Mickelsen Coordinated Attack — How a Manufactured Lie Brought ICE to a Farm
TL;DR
Mickelsen never said she employed undocumented workers. She said Idaho agriculture depends on undocumented labor. Ryan Spoon converted that into 'she bragged about hiring illegals,' filed ICE tip forms, and three days later federal agents arrived. Spoon took credit and threatened more. The network then pushed employer-penalty bills built on the lie.
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This is one of three connected investigations on this site:
- This page, the operational consequence: federal ICE-raid retaliation against an Idaho Republican legislator
- Follow the Money, the funding architecture that backs the actors involved
- Anatomy of a Lie, the narrative-construction machinery on the other side of the same network
The Manufactured Lie at the Center of This Investigation
Rep. Stephanie Mickelsen never said she employed undocumented workers.
What she said, in committee testimony on a Texas-style detention bill on the Idaho House floor, was this:
“I think everybody needs to be aware that when we keep going down this road of attacking illegal immigrants, you’re mainly attacking Hispanics in this case. If you guys think you haven’t been touched by an illegal immigrant’s hands in some way, through either your traveling or your food, you’re kidding yourselves.”
That is the testimony. It is on the record. It is a fourth-generation Idaho potato farmer telling the Idaho House that the food on Idaho’s tables, and the agricultural economy that produces it, depends in real ways on undocumented labor across the entire supply chain. It is not an admission of anything about her own business. It is a sector-level economic statement.
What Ada County Republican Central Committee Vice Chairman Ryan Spoon said about that testimony, on X, on January 21, 2025, was this:
“She has been bragging about how many illegals her businesses employ. Here is a list of the businesses to raid”
That is a fabrication. It is Spoon’s invention, projected onto Mickelsen’s testimony, distributed to a federal-enforcement-tagged X audience, and used as the justification for a tip-form submission to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement against a sitting Republican legislator’s family business.
Three days later federal agents arrived at Mickelsen Farms. Six days after that an employee was in federal detention in Las Vegas. Spoon then publicly took credit for the result, threatened more attacks, and collected a free beer from Mark Fitzpatrick’s Old State Saloon under the bar’s ICE-tip reward promotion. And then the network used the manufactured “she hires illegals” framing to push employer-penalty legislation that would have specifically devastated Idaho agriculture.
This is the operation. We have receipts for every step.
Who Stephanie Mickelsen Is
Stephanie Mickelsen is a fourth-generation Idaho potato farmer, CFO of Mickelsen Farms LLC, and a Republican member of the Idaho House of Representatives. In 2024, she led a Republican precinct-committee recruitment effort that wrested the Bonneville County Republican Central Committee (BCRCC) away from longtime Idaho Freedom Foundation board member Doyle Beck and his ally Bryan Smith. Beck had chaired the BCRCC since 2012; the loss in 2024 ended a dozen-year run of party-machinery control.
She is the cross-reference for this investigation, not its subject. The site’s accountability work is on the network that retaliated against her — but Idaho voters reading any Mickelsen attack content from the Beck-aligned amplifier ecosystem deserve to see the underlying record about who she actually is and what she actually said.
Act One: The Eight-Year Origin
The Beck-versus-Mickelsen feud has a documented eight-year origin. In 2016, Doyle Beck filed a lawsuit alleging that a “secret society” of Idaho Republicans was working to undermine him and his allies. Stephanie Mickelsen was among those named in that complaint. Beck also covertly recorded a private conversation with then-Idaho GOP Chairman Steve Yates in roughly the same period — a fact the Post Register documented in May 2016.
The 2016 lawsuit matters because it establishes the pre-existing personal target list. The Beck apparatus identified Mickelsen as an oppositional Republican nearly a decade before the 2025 ICE-raid retaliation. The intervening years are not a gap; they are the record of an apparatus tracking, naming, and eventually acting against a long-standing target.
