ICE awarded $281M+ in nationwide skip tracing contracts to 13+ firms under a 2-year IDIQ. Contractors include GEO Group, Capgemini, SOS International, and AI Solutions 87. Each may receive up to 50,000 names per month. Capgemini is reviewing its role after pressure from French authorities. The program raises major questions about privacy, ethics, and the future of skip tracing as a profession.

By Mighty Mike, President & CEO of 123 Legal Inc.

Published via Mighty Process Server | mightyprocessserver.com

Skip tracing just became a billion-dollar federal program. In December 2025, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement quietly awarded contracts potentially worth a combined $1.2 billion — with at least $281 million confirmed — to more than a dozen firms for "Nationwide Skip Tracing Services." This is the biggest skip tracing story of 2026, and every process server and private investigator needs to understand what it means.


The program, run through ICE's Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) division, tasks contractors with using government data, commercial databases, and physical observation to verify the addresses and locations of individuals on ICE's non-detained docket. In plain language: finding people the government cannot locate on its own.


The scale is staggering. According to reporting by The Washington Post, each contractor may receive up to 50,000 names per month. The confirmed awardees from a pool of 52 bidders include major players like GEO Group (through its subsidiary BI Incorporated), Capgemini Government Solutions, SOS International, Bluehawk LLC, and several AI-focused firms like AI Solutions 87 and Response AI Solutions.


The controversy is equally significant. Civil liberties organizations and legal scholars have called the program "bounty hunting" with financial incentives that encourage speed over accuracy. Lori Nessel, a law professor at Seton Hall University, told The Jersey Vindicator that the contracts allow for "all available technology" in surveillance, raising "huge privacy concerns." The incentive-based structure, she noted, encourages firms to find as many people as possible, as quickly as possible — a rush that "often leads to mistakes and constitutional violations."


The international fallout has been notable. Capgemini, a French technology firm, announced it is reviewing "the content and scope" of its role in the program following demands from French authorities.


For the skip tracing profession, this program is a double-edged sword. On one hand, it validates skip tracing as a legitimate, high-demand skill set worthy of major federal investment. The contracts signal that the government considers commercial skip tracing capabilities essential to its enforcement operations. On the other hand, the controversy surrounding the program could invite new regulations on skip tracing practices, data access, and surveillance methods — regulations that could affect private sector investigators and process servers who rely on similar tools and databases.



The intersection with AI is also worth watching. Several of the awarded firms specialize in artificial intelligence and automated data analysis. As AI tools become more sophisticated, the skip tracing landscape will change rapidly — and professionals who do not adapt risk being left behind.


Video Resources:

Small Companies Score Big ICE Skip Tracing Contracts (Scripps News)

ICE Skip Tracing Contracts Explained (Forbes)


Sources & Further Reading:

ICE Capgemini Skip Tracing Contracts (The Washington Post)

Small Companies Score Big Contracts (Scripps News)

ICE Taps GEO Group Subsidiary in $121M Deal (The Jersey Vindicator)


Stay sharp. Stay informed. Stay mighty.


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This article is written for members of the Mighty Process Server community, powered by AskAServer.ai, the leader in legal support intelligence.

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