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US Hackers Reportedly Caused a Blackout in Venezuela

January 17, 2026
in News
US Hackers Reportedly Caused a Blackout in Venezuela

As Immigration and Customs Enforcement continues its “Operation Metro Surge” infiltration of Minnesota, more than 2,000 ICE operatives and about 1,000 other federal agents have made more than 2,400 arrests since the operation began in late 2025, and tear gassed protesters. Last week, an ICE agent shot and killed local resident Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old US citizen. In response, the state of Minnesota and the Twin Cities’ local governments sued the US government and several officials this week to stop the operation.

WIRED reported on a contract justification published in a federal register on Tuesday that says 31 ICE vehicles currently operating in Minnesota “lack the necessary emergency lights and sirens” to be “compliant” with regulations. Meanwhile, the crowdfunding platform GoFundMe allowed a fundraising campaign claiming to fund a potential legal defense for Jonathan Ross, the ICE agent who shot Good, to remain live—despite company rules that GoFundMe has enforced in the past banning fundraisers connected to violent crimes.

An investigation by WIRED found that an FBI agent’s sworn testimony in federal court in Minnesota in December contradicts claims Ross made under oath about whether a man they were trying to interview had asked to speak to his attorney. The FBI agent’s testimony also raises questions about whether Ross failed to follow his training during the incident in which he shot and killed Renee Good.

The situation in the Twin Cities is still rapidly evolving and WIRED has context on what to do if ICE invades your neighborhood as well as an analysis of why ICE agents can seemingly kill with impunity in the US today

In other news, analysis of hundreds of records obtained by WIRED shows that US intelligence on Tren de Aragua—the Venezuelan gang that President Donald Trump has described as mounting an “invasion” in the US—was thin, describing disjointed, low-level crime in the US rather than a coordinated terrorist threat.

Following a flood of graphic AI-generated imagery—including images that appeared to depict minors—the social media platform X said it has placed more restrictions on its sister AI platform Grok’s ability to generate explicit images. Tests show, though, that Grok’s “undressing” problem isn’t solved on the tool’s website and app, and the updates on X have merely created a patchwork of inadequate guardrails.

Researchers disclosed findings this week that hundreds of millions of audio devices that use Google’s one-tap Fast Pair Bluetooth protocol—from 17 models of headphones, earbuds, and speakers—need a security patch to prevent wireless hacking, eavesdropping, and even, in some cases, location tracking. Meanwhile, a major Verizon outage this week knocked out large swaths of cellular and mobile service in the US for hours, including some access to 911 calling. And former US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency director Jen Easterly announced this week that she will become CEO of RSAC, which puts on one of the most prominent US security conferences.

And there’s more. Each week, we round up the security and privacy news we didn’t cover in depth ourselves. Click the headlines to read the full stories. And stay safe out there.

US Hackers Reportedly Triggered a Blackout in Venezuela Ahead of Military Incursion

Among all the nations in the world whose state-sponsored hackers have honed the capability to turn off the lights with a cyberattack, only Russia has been confirmed to have taken that brazen step, hacking another nation’s power grid to cause a blackout—until now. Amid the surprise military operation that seized Venezuelan president Nicholas Maduro and his wife, the US appears to have crossed that rubicon, too.

In the aftermath of the air strikes and on-the-ground military operation that arrested Maduro and killed as many as a hundred people in Caracas earlier this month, President Trump hinted at a cyberattack that blacked out the country’s capital city. “It was dark, the lights of Caracas were largely turned off due to a certain expertise that we have,” Trump said in a news conference hours after the operation.

Now The New York Times has cited unnamed US officials confirming that the blackout was in fact caused by a cyberattack, the first time the US government has ever been publicly reported to have carried out such a hacking operation. US forces also used hacking capabilities to disable Venezuelan air defense radar ahead of the incursion, the Times reported, citing officials. US Cyber Command also added in a somewhat ambiguous statement to the Times that it “was proud to support Operation Absolute Resolve,” as the US government dubbed the Venezuelan operation.

According to the Times, the power was restored “quickly”—perhaps purposefully by Cyber Command—and didn’t cause fatalities in hospitals, due to the use of backup generators.

Previously, only Russia’s hacker group known as Sandworm had caused blackouts through cyberattacks, turning off the power in various regions of Ukraine in at least three confirmed instances starting in 2015. When asked by a WIRED reporter why the US hadn’t publicly condemned one such blackout attack that hit the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv in 2016, Trump’s former top cyber official, Tom Bossert, responded that the US itself needed the freedom to carry out such attacks if it saw fit. “If you and I put ourselves in the Captain America chair and decide to go to war with someone, we might turn off power and communications to give ourselves a strategic and tactical advantage,” Bossert said.

It remains unclear, of course, whether the US was technically at war with Venezuela in any sense at the time of the operation. Either way, the cyberattack represents yet another unprecedented step from an administration with little apparent regard for precedents.

ICE Accidentally Hired a Journalist

Journalist Laura Jedeed did not expect to hear back after she applied to be a deportation officer while covering an ICE recruitment expo. She ignored emails, shrugged off a drug test, shirked paperwork, and her negative views on ICE and the Trump administration as a whole are easily searchable online. And yet, she still received a “Welcome to ICE!” email with a start date.

The Trump administration has made a major push to hire a lot of officers in a short amount of time–in December, the Department of Homeland Security announced that it had received over 220,000 applications for more than 10,000 ICE officer positions–and Jedeed’s account raises questions about how much vetting was actually done for candidates going through the application process.

An AI Hiring Tool Reportedly Sent Untrained ICE Agents Into the Field

An AI tool that was supposed to review the resumes of potential ICE agent candidates and categorize them by whether or not they had past law enforcement experience was actually broken, according to two law enforcement officials who spoke with NBC News. Candidates without law enforcement experience were supposed to do eight weeks of in-person training, including lessons on immigration law. Instead, applicants with the word “officer” in their resume–including those who simply said, for example, they aspired to be an ICE officer–were placed in a shorter online course. A DHS spokesperson said it impacted around 200 hires, who eventually reported to the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center for full training.

A Palantir App Tells ICE Which Immigrants to Target

Palantir’s for-profit partnership with DHS amid its mass deportation surge is no secret. But now news outlet 404 Media has revealed the exact app Palantir built for ICE that helps it choose targets and decide on which neighborhoods to focus its raids. The tool, called Enhanced Leads Identification & Targeting for Enforcement, or ELITE, provides a map with human targets and confidence scores of their likelihood to reside at a certain address based on data sources ingested from official sources and surveillance. “This app allows ICE to find the closest person to arrest and disappear, using government and commercial data, with the help of Palantir and Trump’s Big Brother databases,” Senator Ron Wyden told 404 Media. “It makes a mockery of the idea that ICE is trying to make our country safer. Rather, agents are reportedly picking people to deport from our country the same way you’d choose a nearby coffee shop.”

Iranian Activist Networks Are Using Starlink to Stay Online Amid Internet Shutdown

Iran’s internet blackout amid the protests roiling the nation have been some of the longest and most complete in history. But some activists are managing to stay online thanks to an effort to smuggle Starlink satellite internet devices into the country. According to activists who spoke to The New York Times, some 50,000 of the satellite modems are in Iran, offering a window of internet access despite the government’s efforts and helping to share information about a government crackdown on protest that has killed thousands of Iranians. Several activists who spoke to the Times expressed their fear that Starlink’s owner, Elon Musk, would change his mind and make the service unavailable, as he has in China—an internet-censoring country where Musk has business interests.

The post US Hackers Reportedly Caused a Blackout in Venezuela appeared first on Wired.

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