DOCUMENTED — 2016 SECRET SOCIETY LAWSUIT
Doyle Beck filed a 2016 lawsuit alleging a 'secret society' of Idaho Republicans was undermining him and his allies. Stephanie Mickelsen was named in that complaint. Beck also covertly recorded a private conversation with then-Idaho GOP Chairman Steve Yates in roughly the same period.
Act Two: December 2023 — The Beck-Run Censure Investigation
In December 2023, Beck’s Bonneville County Republican Central Committee — under his personal chairmanship — opened an official censure investigation against Rep. Stephanie Mickelsen, Rep. Wendy Horman, and Sen. Kevin Cook for voting against IFF-platform priorities (HB 138 presidential-primary timing, HB 265 sexual-exhibition restrictions). The censure was institutional. It used the official party-discipline machinery. It was Beck personally signing off on the investigation.
East Idaho News covered the censure investigation in real time. The signal it sent to the Bonneville County Republican base was: this is what happens to legislators who do not vote the IFF stack on contested floor calls.
Act Three: 2024 — The BCRCC Taken Back
In 2024, Stephanie Mickelsen led an organized precinct-committee recruitment campaign in Bonneville County. Mickelsen and a coordinated group of Bonneville Republicans recruited enough new precinct committee officers (PCOs) to win majority control of the BCRCC away from Beck and Smith. Beck’s twelve-year run of party-machinery control ended.
Mickelsen herself was elected to the Idaho House twice with large margins during the same period.
The BCRCC takeover is also why the response, when it came, did not target Mickelsen’s legislative work or her policy positions. It targeted her family business. The point of the response was not policy disagreement. The point was demonstrating to other potential PCO-recruiters around Idaho what happens when you successfully break Beck’s county-party control.
Act Four: November 2024 — The Free-Beer Reward Channel Goes Live
Two months before the Mickelsen ICE-tip attack, Idaho gubernatorial candidate Mark Fitzpatrick, owner of Old State Saloon in Eagle, launched a public ICE-tip free-beer promotion: customers who reported undocumented workers to ICE could redeem the report for free beer at the bar. The promotion drew national coverage from Fox News and others.
The promotion did three operational things in advance of January 21, 2025:
- It established a financial-incentive channel rewarding ICE-tip submissions.
- It tested the public reaction. Fitzpatrick took criticism but kept the promotion live.
- It told the network’s operatives that ICE-tip activity against political enemies would be socially rewarded inside the network, regardless of the official-party-position cost.
The Old State Saloon promotion is the operational predicate for what Spoon did sixty days later. Spoon would later publicly claim the free-beer reward under the promotion. The reward channel was not incidental. It was infrastructure.
Act Five: January 21, 2025 — The Spoon Posts
On January 21, 2025, days into President Trump’s second term, Ryan Spoon — Ada County Republican Central Committee Vice Chairman, former President of Idaho Freedom PAC (the IFF’s electoral arm), and operational link between the IFF apparatus and the official Ada County Republican Party — published a series of X posts demanding federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids on the family business of a sitting Republican state legislator.
The exact verbatim posts
VERBATIM PRIMARY SOURCE — JAN 21, 2025
Spoon's first X post tagging Trump border czar Tom Homan: 'Attention, Mr. Homan, could you please send some illegal immigration raids to the businesses owned by Idaho State Rep. Stephanie Mickelsen?'
VERBATIM PRIMARY SOURCE — JAN 21, 2025 (FOLLOW-UP)
Spoon's follow-up post: 'She has been bragging about how many illegals her businesses employ. Here is a list of the businesses to raid.' Spoon then said he was 'filling out' ICE tip forms for 'all of Rep. Mickelsen's businesses.'
What Mickelsen actually said vs. what Spoon claimed she said
This is the lie at the center of the operation. Lay them next to each other.
