Ohioans are turning on each other in a heated debate over on Reddit about ICE sightings, with a growing chorus warning that the state’s obsession with spotting so-called “ICE license plates” is spiraling into dangerous territory, which could risk putting innocent people in harm’s way.
At the center of the controversy is a clear message that license plates are a terrible way to track ICE, and continuing to treat them as evidence could get someone hurt.
Over on the Columbus subreddit, there’s been a flood of posts flagging random vehicles, usually SUVs, as potential ICE units, often based on nothing more than a plate number, a vague description, or the driver’s appearance. Critics say that’s exactly the problem.
According to multiple citizens in the discussion, ICE has already adapted to public scrutiny by using rentals, swapping plates, or fabricating registrations entirely. One Ohio resident flatly stated, “They have been videotaped changing out license plates in Chicago. They are absolutely doing this.”
Another added that similar tactics were discovered elsewhere, with abandoned vehicles allegedly containing spare plates ready for swapping. If true, that means Ohioans posting plate numbers are potentially painting targets on regular people just trying to get through their day.
“Simply posting random cars in traffic you suspect are ICE agents isn’t helpful. Unless you see ICE agents in ICE gear, doing ICE things, you didn’t see ICE.”
That sentiment resonated with many who fear a worst-case scenario: an innocent driver followed, harassed, or confronted because strangers online decided their plate “looked suspicious.” As many noted, seeing a license plate in traffic is normal. Associating that plate with a call to action is not. Importantly, many of the loudest voices pushing back insist this isn’t about defending ICE. It’s about protecting civilians.
“As much as I think it’s important that we document them and share it, I agree completely with this. The last thing anyone needs is people harassing someone who hasn’t done anything wrong. Or worse.”
Others warned that overzealous reporting has already led to civilians being confronted simply for driving the “wrong” kind of vehicle. As one Ohioan joked darkly, being a bald, bearded man in an SUV is starting to feel like probable cause.
The debate has clearly exposed deep anxiety across Ohio. Some residents argue that even false alarms help keep people vigilant. Others say constant misinformation only dulls the public’s ability to recognize real threats. In other words, the classic “crying wolf” problem.







