Who are the ICE agents listed on the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial?

Checked on December 6, 2025
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Executive summary

ICE does not publish a single, public list of its employees whose names appear on the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial; ICE memorial ceremonies at the Memorial honor “fallen officers” and include roll calls and wreaths but do not reproduce the Memorial’s roster on agency pages [1] [2]. The National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial itself is maintained by the NLEOMF and lists tens of thousands of names on the Memorial and in related programs — the Memorial is said to honor some 24,412 names in NLEOMF materials [3] [4].

1. What the sources actually say about “ICE agents listed”

ICE’s public materials describe participation in National Police Week ceremonies at the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial and refer to ICE’s own fallen-officer roll calls and wreath ceremonies [1] [2]. ICE’s Fallen Officers pages recount individual officer stories and end-of-watch notices for ICE personnel [5]. None of the ICE pages in the provided material reproduces a definitive, agency-hosted roster that maps names to the names inscribed on the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial [5] [1] [2].

2. Where the actual Memorial names are maintained and displayed

The National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial is organized by the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund (NLEOMF), which runs National Police Week events and maintains the Memorial and Museum; NLEOMF materials reference the Memorial’s scope — the Memorial honors roughly 24,412 names as presented in NLEOMF reporting [3] [4]. The available search results do not show a direct copy of ICE-specific names taken from the Memorial; instead, the institutional relationship is one of ceremony and recognition, not a public ICE roster tied to the Memorial [1] [2].

3. How ICE commemorates its fallen — and what that implies about finding names

ICE holds an “ICE Valor Memorial and Wreath Laying Ceremony” at the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial and conducts an ICE fallen-officer roll call during Police Week [1]. ICE also maintains an “ICE Fallen Officers” section that profiles specific agents and circumstances of death [5]. These agency resources can identify deceased ICE personnel, but they function as agency remembrances rather than as an authoritative crosswalk to the Memorial’s inscriptions [5] [1].

4. Limitations in available reporting and documentation

The sources provided do not include a single, searchable list that enumerates every ICE agent whose name appears on the Memorial; they do not reproduce the Memorial’s ledger of names nor do they claim to. NLEOMF materials document the Memorial’s overall name count and run National Police Week programming, but the current reporting does not present a breakdown by agency that would directly answer “who are the ICE agents listed” [3] [4]. Therefore, a definitive name-by-name answer is not available in these sources.

5. How you can get a definitive list (based on institutional roles cited)

Primary places to check outside this packet would be the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund’s databases or the Memorial site (NLEOMF), and ICE’s Fallen Officers pages for agency-acknowledged names [5] [4]. The provided sources show that ICE participates in Memorial events and maintains internal fallen-officer pages, while NLEOMF maintains the Memorial itself — a definitive cross-reference would require consulting NLEOMF’s Memorial name database or contacting the Memorial Fund directly [1] [4].

6. Why this distinction matters for readers

There is an important institutional distinction: the Memorial’s roster is curated by NLEOMF and displayed at the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial, while ICE’s communications focus on ceremony and internal remembrance [1] [2]. That division can create confusion for people seeking a single centralized list labeled “ICE agents on the Memorial”; the sources show separate but overlapping functions rather than one consolidated public list [1] [3].

Sources and caveats: This analysis relies only on the documents returned in the search results: ICE’s pages on National Police Week and Fallen Officers [6] [5] [1] [2] and NLEOMF materials and reports that describe the Memorial and its name count [3] [4]. Those documents do not publish a complete, public, ICE-specific roster of names on the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial; they record ceremonies, agency remembrances, and the Memorial’s overall scope [5] [1] [3] [4].

Want to dive deeper?
How many ICE agents are honored on the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial?
What criteria determine which ICE agents are included on the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial?
Are there controversies or disputes about listing ICE agents alongside other federal officers?
Where can I find a searchable database of names and biographies for officers on the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial?
Have any ICE agents been added to the memorial since 2020 and who were they?