04/21/2026
BREAKING🚨 A Thomson Reuters employee raised alarms that their data was helping ICE hunt immigrants — and was fired for it. Now she's suing.
Billie Little had spent nearly two decades at Thomson Reuters, the massive media and data company best known for owning Reuters News and the Westlaw legal research platform. She wasn't a radical. She wasn't an activist. She was a senior editor in the legal commentary division who started paying attention to something most of her coworkers had never heard of: a product called CLEAR.
CLEAR is Thomson Reuters' "law enforcement investigative database." The name sounds boring. What it actually does is terrifying.
The platform aggregates billions of data points on ordinary people — names, addresses, Social Security numbers, phone records, email addresses, vehicle registrations, utility bills, employment history, insurance records, license plate scans, social media activity, and credit information — and bundles all of it into individual profiles that law enforcement can search in seconds. It pulls from public databases, commercial data sources, and proprietary Thomson Reuters records. It is updated daily. If you moved last month, CLEAR probably knows your new address already.
ICE has been using CLEAR to build deportation target lists.
ICE's contract with Thomson Reuters, worth nearly $5 million, specifically covers "license plate reader data to improve investigations for potential arrests, seizures, and forfeitures." But that's just part of the picture. A separate $22.8 million contract gives ICE broad access to CLEAR's full investigative suite. According to an official government document describing how ICE's Enforcement and Removal Operations unit would use the platform, CLEAR was expected to provide "any information that identifies the possible location of the target" — including address changes, new phone numbers, new aliases, utility changes, employment changes, and affiliated organizations.
Put it together with Palantir's ELITE tool — which ICE also uses, and which is directly fed by CLEAR data — and you have a surveillance map that populates Minneapolis street corners with red dots and assigns a "confidence score" to each address where an undocumented person might be found.
Little started connecting these dots in late 2025, after Operation Metro Surge — a massive ICE sweep of the Minneapolis area in December — led to a wave of arrests. Protesters in the city reported that ICE agents seemed to know their names and addresses when they showed up. Reports suggested the agents had obtained that information through vehicle registration records. The same records Thomson Reuters was selling to ICE.
Little worked in Minneapolis. Her neighbors were among those swept up.
She raised her concerns internally, questioning whether CLEAR was being used in ways that violated the company's own stated policies. Thomson Reuters had publicly claimed, at various points, that CLEAR "was not designed for mass illegal immigration inquiries or for deporting non-criminal undocumented individuals." But the evidence coming out of Minneapolis — and from ICE's own contract documents — told a different story.
Soon after she spoke up, she was fired.
She filed a lawsuit in federal court in Oregon this week, alleging wrongful termination under whistleblower protection laws. The lawsuit claims Little believed Thomson Reuters was distributing data in ways that broke legal standards and potentially aided unlawful actions by ICE. Her case is now part of a widening pressure campaign against the company that includes over 200 Thomson Reuters employees who signed an internal letter urging management not to renew the ICE contract, and a shareholder proposal demanding an independent investigation into whether the company's products have contributed to human rights violations.
Thomson Reuters has not denied the contracts exist. Their public line is that CLEAR "does not contain data about a person's immigration or employment eligibility status" and is "not designed for" mass deportation purposes. Privacy advocates say that distinction is meaningless. You don't need a database field that says "undocumented" to use billions of location and identity data points to find someone and have them arrested. You just need the data.
"If you consolidate enough information about an individual," said one privacy researcher cited in reporting on the case, "you can deduce various deeply personal details that would necessitate a warrant through conventional intelligence and investigation methods."
Thomson Reuters is not alone in this. Palantir, Amazon Web Services, Microsoft, and a cluster of other tech companies are all embedded in ICE's surveillance and enforcement infrastructure. But Thomson Reuters occupies a particular position: it is the parent company of a global news service that regularly reports on civil liberties, human rights, and press freedom. The brand projects neutrality and trust. The contracts tell a different story.
For Billie Little, the corporate language and the press releases stopped mattering when she watched what was happening outside her window. Real people were being pulled out of their cars and their workplaces using data that her employer had sold. She asked whether that was legal, whether it was right, whether it matched the values the company said it stood for.
She got her answer.
Now her lawsuit will ask a federal court to decide whether a corporation can fire someone for asking those exact questions — and what it means when the "neutral information company" turns out to be one of the quiet engines of a mass deportation machine.