The ICE solicitation seeks 17,800 conductive energy weapons, a move that would quadruple the agency's current arsenal. Procurement experts noted that the contract specifications—including a 45-foot range and 10-probe targeting—effectively mirror the capabilities of Axon’s T10 model, potentially excluding other competitors from the bidding process. Following the announcement, Axon stock surged by more than 22%.
Ethics advocates argue the sequence suggests a direct overlap between personal financial interests and government procurement. Jordan Libowitz of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington stated the concern lies in the president profiting from an administration-led expansion of immigration enforcement. While the White House maintains that investments are managed by independent third parties, the disclosure follows a pattern of reported financial entanglements, including a recent billion-dollar tungsten deal in Kazakhstan involving the president’s sons and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.

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