Feds Arrest Santa Monica Man for Doxxing ICE Attorney
Gregory John Curcio, 68, posted the name and address of a female ICE lawyer in a Facebook post in February 2025, prosecutors say

A 68-year-old Santa Monica man was arrested for allegedly doxxing a female U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement attorney, federal prosecutors in Los Angeles announced Tuesday.
In a news release, federal prosecutors said Gregory John Curcio, who was taken into custody on Sept. 22, created a Facebook post that identified the lawyer as an “ICE agent” and included her home address along with a call for others to “swat” her at the address.
The victim also told investigators that Curcio once lived in her mother’s Santa Monica apartment building, but she had never met him. But, the victim said, Curcio allegedly “harassed and threatened her mother for years.” The complaint alleges that Curcio made false allegations and engaged in a campaign to harass the victim and her family, beginning from at least January 2024.
Curcio, who was arrested Monday, made his initial appearance today in the United States District Court in Los Angeles. A federal magistrate judge ordered Curcio jailed without bond and scheduled his arraignment for October 14.
“Contrary to what some misguided individuals think, doxxing federal agents and employees is not a harmless crime,” said Acting United States Attorney Bill Essayli. “It endangers the agent’s personal safety and that of their family. It’s also a federal crime. If convicted, this defendant will face up to five years in a federal prison cell.”
Federal law prohibits making certain personal information about covered persons – including federal employees – public. The restricted personal information includes a victim’s Social Security number, home address, home phone number, mobile phone number, and personal email address.