Federal Authorities in Los Angeles Arrest Woman Accused of Stalking Agent
Federal Jury Delivers Guilty Verdict in Shocking ICE Agent Stalking Case: A Warning Shot to Anti-Government Agitators
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In a courtroom drama that has reignited the debate over the boundaries of political protest and personal safety, a Los Angeles federal jury has returned guilty verdicts against two women accused of a harrowing stalking campaign against a federal agent. The case, which dates back to the volatile summer of 2025, serves as a stark reminder that while the First Amendment protects the right to peaceful assembly, it does not provide a shield for targeted harassment, doxing, or the intimidation of federal officers and their families.
The Midnight Ambush: Following the Agent Home
The conviction of Cynthia Rigoza, 38, of Riverside, and Ashley Brown, 38, of Aurora, Colorado, stems from an incident on August 28, 2025. According to federal prosecutors and trial testimony, the two women spotted an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) deportation officer leaving a federal building in downtown Los Angeles. Rather than engaging in a standard protest at the facility, the defendants decided to take the confrontation to the officer’s front door.
Rigoza and Brown followed the officer in a vehicle for miles, trailing him from the city center to his private residence in Baldwin Park. Throughout the pursuit, the women utilized social media as a weapon, live-streaming the entire event on their Instagram accounts. They didn’t just film the officer; they actively provided turn-by-turn directions to his home and repeatedly shouted his home address to their digital audience, encouraging viewers to share the stream far and wide.
Terrorizing the Family: “ICE Lives on Your Street”
The most disturbing evidence presented during the trial focused on what happened once the officer reached his home. The live-stream captured the defendants shouting to the officer’s neighbors, announcing, “Your neighbor is ICE,” and “La Migra lives here.” The situation escalated further as the women allegedly shouted racial slurs at the officer’s wife.
Perhaps most tragically, the officer’s children were present and witnessed the entire ordeal. Federal prosecutors argued that the intent was never to change policy or voice a political grievance, but to inflict psychological trauma and compromise the safety of a public servant in his most private sanctuary. “This was about intimidation and harassment because they couldn’t get their way in the courts or in Congress,” stated acting U.S. Attorney Billy in a post-verdict briefing.
The “FAFO” Doctrine: Federal Enforcement Under Trump
The verdict is being hailed by supporters of the Trump administration as a victory for the rule of law. Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon punctuated the news with a viral comment, using the acronym “FAFO” (F*** Around and Find Out) to describe the administration’s stance on those who target federal agents.
While critics of the administration, including Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, have previously blamed federal “raids” for stoking chaos in the city, federal officials argue that the rhetoric from local politicians has actually “stoked the flames” of extremism. ICE leadership has maintained that if Los Angeles were not a “sanctuary city” and local law enforcement cooperated in secure settings, agents would not be forced to conduct arrests in public spaces, which often leads to these types of confrontations.
A Summer of Violence: The Molotov Cocktail Incident
The stalking trial is just one piece of a larger puzzle of anti-federal violence that plagued Los Angeles in late 2025. The prosecution of Rigoza and Brown comes alongside the ongoing trial of Jose Francisco Hovell, a 54-year-old man accused of throwing Molotov cocktails at the same downtown federal building.
Hovell, who has a criminal history spanning four decades—including attempted murder—reportedly set his own apartment on fire after receiving an eviction notice before heading to the federal building to launch a “terrorist attack.” These incidents, when viewed together, paint a picture of a city at a breaking point, where political disagreement has frequently curdled into life-threatening criminality.

The Road to Sentencing
For Rigoza and Brown, the “backfire” of their live-streaming tactics has led them to a grim reality. Each woman faces up to five years in federal prison. Their sentencing hearing is scheduled for June 8, an event that federal monitors say will be closely watched by activists nationwide.
The Department of Justice’s successful prosecution sends a definitive message: the era of “doxing” federal employees with impunity is over. The jury’s decision reinforces the legal principle that while you may hate the policy, you cannot hunt the person.
As the country looks toward a contentious 2026, this verdict stands as a boundary line. It protects the sanctity of the home and the safety of families, ensuring that no matter how heated the political landscape becomes, the front porch remains off-limits to the mob.
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