The fatal shooting of Minneapolis nurse Alex Pretti by federal agents has triggered renewed internal debate at Palantir Technologies, placing the company’s longstanding relationship with U.S. immigration authorities under sharp scrutiny. In the aftermath of the incident, employees across the data analytics firm began openly questioning Palantir’s role in supporting Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), with calls for greater transparency and accountability from leadership.
The internal pushback unfolded largely on Palantir’s Slack platform, where workers discussed the killing and its broader implications in a company-wide channel dedicated to world news. Messages reviewed by WIRED show growing unease among staff, particularly around the ethical risks tied to immigration enforcement and the reputational consequences of continuing to work with ICE during an era of increasingly aggressive federal operations.
Growing frustration inside the company
Employees raised concerns not only about the moral dimensions of Palantir’s work but also about whether it made long-term business sense. Some questioned whether the company had adequately addressed its involvement with ICE during President Donald Trump’s second term, suggesting the issue had received insufficient internal discussion.
Others expressed alarm over reports of asylum seekers and migrants with no criminal records being detained despite complying with immigration requirements. These concerns resonated widely within the company, with many Slack messages receiving dozens of reactions from coworkers who appeared to support calls for clearer explanations from leadership.
Despite the growing internal debate, Palantir did not respond publicly to media inquiries regarding employee dissatisfaction.
Company leadership responds with internal disclosures
In response to mounting questions, Courtney Bowman, Palantir’s global director of privacy and civil liberties engineering, directed employees to an updated internal wiki outlining the company’s work with the Department of Homeland Security and its immigration-related agencies.
The document, last updated on January 24 by Palantir USG chief technology officer and president Akash Jain, details a pilot program that began in April 2025. The six-month initiative was designed to support ICE in several operational areas, including enforcement prioritization, monitoring self-deportation activity, and managing immigration-related logistics.
According to the internal materials, these efforts align with a $30 million contract ICE awarded Palantir earlier in the year for a platform known as ImmigrationOS. DHS contracting information indicates the system provides near real-time visibility into self-deportation activity and assists ICE in selecting individuals for removal.
The wiki notes that the pilot was renewed in September for another six months, with self-deportation tracking integrated into broader enforcement targeting systems.
Expansion beyond ICE raises further questions
Palantir’s immigration-related work is not limited to ICE. The internal documentation also describes a separate pilot project with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) aimed at identifying potentially fraudulent immigration benefit applications.
Allegations of fraud have played a significant role in the Trump administration’s justification for expanding interior immigration enforcement, particularly in cities such as Minneapolis. The wiki acknowledges that these expanded field operations have drawn public attention and criticism, increasing scrutiny of Palantir’s role.
While recognizing the reputational risks involved, the company maintains internally that its technology can help immigration officials make more precise decisions, potentially reducing mistakes and unintended harm.
Civil liberties risks acknowledged internally
The internal documentation does not ignore broader concerns. It references growing reports of U.S. citizens being detained during immigration enforcement actions, as well as allegations of racial profiling. According to the wiki, Palantir’s ICE partners remain committed to avoiding unlawful or unnecessary targeting of citizens, and the company argues its tools are designed to reduce risk rather than amplify it.
Still, the reassurances did not fully satisfy employees. Following the release of the wiki, workers continued to question whether ICE could use Palantir’s platforms in ways that extend beyond contractual limits, including building independent workflows or integrating external datasets.
Jain acknowledged that while Palantir builds safeguards into its systems, the company does not monitor or control every possible use of its platforms. He noted that misuse or harmful outcomes are subject to legal oversight, similar to how commercial customers are regulated.
Surveillance fears deepen amid data-sharing expansion
Allowing ICE to pull data from other government agencies or third-party sources could dramatically expand DHS surveillance capabilities. Over the past year, ICE has broadened its data-sharing arrangements, including agreements with agencies such as the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Separately, WIRED reported that DHS has been working on a centralized system to track migrants using data from agencies like the Social Security Administration and the Internal Revenue Service. Palantir has not publicly clarified whether its software supports those systems.
The company also declined to comment on whether its technology is connected to databases referenced in recent viral videos involving ICE agents.
Viral video intensifies employee concerns
Internal tensions escalated further after footage circulated showing an ICE agent scanning a legal observer’s vehicle and claiming the observer had been entered into a database as a “domestic terrorist.” Similar claims were cited in legal filings supporting Minnesota’s lawsuit against DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, which alleges excessive force and unlawful detentions by ICE agents.
A Palantir employee shared the video internally, asking whether the company had provided such a database. Jain responded that he was not aware of Palantir’s involvement in any system fitting that description.
According to the internal wiki, Palantir states it does not provide ICE with unrestricted access to third-party databases beyond established data-sharing agreements.




