last year, prompting scrutiny.

People also ask

  • What did DHS say about ICE and Paragon Solutions?
  • Why is ICE's contract with Paragon Solutions controversial?
  • What are the privacy concerns regarding ICE's use of spyware?
  • Who is Paragon Solutions and what do they do?
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At a glance

  • DHS claims ICE has no relationship with Paragon Solutions
  • ICE reactivated a contract with Paragon Solutions last year
  • Concerns about compliance with a 2023 executive order
  • Questions raised about the use of commercial spyware
  • Privacy advocates worry about surveillance implications

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