Key facts
- Anti-ICE activists used Signal chats to coordinate protests outside Delaney Hall in Newark, N.J.
- The protests are described as the result of years of strategic planning by a network of about 100 well-funded groups.
- These organizations report collective annual revenues of about $850 million.
- Many of these groups have special IRS designations as charities, enjoying tax-deductible donations and tax-free benefits.
- A strategic communications document, the 'Delaney Hall Creator Brief,' directs activists on language and tactics.
- Protest preparations included organizing transportation, supplies like goggles and respirators, and 'on the ground' intelligence gathering.
An investigation by Fox News Digital reveals that protests outside the Delaney Hall ICE detention facility in Newark, N.J., are orchestrated by a network of approximately 100 well-funded organizations, some with nonprofit status. An activation signal on June 3 called hundreds of anti-ICE activists to the facility, with coordination occurring through secret Signal chats under pseudonyms. These groups, including organizations like the ACLU and Democratic Socialists of America, collectively report annual revenues of about $850 million. Many operate as 501(c)(3), (c)(4), (c)(5), and (c)(6) nonprofits, benefiting from tax-deductible donations and tax-free status. A strategic communications document, the 'Delaney Hall Creator Brief,' guides activists on language, such as referring to the detention center as a 'concentration camp' and detainees as 'imprisoned prisoners.' Preparations for the protests involved organizing transportation, logistics, and supplies like goggles, respirators, and protective knee pads, with some experts comparing the operations to insurgency tactics. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and several House committees are reportedly investigating the alleged abuse of nonprofit laws to instigate conflict. The network's activities have been scrutinized by tech sleuths who have infiltrated their digital operations.