Are there convicted fellens of murder, rape, child abuse and trafficking amongst ice agents

Checked on January 30, 2026
Disclaimer: Factually can make mistakes. Please verify important information or breaking news. Learn more.

Executive summary

Reporting compiled by an immigrant-rights group and subsequent news coverage show that current and former ICE and Border Patrol agents have been charged with and, in many cases, convicted of serious crimes including sexual assault, child sex trafficking, and other violent offenses [1] [2]. Federal DHS/ICE communications, by contrast, overwhelmingly highlight arrests of non‑agent “criminal illegal aliens,” a framing that both competes with and can obscure accountability questions about personnel [3] [4].

1. What the independent list says: dozens of agents charged with grave crimes

An updated list circulated by the Ohio Immigrant Alliance documents 30 current and former ICE and Border Patrol officers who have been charged with or convicted of offenses ranging from gunpoint sexual assault and child sex trafficking to rape, kidnapping and possession/production of child sexual abuse materials, and the list is explicitly cited by wider outlets summarizing those allegations [1] [2].

2. Specific agent cases visible in reporting: sexual abuse and trafficking allegations

News summaries that draw on the Ohio Immigrant Alliance list and local reporting highlight named border agents accused of abusing minors—examples include a Yuma‑based CBP agent Ramon Marquez arrested on multiple counts for abusing a 16‑year‑old in an Explorer program and another agent, Bart Conrad Yager, charged on multiple felonies including an attempted child sex‑trafficking count [2]. Those episodes illustrate the kinds of criminal exposure catalogued by advocacy researchers [1] [2].

3. Where the evidence on murder and convictions is thin or contested

The advocacy list and its coverage make grave claims about an agent, Brian Palacios, alleged to have killed Keith Porter Jr.; the Ohio Immigrant Alliance piece asserts Palacios “remains free without charge and employed by ICE,” but this is presented as the group’s reporting and not corroborated across the supplied DHS releases, which do not catalogue internal‑employee murder convictions [1] [5]. Within the provided sources, definitive, publicly reported convictions of ICE agents for murder are not comprehensively documented, even as multiple agents have been accused or charged with violent and sexual offenses in the civic reporting cited [1] [2].

4. The government’s messaging and the competing narratives

Official DHS and ICE news releases across 2025–2026 emphasize that ICE agents are arresting “the worst of the worst” criminal illegal aliens — individuals convicted of child rape, murder, trafficking and other violent crimes — and frame agency personnel as protectors of public safety [3] [4] [6]. Those releases focus on arrests of non‑agency suspects (many named and convicted) and do not serve as a central source for tracking internal misconduct by agents, creating parallel narratives: government PR about external threats and advocacy reporting about internal abuses [3] [4] [7].

5. How to interpret the record: proven pattern plus gaps

Taken together, advocacy documentation and press summaries establish that there have been numerous accusations, charges and convictions involving current and former ICE/CBP personnel for sexual crimes, including crimes against children and trafficking‑related counts [1] [2]. However, the supplied official DHS/ICE releases do not corroborate every allegation nor provide an internal inventory of agent prosecutions; they instead catalogue many arrests of non‑agents for rape, murder and child abuse, which can blur public understanding of whether crimes were committed by detainees, third parties, or employees [3] [4] [6].

6. Competing agendas and what that means for readers

The Ohio Immigrant Alliance is an advocacy organization focused on immigrant rights and policing accountability and compiles a targeted list that illuminates a pattern of alleged misconduct among agents [1]; DHS/ICE communications serve institutional law‑enforcement messaging that foregrounds the criminality of non‑citizens and the risks officers face, a narrative that can deflect attention from internal accountability [3] [4]. Both sources are factual within their aims, but each reflects an implicit agenda that shapes what is emphasized and what remains underreported.

Conclusion: direct answer to the question

Yes — the reporting provided documents multiple current and former ICE/CBP agents who have been charged with and in many cases convicted of serious crimes including sexual assault, child sexual offenses, trafficking‑related allegations and other violent crimes [1] [2]. The supplied materials do not, however, offer a comprehensive government dataset enumerating every internal conviction (and convictions for murder by agents are not clearly documented in these sources), and official ICE/DHS releases featured here primarily catalog arrests of non‑agency criminal aliens rather than prosecutions of agency personnel [3] [4].

Want to dive deeper?
How many current or former ICE/CBP employees have been convicted of sex crimes since 2010 according to court records?
What are DHS and DOJ mechanisms for investigating and prosecuting criminal conduct by ICE and CBP agents?
How have advocacy groups compiled lists of law‑enforcement misconduct, and what methods do they use to verify allegations?