another example to reinforce: ICE commonly self-issues "administrative warrants" for agents to present at a raid. these are not the same as judicial warrants, have not been reviewed by a judge, and do not have any legal power. but none of that is obvious to the person looking at a document that says "warrant" at the top.
These shortcuts, combined with the speed and scale with which ICE is trying to work has real risks. What if a US citizen happens to be in an area (e.g., walking through a restaurant kitchen to the bathroom) when a raid starts there? If there is not sufficient due process, there is a real risk of citizens being deported. How far are we from having to carry papers and need to present them on demand if we don't want to be deported accidentally? This is not a hypothetical concern:
annotated example: https://www.ilrc.org/sites/default/files/resources/i-200_and...