That is if you are on FBI, or ICE list. Not always, but most of time it has to do with being a suspected terrorist or involved in human smuggling. They take this very seriously.
"Police ice" typically refers to law enforcement's use of ice or cold weather tactics, but it is more commonly associated with the term "ICE," which stands for Immigration and Customs Enforcement in the United States. ICE is a federal agency responsible for enforcing immigration laws and investigating customs violations. The term may also refer to police operations targeting illegal immigration or criminal activities related to immigration enforcement.
Both. Your 'everyday' police officer is probably an employee of your municipality, county, or state, but federal agents (e.g.: FBI - ATF - ICE - etc) and certain uniformed forces (e.g.: US Park Police - White House Police - US Capitol Police - etc) work for the federal government.
No.
Police Woman - 1974 Ice 1-20 was released on: USA: 28 February 1975
The Department of Justice, the CIA, the FBI, the ATF, ICE, Homeland Security.
I believe the questioner is asking about Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)officers. They are Federal officers who formerly worked for two separate organizations (U.S. Bureau of Immigration -and- U.S. Customs Service). These organizations were combined under the Department of Homeland Security and became one agency with combined powers and authority.
The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are two federal agencies that have authority under Title 21 of the United States Code. The DEA enforces regulations related to controlled substances, while the FDA regulates food, drugs, cosmetics, and medical devices under Title 21.
Report to ICE or authority in your locale.
Immigration and customs enforcement
Homeland Security Investigations (ICE).
The phrase is spelled "federal law enforcement", e.g. the FBI, DEA, ICE, etc.