For days, Los Angeles has been burning—fueled by radical, anti-ICE rioters attacking police, torching cars, and wreaking havoc across the city. But while federal agents risk their lives on the ground, one online agitator operating under the handle @LAScanner has been making their job even more dangerous by publicly doxxing ICE agent locations in real time.
The account, run by a man identified as Jack Quillin, not only endangered federal officers but actively sought to disrupt immigration enforcement by broadcasting ICE operations to thousands of followers—encouraging rioters to intervene.
Doxxing Feds… Then Playing Victim
Conservatives quickly took note and called for federal action to stop this digital sabotage. But before any government agency could respond, some online users gave Quillin a taste of his own medicine—posting publicly available information about him, including his own name and connections.
Quillin responded with outrage:
“I recently discovered several posts containing my family’s name and home addresses. This is unacceptable and violates our privacy.”
He then issued a thinly veiled threat:
“Be warned: if anyone appears at my residence with harmful intentions, I am legally entitled to use deadly force in accordance with my state’s laws.”
The irony is hard to miss. Quillin had no problem placing federal officers and their families in harm’s way—but when faced with his own information being revealed, he immediately claimed victimhood and threatened violence in self-defense.
Not Even From LA
Even more curious? Quillin isn’t even a California resident. According to his own @JackQuillinTV profile, he’s based out of Houston, Texas. Which raises a critical question:
Who was feeding him the real-time ICE intel while he sat safely in another state?
Whether it’s a leak from local law enforcement, a sympathetic city official, or a coordinated activist network, this breach demands a full federal investigation.
Final Thoughts: One Standard for All
The hypocrisy on display is staggering. Leftist agitators like Jack Quillin endanger lives, then cry foul when held to the same standard. But actions have consequences.
If you broadcast federal agent locations during a riot, you’re not a journalist—you’re an accomplice to criminal behavior. And if you’re dumb enough to attach your real name to that behavior, don’t act surprised when the Internet finds you.
Comment:
Jack Quillin just learned what happens when you play games with other people’s safety. If you can’t take the heat, maybe stop lighting the match.