Pokémon said that she had not provided permission to use her objective song and other shots to use in a video of the ice deportation published by the United States government.
“We are aware of a recent video published by the Ministry of Internal Security, which includes pictures and language related to our brand,” Pokemon International said in a statement to the British Broadcasting Authority.
“Our company has not participated in creating or distributing this content, and then has not been granted to use our intellectual property.”
Video, Posted by Homeland Security X and White House on TijookThere are many arrests by the border patrol and ice factors, along with the Gotta Catch ‘EM.
It also features shots of opening credit for Pokémon’s Anime TV with the main character Ash Ketchum.
The video ends with pictures of fake Pokémon trading cards that include Mugshots for men and women arrested by ICE and their alleged crimes, including killing, children, robbery, killing and child exposure.
ICE (enforcement of immigration and customs enforcement) is making raids across the United States after Trump’s immigration policy to provide “the largest deportation program for criminals in the history of America.”
Meanwhile, the comedy actor and PodCaster Theo von intercepted another video from the Ministry of Internal Security, from which he used a clip saying, “I heard that you were deported, my shout – goodbye” to reveal the agency’s deportation numbers.
“Yooo DHS I did not agree to use it in this,” Von wrote on x.
“I know you know my address, so send a check. Please take this down and please keep me away from the” Banger “deportation videos.
“When it comes to immigration, my thoughts and my heart are more accurate than this video allows. Goodbye!”
On Tuesday, the department shared a 31 -second video clip on X with the “Goodbye” illustration, although the post has been removed now.
She started with a Von clip, followed by a claim that two million illegal immigrants had been deported in the first 250 days of President Trump’s second term.
Then Trump showed, “They simply stopped coming, and they didn’t come anymore,” before they were pursued with a plane taking off with the words “Leave now” written on the image.
This comes after British singer Jess Glenn said in July that she felt “sick” that the White House had used the viral Jet2Holdy video, which includes her song as a video of a video that enhances deportation.
White House Publish a clip on x Show the ingredient -bounded people to the Globalx trip.
Jet2 advertisement, which includes the 2015 Glynne’s song, my hand, and a cheerful audio comment saying, “Nothing surpasses the Jet2 vacation” – which has become Mimi – played on the video.
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/1024/branded_news/9adc/live/8465af70-99f1-11f0-8075-a1f3b14172f9.jpg
2025-09-25 10:37:00