What Mickelsen said in committee testimony, on the record:
“I think everybody needs to be aware that when we keep going down this road of attacking illegal immigrants, you’re mainly attacking Hispanics in this case. If you guys think you haven’t been touched by an illegal immigrant’s hands in some way, through either your traveling or your food, you’re kidding yourselves.”
That is a sector-level economic statement about how American food production, restaurants, hospitality, and supply chains are touched by undocumented labor. It is not a statement about Mickelsen’s own hiring. It does not name Mickelsen Farms. It does not concede anything about her personal business practices. A reasonable reader cannot extract “I employ undocumented workers” from this testimony.
What Spoon told his X audience and the federal border czar she said:
“She has been bragging about how many illegals her businesses employ.”
That is fabricated. That is Spoon’s invention. The conversion from “the food economy depends on undocumented labor” into “she brags about how many illegals her businesses employ” is the manufactured lie this entire investigation pivots on.
Spoon’s later credit-claiming
After the ICE raid produced a detention, Spoon did not back away. He took credit publicly.
VERBATIM — SPOON'S CREDIT-CLAIMING POST
In a follow-up post Spoon stated: 'I reported her on January 21st. They raided her businesses on January 27th.' This is direct public attribution of cause and effect: the X-platform ICE submission and the federal enforcement that followed.
VERBATIM — SPOON'S THREAT POST
Spoon then escalated with the explicit threat: 'Stop hiring illegal farm slaves for your businesses! This is not the end, it's just the beginning.'
Spoon’s “no rivalry” defense — and the puncture
When HuffPost reached him for comment, Spoon told the reporter the attack “had nothing to do” with political rivalry, adding: “She lives on the opposite side of the state from me. There is no position for which she would be my ‘rival.’”
The puncture is straightforward: Spoon was, at the time, Vice Chairman of the Ada County Republican Central Committee and former President of Idaho Freedom PAC — the IFF’s named electoral arm. Mickelsen had, eight months earlier, led the precinct-committee recruitment that broke Beck and Smith’s twelve-year control of the Bonneville County Republican Central Committee. The “we live on opposite sides of the state” defense ignores that the entire IFF / Beck apparatus operates statewide, that Spoon was holding a structural party-leadership office connected to the network the BCRCC takeover had just damaged, and that Spoon’s own credit-claiming post six days later established the political-targeting motive on the public record in his own words. The “no rivalry” framing does not survive his own posts.
Act Six: January 24–27, 2025 — The Raid
On approximately January 24, 2025, three days after Spoon’s X posts, federal ICE agents appeared at Mickelsen Farms. By January 27, a Mickelsen Farms employee, Sajid Soto, had been arrested by ICE and was being held at the Nevada Southern Detention Center in Las Vegas.
The employment record matters here, because the network has spent a year insisting it does not.
Federal employment law (the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986, IRCA) expressly prohibits employers from re-verifying immigration status after the initial I-9 hiring process. Mickelsen Farms hired the employee with proper I-9 documentation. Mickelsen Farms is legally barred from re-verifying that documentation later. The employee detained had a pre-existing criminal record — which is what triggered ICE’s interest, not any allegation that Mickelsen Farms had violated IRCA’s hiring or verification provisions. The framing that the raid proved Mickelsen Farms was an unlawful employer of undocumented workers is the same fabrication Spoon launched on January 21, dressed up as enforcement-result confirmation. It is not.
DOCUMENTED — THE FARM RAID AND DETENTION
Three days after Ryan Spoon's January 21, 2025 X posts demanding ICE raids on Mickelsen Farms, ICE agents appeared at the farm. By January 27, Mickelsen Farms employee Sajid Soto had been arrested and was being held at the Nevada Southern Detention Center in Las Vegas. Per Mickelsen, the detained employee had a pre-existing criminal record; federal law (IRCA 1986) prohibits employers from re-verifying immigration status post-hire.
Act Seven: The Bad-Faith Employer-Penalty Push
Once the manufactured “she hires illegals” frame was installed in the network’s audience, the operation moved to the next phase: legislation built on top of the smear.
