Amid ICE raids, some Home Depot investors want to know how law enforcement uses its surveillance data
By Arriana McLymore and Ross Kerber
NEW YORK, Jan 16 (Reuters) – A group of Home Depot investors is asking the company to review its partnership with surveillance firm Flock Safety and state how its data is used and shared with law enforcement, following reports by an independent media outlet that the vendor’s data has been used in Immigration and Customs Enforcement investigations.
Home Depot locations have become hotbeds for ICE arrests, after U.S. Homeland Security Adviser Stephen Miller said the agency should target the home improvement chain, where migrant day laborers are known to gather.
Investors in several companies are increasingly seeking answers to how U.S. President Donald Trump’s immigration policies and enforcement are affecting company operations and reputation.
Zevin Asset Management, a sustainability-minded investor that owns more than $7 million in Home Depot stock, is leading a shareholder proposal with 17 co-filers asking Home Depot to evaluate and report the risks associated with sharing data with third-party surveillance vendors.
Zevin’s proposal comes after a Walmart and Amazon.com shareholder asked the retailers for details on how the immigration crackdown is affecting their finances and supply chains, and as protests erupt after the fatal shooting of a 37-year-old woman by a U.S. Immigration agent in Minneapolis.
The investor group wants an “assessment of privacy and civil rights risks, including discrimination or wrongful detention from misuse of customer data,” according to the proposal seen by Reuters.
“Such practices may expose the Company to financial and legal risks, including potential data breaches and enforcement of evolving state privacy laws,” shareholders said in the proposal. “The Company already faces reputational risks stemming from frequent immigration enforcement raids occurring near its stores and heightened public concerns regarding data privacy.”
The company’s annual shareholder meeting is expected in May.
Home Depot has faced criticism for ICE raids in its store parking lots, where immigrant day laborers often congregate looking for opportunities to work on construction projects. Some critics have said the company should speak out against the raids, which have prompted protests at some of its stores.
A Home Depot spokesperson said: “We cannot legally interfere with federal enforcement agencies, including preventing them from coming into our stores and parking lots.”
Like other retailers, Home Depot collects demographic information including age, race, ethnicity and gender from companies that provide services on its behalf for fraud prevention, security and asset protection, according to its website.

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