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Norms Impact

The White House Intervened on Behalf of Accused Sex Trafficker Andrew Tate During a Federal Investigation

A White House DHS liaison with past ties to the targets invoked presidential backing to reclaim seized devices, collapsing the firewall between political power and federal evidence control.

Executive

Nov 18, 2025

Sources

Summary

After Customs and Border Protection seized Andrew and Tristan Tate’s electronic devices upon their Feb. 27 entry into Fort Lauderdale, a White House official pressed senior Homeland Security leaders to return them within days while federal agents examined the contents.
The intervention ran through Paul Ingrassia, the White House’s DHS liaison and a lawyer who previously helped represent the Tate brothers, invoking the White House as the source of the request.
The message signaled to career officials that politically connected figures can seek to alter evidence custody decisions, risking chilled enforcement and compromised investigations at the border.

Reality Check

Political pressure to surrender potential evidence during an active federal inspection sets a precedent that our rights depend on who has access to the White House, not on uniform enforcement of law. If a White House official used authority to influence DHS’s handling of seized devices, it raises exposure under 18 U.S.C. § 1505 (obstruction of agency proceedings) and 18 U.S.C. § 1512(c) (impairing the availability of evidence), even where the attempt is framed as a “request.” Even absent provable criminal intent, leveraging the presidency to benefit a former client shreds the core anti-cronyism norm that keeps federal law enforcement from becoming a patronage system.

Media

Detail

<p>Andrew and Tristan Tate arrived by private plane in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on Feb. 27, and Customs and Border Protection detained their electronic media devices during a “100% baggage examination,” later turning them over to Homeland Security Investigators.</p><p>Records and interviews reviewed by ProPublica describe a subsequent written request from Paul Ingrassia, a White House official serving as the administration’s DHS liaison and a former lawyer for the Tate brothers, to senior DHS officials seeking the devices’ return several days after the seizure. In the request, Ingrassia criticized the seizure as a poor use of resources and emphasized the request was coming from the White House.</p><p>Contemporaneous communications and interviews indicate DHS officials raised concerns internally that complying could interfere with a federal investigation; HSI agents examined the devices’ contents. The White House and DHS declined to answer questions about the episode, and Ingrassia and his lawyer denied that any intervention occurred. The Tates’ lawyer said the devices still had not been returned and it was unclear whether any review continued.</p>