ICE Barbie Insists No One Is Sliding Into Her DMs

The Department of Homeland Security informed a journalist requesting legal copies of Kristi Noem’s Truth Social DMs that they couldn’t locate any. Lauren Harper, a journalist for the Freedom of the Press Foundation, reported that she requested copies of the DMs from “all cabinet officials with active Truth Social accounts,” including “restored copies of all deleted messages” after President Trump accidentally published direct correspondence with Attorney General Pam Bondi on the social media site. Harper submitted this request under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), which, amongst other things, allows people to request federal agency records. Correspondence on social media is deemed a federal record that, under federal records management rules, must be preserved and reviewed when FOIA requests are submitted. Harper wrote that she was expecting to receive “at least some records” from Noem’s account—which has over two million followers and receives regular engagement—as her account “is as active as Bondi’s.” However, DHS told her that, after conducting a “comprehensive review,” they could not locate the requested records. ”We are appealing the DHS denial to get to the bottom of it,“ Harper wrote. DHS did not immediately respond to the Beast’s request for comment.



















