A whistleblower from Immigration and Customs Enforcement is expected to testify at a congressional forum Monday that the agency is “lying to Congress and the American people” about its training of new recruits.
Ryan Schwank — an ICE academy instructor for new recruits before he resigned earlier this month — was set to testify that the agency’s training program “is now deficient, defective, and broken,” according to information shared with MS NOW.
“Without reform, ICE will graduate thousands of new officers who do not know their constitutional duty, do not know the limits of their authority, and do not have the training to recognize an unlawful order,” he will say, according to excerpts from his prepared testimony provided to MS NOW by the office of Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.
Schwank’s testimony at the forum co-hosted by Blumenthal and Rep. Robert Garcia, D-Calif., comes on the heels of mounting public criticism of ICE as its officers have aggressively worked to carry out President Donald Trump’s mass deportation agenda. An ICE officer killed Renee Good, a 37-year-old U.S. citizen, in Minneapolis last month, using tactics that law enforcement experts broadly criticized. (Agents from the Border Patrol, a separate agency, killed Alex Pretti, also a 37-year-old U.S. citizen, in Minneapolis shortly after.)

Two ICE officers are also under criminal investigation about whether they lied under oath about the shooting of a migrant in Minneapolis last month, as MS NOW previously reported.
The agency has made sweeping changes to its recruitment processes after the Trump-backed so-called One Big Beautiful Bill allocated funding for ICE to hire 10,000 new agents on top of the 20,000 it already employed. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem eliminated prior age restrictions for new officers and offered signing bonuses of up to $50,000.
New documents provided by Blumenthal’s office by an unidentified whistleblower provide more insight into how, exactly, the training protocol has changed. (Blumenthal’s staff could not confirm whether it was Schwank or another anonymous whistleblower who reached out to their office last month that provided the images of the syllabus.)
The documents — which appear to be images of the syllabus for the agency’s basic immigration enforcement training program — suggest that more than a dozen practical exams have been eliminated for enforcement removal operations officers, including exams in “judgment pistol shooting” and “criminal encounters.”
The agency also appears to have cut courses in “use of force simulation training” and legal trainings on “criminal vs. removal proceedings,” among other topics, from the training curriculum, the documents indicate. And they suggest that, contrary to acting ICE Director Todd Lyons’ testimony to Congress earlier this month, new ICE officers receive 250 fewer hours of training compared to prior recruits.
Spokespeople for ICE did not immediately respond to MS NOW’s questions on Monday about the documents.
Schwank’s prepared remarks indicate he will take aim at these changes.








