Dean Cain, who played Superman on TV, is joining ICE | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: National Post
Author: Chris Knight
Publication Date: August 7, 2025 - 15:49

Dean Cain, who played Superman on TV, is joining ICE

August 7, 2025

He won’t wear a mask — or a cape — but Dean Cain, the actor who played Superman in the ’90s TV show Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, has announced he is joining the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, better known as ICE.

In an Instagram post backed by John Williams’ Superman theme from the 1970s, the actor introduces himself as “a sworn law enforcement officer as well as being a filmmaker,” saying he joined ICE and inviting others to do the same.

Cain says the benefits of working for ICE include a $50,000 signing bonus, student loan repayment, enhanced retirement benefits, and special pay for those in field operations. He claims the agency has arrested “the worst of the worst,” including “hundreds of thousands of criminals, including terrorists, rapists, murderers, pedophiles, MS 13 gang members, drug traffickers — you name it, very dangerous people who are no longer on the streets.”

Speaking on Fox News Wednesday, Cain told host Jesse Watters that he decided to join after sharing one of ICE’s recruitment videos on his Instagram account several days earlier, which Watters had spoken about on his show.

“I wasn’t part of ICE, but once I put that out there and you put a little blurb on your show, it went crazy,” he said. “So now I’ve spoken with some officials over at ICE, and I will be sworn in as an ICE agent, ASAP.”

Asked if he would be “hopping out of ICE vans and apprehending guys,” the 59-year-old responded: “I will do whatever Director (Todd) Lyons wants me to do. If that’s what it takes, absolutely. I somehow doubt I’ll be in that position but I would be there in a heartbeat.”

Speaking of the latest recruitment drive, an ICE spokesperson told Fox News: “We’ve removed any of the age barriers. We no longer have a cap on how old you can be. We’ll get you trained and ready to be equipped to go out on the streets and help protect families.”

Cain also said he didn’t think he’d be eligible for the $50,000 recruitment bonus, but that he’d “absolutely” take it if he were.

The former Superman is not a fan of this summer’s newest film iteration of the man of steel, which was directed by James Gunn and plays up Superman’s immigrant story.

“How woke is Hollywood going to make this character?” he said to TMZ in an interview last month. “We know Superman is an immigrant — he’s a freaking alien!”

He added: “The ‘American way’ is immigrant friendly, tremendously immigrant friendly. But there are rules … There have to be limits, because we can’t have everybody in the United States. We can’t have everybody, society will fail. So there have to be limits.”

He told Watters on Wednesday: “We have a broken immigration system. Congress needs to fix it, but in the interim, President Trump ran on this. He is delivering on this. This is what people voted for. It’s what I voted for and he’s going to see it through, and I’ll do my part and help make sure it happens.”

Cain has been a longtime and vocal supporter of U.S. President Donald Trump, telling Variety magazine : “I’ve been friends with him forever. Trump is actually one of the most empathetic, wonderful, generous people you’ll ever meet.” Trump even enlisted Cain to host his inaugural parade, which was ultimately cancelled due to extreme cold.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our newsletters here.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Prisoners’ Justice Day (PJD) demands an end to frequent and preventable deaths in custody, while standing up for basic human rights of people in prison. It was initiated by prisoners to honour Edward “Eddie” Nalon, who was left to die alone in the segregation unit of Millhaven Institution, a maximum-security penitentiary in Bath, Ont. on Aug. 10, 1974. Read More
August 8, 2025 - 04:00 | Christina Spencer, Ottawa Citizen | Ottawa Citizen
Standing along the rocky shores of Cape Breton Island, Jonathan Kanary is trying not to feel completely defeated. The manager and backcountry guide of a Nova Scotia adventure-tourism company, Live Life InTents, has been turning away customer after customer, many of whom drove across the country or flew overseas to be there. Nearby, atop the Mabou Highlands walled by the Atlantic Ocean, Capes 100, a world-renowned trail race, has been cancelled this weekend – with organizers issuing deferrals and partial refunds for dozens of participants, while mile-marker signage is being haphazardly...
August 7, 2025 - 23:13 | Temur Durrani | The Globe and Mail
Canadian officials say it is not possible for wildfire fighters to lessen the impact of smoke drifting across vast swathes of the country and blanketing some American states, after several U.S. lawmakers complained that Canada is not doing enough to combat the smokey conditions.Officials with the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre – a non-profit broker of staff and equipment owned and operated by federal, provincial and territorial wildland fire management agencies – held a briefing Thursday, which was attended by multiple American news outlets.
August 7, 2025 - 21:50 | Mike Hager | The Globe and Mail