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Palantir Government Revenue Growth (Fiscal Year)
Annual revenue and obligations from US government agencies for Palantir Technologies.
Primary Sources
NYC Comptroller Levine: Palantir's 'material change' in immigration ...
New York City Comptroller Mark Levine is raising concerns about Palantir Technologies and the city’s pension fund investments in the company, citing fiduciary oversight issues and its involvement with U.S. immigration enforcement agencies. In a statement accompanying a letter posted on the website of the New York City Comptroller's Office, Levine addressed Palantir’s role in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations. "Palantir purposefully declined to contract with ICE’s Enforcement and Removal Operations over risks of disproportionate immigration enforcement but has since expanded its involvement in ERO’s operations," said Levine. "This stark reversal represents a material change in the Company’s role in these activities." The letter was issued in Levine’s capacity as investment adviser and trustee for the city’s pension systems and focuses on governance and oversight of technology companies that contract with federal agencies. The five New York City public pension systems collectively manage about $311 billion in assets and are long-term shareholders in Palantir Technologies. The funds provide retirement benefits to city workers and retirees and invest across a diversified portfolio that includes major technology firms, according to the comptroller’s office. ICE reported increased interior enforcement activity during 2025, including higher levels of arrests and removals under federal immigration laws, according to agency statistics. The agency has said its operations focus on enforcing existing immigration laws nationwide. Levine became New York City comptroller on Jan. 1, 2026, after winning election the previous November. He previously served as Manhattan borough president from 2022 to 2025 and as a New York City Council member representing Manhattan’s 7th District from 2014 to 2021. Earlier in his career, he worked as a bilingual math and science teacher in the South Bronx and founded a community credit union.
DHS Paying Local Police Millions in Quieter Approach to Immigration ...
Filed 12:00 p.m. EDT 04.11.2026 DHS Paying Local Police Millions in Quieter Approach to Immigration Enforcement Facing public backlash, the Trump administration is outsourcing more immigration enforcement to local agencies and politically connected contractors. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents walk through a gas station in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in February 2026. Ryan Murphy/Associated Press This is The Marshall Project’s Closing Argument newsletter, a weekly deep dive into a key criminal justice issue. Want this delivered to your inbox? Sign up for future newsletters. The Trump administration’s immigration enforcement often appeared calibrated for public attention and maximum spectacle under former Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. For much of the administration’s first 14 months, operations commonly included highly-produced videos, bombastic social media rhetoric and staged photo ops. Noem became the public face of the crackdown, but that also made her a convenient scapegoat as public disapproval of the campaign ballooned, especially after federal agents killed two U.S. citizens during Operation Metro Surge in Minneapolis. Noem’s successor, Markwayne Mullin, has charted a different trajectory, telling senators during confirmation hearings last month that his goal was to prevent the department from being “the lead story every single day.” Part of that posture appears to be scaling back the visible involvement of ICE agents in enforcement activity, with Mullin telling senators he’d “love to see” ICE spend more of its time doing “transport” and less time on the “front line.” One way to do that is by paying local police to take on more of the investigations and arrests of immigrants. Last fall, DHS announced that agencies participating in the 287(g) task force program — which allows local police to conduct immigration enforcement — could be reimbursed for the salaries and benefits of officers who are trained to participate. If DHS follows through on those promises, the program, which was funded by last year’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, would become the largest federal police funding effort in the country by far, according to a February report from Fwd.us, a progressive think tank. The same report estimated that between 13,800 and 15,800 local officers and deputies have been trained for taskforce work so far, more than the roughly 12,000 new ICE agents that DHS says it’s hired since Trump returned to office. Readers may b...
The IRS is paying tech giant Palantir hundreds of millions of dollars ...
And the leaks just confirmed it: Palantir is now helping ICE track immigrants in real time using military-grade software. Their system—ICM—pulls from DMV ...
Palantir operates largely behind the scenes, yet its software is ...
+4 · · . Recent Posts. . Can predictive AI be used to monitor crime data? Cecile G. Tamura ▻ Techno-Optimism. 8y · Public ...


