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

In side-by-side photos recorded by a doorbell camera, two federal agents in blue jackets are seen on David Streever’s porch at his home in Rochester, N.Y. on June 23, 2026.

David Streever


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David Streever

Federal agents with Homeland Security Investigations tried to track down Rochester resident David Streever last month and give him a warning notice alleging that he had potentially violated the law when he wrote a harsh email months earlier to the former head of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Now a lawsuit filed by the nonprofit Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression on Monday in federal court in Washington, D.C. argues Streever’s January email was protected speech and the federal agents’ and their superiors violated Streever’s First Amendment rights.

NPR reported last week about HSI agents trying to contact Streever first at his home and later at a hotel over an email that Streever wrote to Todd Lyons, who stepped down as the acting director of ICE at the end of May.

FIRE’s lawsuit says the First Amendment protects Americans’ rights to speak out against police but says the “Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is actively threatening that freedom, tracking down and retaliating against speakers like Plaintiff David Streever because he exercised his fundamental right to criticize one of the highest-ranking law enforcement officers in the United States.”

The suit goes on to say, “Our Constitution does not tolerate such a brazen abuse of authority.”

Streever wrote to Lyons’ government email address on Jan. 26 after federal immigration officers in Minneapolis fatally shot two U.S. citizen observers during the immigration enforcement surge there.

The three-paragraph note compared Lyons to a Nazi and predicted that Lyons would be tormented by his own conscience. It has the subject line, “What’s next.”

Five months later, on June 23, two HSI agents rang the doorbell of Streever’s Rochester home and then left a document with Streever’s wife for him to sign. It was labeled “WARNING NOTICE” and “YOU MAY BE IN VIOLATION OF FEDERAL LAW,” and described federal laws that make it a crime to threaten federal officials. The notice said ICE’s Office of Professional Responsibility had identified an email to Lyons that may violate federal law and the office “is requesting that you promptly remove and/or discontinue the aforementioned behavior.”

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