The Idaho Freedom Foundation network and its allied legislators began pushing employer-penalty proposals — bills aimed at criminalizing Idaho employers whose workforces, after the fact, turned out to include any individual without status. The framing was law-and-order. The functional consequence would have been the targeting of Idaho agriculture’s labor base, including the precise sector Mickelsen Farms operates in.
The bad-faith logic stack:
- Step 1 (the manufactured premise): Mickelsen “bragged about hiring illegals.” (This is the Spoon fabrication. It is not true.)
- Step 2 (the apparent enforcement validation): ICE raided her farm and detained an employee. (This happened — but federal law prohibits the employer behavior the network was implying.)
- Step 3 (the legislative move): Therefore, Idaho needs harsher employer-penalty laws, because employers like her are evading enforcement.
- Step 4 (the convenient consequence): The new laws would specifically harm large irrigated-agriculture operations like Mickelsen Farms. The legislator who took back the BCRCC from Beck would be regulated out of business by laws built on a lie about her business.
The push was not coincidence. Bills targeting employer hiring practices in agriculture were proposed and amplified through the same Honor Idaho / Idaho Dispatch / Gem State Chronicle ecosystem that had carried Spoon’s fabrication. The same operators who built the smear used the resulting “evidence” — the federal raid the smear had produced — as the policy justification for legislation that would have completed the operation.
A lie was told. Federal enforcement responded to the lie. The federal response was then offered as proof the lie was true. Legislation built on the proof was then proposed — legislation that would have specifically harmed the business of the legislator the lie was about.
Act Eight: The Named Republican Condemnations
What the Beck network did not anticipate was that the on-the-record condemnations from prominent Idaho Republicans would be unambiguous, named, and quotable. They are.
NAMED CONDEMNATION — JIM JONES, FORMER IDAHO ATTORNEY GENERAL
Former Idaho Attorney General Jim Jones, on the record: 'Ryan Spoon's doxing of Representative Stephanie Mickelsen is reprehensible…Spoon's vicious, but juvenile, reporting of Mickelsen to federal immigration authorities is totally unjustified and may well be actionable in court.'
NAMED CONDEMNATION — BRUCE NEWCOMB, FORMER IDAHO HOUSE SPEAKER
Former Speaker of the Idaho House Bruce Newcomb: 'People, especially legislators, need to be careful when casting aspersions toward other legislators because the rule used to be when I was Speaker, if a complaint was filed the Speaker had no choice but to convene an ethics committee.'
NAMED CONDEMNATION — CHERYL MILLER, ACRCC PRECINCT COMMITTEE OFFICER
Cheryl Miller, longtime Ada County Republican Central Committee precinct committee officer — i.e., a peer inside Spoon's own county-party body: 'These actions are beneath the dignity of a county Republican leader who is tasked with electing Republican representatives, not inciting violence against them.'
NAMED CONDEMNATION — JENNIFER ELLIS, TAKE BACK IDAHO CHAIR
Jennifer Ellis, Chair of Take Back Idaho: 'This type of behavior — targeting a legislator and their family with baseless accusations to incite fear, racial hatred, and political coercion — is unacceptable in any context.'
The Idaho criminal-code exposure flagged in real time
The Take Back Idaho condemnation did not just call the conduct wrong. It cited specific Idaho criminal-code provisions that Spoon’s conduct may have implicated:
- Idaho Code § 18-6710 — false reports to law enforcement
- Idaho Code § 6-701 — defamation (false statements made with intent to harm reputation)
- Idaho Code § 18-7901 — harassment (intentional acts causing substantial emotional distress or fear)
A sitting Republican Party Vice Chair using the institutional platform of his county-party office to file federal-enforcement tip submissions on a sitting Republican legislator, premised on a fabricated quote, generated this immediate criminal-code exposure analysis. That is the tier of legal jeopardy the conduct rose to in the on-the-record assessment of Idaho lawyers and Republicans the next day.
