A man was tracked down by DHS agents after he sent a harsh email : NPR

by Curtis Jones
0 comments

David Streever takes a selfie while on vacation with his daughter and a character at Moomin World in Finland. Homeland Security Investigations agents showed up at his house and then at a hotel he was staying at to discuss an email he sent to Todd Lyons, the former acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

David Streever


hide caption

toggle caption

David Streever

Stay up to date with our Politics newsletter, sent weekly.

David Streever was on vacation in Finland with his 7-year-old daughter last week when he noticed his doorbell camera back home had captured some unusual footage. In recordings from hours earlier, he could see what looked like two law enforcement officers in blue jackets waiting on his front porch in Rochester, N.Y.

Streever, 45, didn’t grow concerned about it until he learned more about their visit from his wife, the Rev. Hilary Streever, 43, who is an Episcopal priest. She encountered the pair late on the afternoon of June 23 when she was arriving home with the couple’s 2-year-old son, still wearing her clergy collar.

The agents were from Homeland Security Investigations, part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and they were looking for David Streever. Hilary Streever told NPR the agents had said it was about “an email he may or may not have sent threatening Todd Lyons,” the former acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

A diptych of images from a doorbell camera show two federal agents in blue jackets standing on David Streever's porch at his home in Rochester, N.Y.

Two federal agents in blue jackets stand on David Streever’s porch at his home in Rochester, N.Y.

David Streever


hide caption

toggle caption

David Streever

“He wouldn’t have sent that,” she recalled telling the agents. She told them her husband was out of the country and would be home Friday.

The agents asked Hilary Streever to tell her husband to call them back and left a form for him to sign. It said “WARNING NOTICE” and “YOU MAY BE IN VIOLATION OF FEDERAL LAW” and described federal laws that make it a crime to threaten federal officials. Later, the Streevers would learn the same agents presented the same form to a Syracuse poll worker earlier that day, and accused her of threatening an ICE officer on her Instagram account. Civil liberties advocates have criticized the agency’s recent use of these forms, calling them an intimidation tactic to silence critics.

When Hilary Streever relayed the agents’ message to David, he was puzzled. “I’ve never made a threat against anyone. I’m not a violent person,” he told NPR. He did remember a strongly worded note he had sent to Lyons’ government email address in January right after federal immigration officers fatally shot two people in Minneapolis.

In the Jan. 26 email, Streever, a former journalist who now works in the tech industry, warned Lyons that his own conscience would torment him in the future for his actions and compared him to a Nazi official. It is the only email he sent to Lyons, Streever said.

Todd Lyons, then-acting director of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, testifies during a House Committee on Homeland Security hearing on Feb. 10.

Todd Lyons, then-acting director of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, testifies during a House Committee on Homeland Security hearing on Feb. 10.

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

“One powerless citizen yelled into the void with a stern email to the former director of this agency six months ago,” Streever told NPR. “And now there’s agents at his door.”

You may also like

Leave a Comment

AdSense Space

@2025 – All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by  Kaniz Fatema