“…Over the course of an investigation, ICE investigators may be required to perform tasks such as searching data storage devices and meticulously cataloguing the contents, preserving evidence, preparing reports suitable for use in court proceedings, participating in court proceedings, and posing as offenders and victims to gain access to online networks (Burns, Morley, Bradshaw, & Domene, 2008;Krause, 2009;Mitchell, Wolak, & Finkelhor, 2005). ICE material involving younger victims and children who display obvious signs of fear and terror is known to heighten investigator distress 3 (Burns et al, 2008;Krause, 2009), and the work is also associated with a range of challenges common to other areas of child abuse investigation such as high case loads, inter-agency conflict, inadequate resourcing, and low managerial support (Perez, Jones, Englert, & Sachau, 2010;Powell, Cassematis, Benson, Smallbone, & Wortley, 2014a, 2014b. Given the wide array of potential stressors and evidence that physical, social, and psychological health can decline while performing ICE work (Bennett et al, 2005;Burns et al, 2008;Krause, 2009;Russ et al, 2009;Sabin-Farrell & Turpin, 2003), we considered it important to independently examine the association between ICE investigation and psychological well-being rather than assume that the prior findings are generalisable to this group.…”