Mickelsen on the record
Mickelsen’s own statement after the attack:
“These attacks aren’t just about me. They represent a dangerous shift in our political discourse. When elected officials can be bullied into silence because of false statements and threats to their livelihoods and safety, we all lose.”
She named what the network counted on no one naming: false statements as the predicate, threats to livelihoods and safety as the consequence, and the operation’s intent as bullying elected officials into silence.
The Coordinated Pile-On
The ICE raid was followed by amplification across the same Beck-CAI-aligned network actors who appear throughout the IdahoExtremism documentation.
Brian Almon, Gem State Chronicle. Almon — publicly identified as Publisher of Gem State Chronicle, a paid contractor for Idaho GOP Chair Dorothy Moon at $10,000 from the state party, and a former Idaho Freedom Foundation staffer — used the Gem State Chronicle property to characterize the Mickelsen ICE-raid coverage in framings consistent with Spoon’s fabrication. The same Gem State Chronicle ecosystem appears in the Anatomy of a Lie coordination documentation.
Lauren Walker (@RogueLou18). Walker amplified anti-Mickelsen content on X during the same period, consistent with her broader role amplifying Tanner-aligned and Idaho Freedom Caucus-adjacent narratives.
Honor Idaho (Greg Pruett). On March 19, 2026, honoridaho.com published “Mickelsen Misleads Voters While the Left Pushes California-Style Abortion,” a Pruett-bylined article using an anonymous Facebook commenter’s lower-bound viability estimate (22 weeks) to attempt to impeach Mickelsen’s medically-defensible viability range (25–27 weeks), labeling her “one of the biggest RINOs in the capitol.” The smear on a separate policy axis (abortion) ran fourteen months after the ICE-raid attack. The targeting did not stop. It diversified.
Stop Idaho RINOs (John Heida). Mickelsen has been included on the Stop Idaho RINOs standing target list across the 2026 primary cycle, framed via low IFF Freedom Index scores.
The amplification did not require coordination at the level of phone calls or meetings. Each actor was operating inside a network with shared funding, shared narrative templates, shared antagonists, and a shared incentive to demonstrate to other Beck-aligned actors that breaking Beck’s county-party control has consequences.
The Network Map — Who Made the Attack Possible
The Mickelsen attack is impossible to read as the action of a single rogue official. The actors involved sit inside the same documented funding-and-amplification apparatus:
- Doyle Beck, the personal target-holder since 2016; the BCRCC chair displaced in 2024; the IFF board member and Citizens Alliance major donor whose funding apparatus supports the operatives involved
- Ryan Spoon, Ada County GOP Vice Chairman; former Idaho Freedom PAC President; the named operational instrument of the January 21, 2025 ICE-tip posts and the credit-claiming follow-up
- Bryan Smith, Beck’s ally on the BCRCC and on the IFF board; Idaho GOP National Committeeman; the legal-architecture half of the Beck-Smith partnership that lost BCRCC in 2024
- Mark Fitzpatrick, Old State Saloon owner and 2026 gubernatorial candidate; operator of the ICE-tip free-beer reward channel that financially incentivized the Spoon attack
- Brian Almon, Gem State Chronicle Publisher; paid contractor for Idaho GOP Chair Dorothy Moon; former IFF staffer; the amplification surface of the Beck-aligned narrative
- Lauren Walker, documented X-platform amplifier of Idaho Freedom Caucus messaging
- Greg Pruett, propaganda-network operator who carried the Mickelsen smear forward into the 2026 cycle on a separate policy axis (abortion)
- John Heida, Stop Idaho RINOs PAC operator who maintains Mickelsen on the standing 2026 target list
The funding spine connecting these actors is the Beck → Citizens Alliance of Idaho → Mobilize the Message → Idaho-campaign pipeline documented across this site.
