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Did Olympic skier Gus Kenworthy urinate expletive toward ICE on snow?

Kenworthy urged his Instagram followers to tell their senators to "rein in ICE and Border Patrol."

by Rae Deng, Published Feb. 10, 2026


Image courtesy of Getty Images


In early February 2026, a rumor spread online that freestyle skier Gus Kenworthy urinated a message to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement onto snow — "f*** ICE" — ahead of his appearance in the 2026 Winter Olympics. 

The claim circulated on X, Reddit, Threads and Facebook

It's true that Kenworthy, who switched from Team USA to Team Great Britain in 2019, posted a picture on Instagram that appeared to show the words "f*** ICE" written in yellow liquid — presumably urine — in the snow (his version was not censored). However, it was unclear what method Kenworthy used to create the image, as he could have used artificial intelligence, digital editing, a liquid that was not urine or urine that was not his. 

Given the amount of undetermined information, we have not rated this claim. 

GB Snowsport, which manages Britain's Olympic skiers and snowboarders, said in an email that Kenworthy "won't be issuing any comment to media on this story, and he won't be undertaking Olympic media activities until much closer to his competition date." The BBC reported that Kenworthy wouldn't receive any punishment for the message. 

Kenworthy's Instagram post 

On Feb. 4, 2026, Kenworthy posted the image in question on Instagram, alongside a caption that urged people to call their senators to "speak up against ICE" during lawmakers' efforts to negotiate a funding package for the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE and Customs and Border Protection. Democrats have demanded more reforms to immigration enforcement operations after two fatal January shootings in Minneapolis at the hands of federal agents. 

A sample script for calls that Kenworthy included asked senators "to refuse to support any final Department of Homeland Security funding agreement that fails to meaningfully rein in ICE and Border Patrol," such as by "establishing clear limits on warrantless arrests, profiling, and enforcement at sensitive locations like schools and hospitals." 

Here's the full post (archived): 

 

Two days later, Kenworthy posted on Instagram again with this caption (archived): 

My last post was pee so it only felt appropriate to follow it up with a lil' dump… of photos from January. Yes, I'm a child. 💩

However, he did not explicitly state whether he used actual urine, and it's possible he meant that his message to ICE was just supposed to resemble urine. 

Kenworthy also posted a video on Feb. 8 referencing the image and saying that he received death threats because of his message to ICE. 

Unclear how Kenworthy made the image 

Many people online speculated that Kenworthy may have generated the image using artificial intelligence, while others suggested that he may have first used his finger to write in the snow, then urinated on top of the snow, thus allowing the urine to pool in the written words. Snopes reached out to a few urologists to ask what they thought about social media users' theories and we will update this story if we hear back. 

Kenworthy has not publicly addressed these rumors, and it was not immediately clear whether there was any truth to them. Nothing in the image, aside from the suspiciously neat penmanship, pointed to the use of AI.

AI-image detection tools, which are not foolproof, returned mixed results. ZeroGPT, for example, believed someone likely used digital editing to create the picture, whereas Hive Moderation gave the image only a 6.4% likelihood of being AI-generated. Google's AI assistant, Gemini, determined that the image did not have a SynthID watermark, which is embedded into images generated using Google's AI.

Several indicators suggested the image was at least partly real, including the realistic lighting and texture of the snow. The skis shown in the picture also had a Monster Energy logo on them. The energy drink company's website indicates that Kenworthy, as of this writing, has a sponsorship with Monster Energy. Monster Energy did not immediately return an inquiry about whether they provided Kenworthy with the skis depicted. 


By Rae Deng

Rae Deng specializes in government/politics and is based in Tacoma, Wash.


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