What This Proves — The Loyalty Thesis
The conventional reading of Idaho’s IFF / Citizens Alliance apparatus is that it funds an ideological faction of conservative Republicans against more moderate ones. That reading cannot account for the Mickelsen attack.
Mickelsen is a Republican. She is a fourth-generation Idaho farmer. She holds positions consistent with most of the Idaho Republican mainstream. She did one thing the Beck apparatus could not tolerate: she built an independent political organization at the precinct level and used it to take back a county party committee from Beck and Smith’s twelve-year control.
The retaliation that followed was not policy retaliation. It was federal-immigration-enforcement retaliation against her family farm, premised on a fabricated quote, executed by a Beck-aligned political official, amplified across the Beck-aligned network, used as the political predicate for employer-penalty legislation that would have finished the operation, and supported by a funding apparatus that did not pause, condition itself, or course-correct.
Why the Apparatus Chose Federal Immigration Enforcement
Of all the tools available to the Beck-aligned apparatus — primary-challenger funding, mailers, scorecard attacks, X-platform amplification — the operational instrument chosen against Mickelsen was a tip-line submission to federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement, premised on a fabricated quote. That choice carries operational implications:
- It outsourced the consequence to the federal government, providing political distance for the apparatus.
- It targeted Mickelsen’s family business and an employee, not her legislative office, meaning the harm fell on third parties (the employee, the farm, the family) rather than on Mickelsen directly in a politically reportable way.
- It used immigration enforcement, an area of broad partisan agreement among Republicans, to disguise an internal-party retaliation as federal-policy execution.
- It generated the “evidence” — a federal raid and an arrest — that the network then cited as the policy justification for the next move (employer-penalty legislation).
- It set a precedent: any Republican who breaks Beck’s party-machinery control might next have ICE arrive at their family business.
The choice of weapon is part of the message. The apparatus did not just retaliate; it retaliated in a way calibrated to deter, to manufacture downstream policy ammunition, and to insulate the originating operator from formal accountability.
What Mickelsen Represents
Stephanie Mickelsen is not the subject of this site’s accountability work. She is the cross-reference. She is the Idaho Republican who broke a longstanding Beck-aligned party-machinery hold at the county level by doing the unglamorous, ground-level work of recruiting precinct committee officers. She is the example that the Beck apparatus had to punish to prevent replication.
Voters and donors evaluating Idaho Republican politics in 2026 should know what happened to her. The actors and apparatus who executed the retaliation are documented across this site. The funding spine that supports them is documented in the Citizens Alliance and Beck pages. The narrative-amplification machinery is documented in the Anatomy of a Lie investigation.
The pattern is the story. The Mickelsen attack is the receipt — and the receipt is in the operator’s own words.
Sources
Primary public-record sources cited in this investigation:
- HuffPost, “GOP Official Called ICE On Rep’s Farms After She Spoke Out Against Immigration Bill” (Pocharapon Neammanee, April 1, 2025), link
- Idaho Capital Sun / InvestigateWest, “Right-wing Idaho activist targets Republican legislator with calls for ICE raids” (March 27, 2025), link
- KTVB, “ICE Raided an Idaho Republican Representative’s Business”, link
- Fox News, “Idaho Bar Owner Faces Death Threats After Viral Promo Offering Free Beer for Assisting ICE”, link
- Post Register, “Who is Doyle Beck?” (Bryan Clark, May 6, 2016), foundational biographical record + 2016 secret-society lawsuit reference, link
- East Idaho News, “Bonneville County Republican Party investigating local legislators for alleged platform violations” (December 2023), link
- Political Potatoes, “The Intimidation Game Comes to Idaho” (Gregory Graf, March 29, 2025), Spoon credit-claiming and threat post documentation, link
- Political Potatoes, “Take Back Idaho Condemns Harassment and Intimidation of Rep. Stephanie Mickelsen / Ryan Spoon” (January 22, 2025), named Republican condemnations and Idaho criminal-code citations, link