Fans ofStranger Things actor Joe Keerybegan receiving deliveries this week from his official Djo music merch store, which included a charity t-shirt, a bumper sticker reading 'F*CK ICE', and a printed guide on immigrants' legal rights.

Photographs of the packages were shared widely on social media on 4 March. A post from the fan account @updatingkeery on X, showing the bumper stickers alongside the orders, garnered more than 258 million views in a day,according to the post.

Recipients also reported finding a 'Know Your Rights' guide in their parcels, outlining what to do if stopped by immigration enforcement,fans reported on Reddit.

The item is the Djo Capsule Logo Charity T-Shirt, a limited-edition stone-washed tee sold through Keery's official Djo store. Pre-orders opened in late January and closed on 9 February. The listing stated all proceeds would go to the National Immigrant Justice Center (NIJC), a Chicago-based nonprofit providing free legal services for immigrants, refugees and asylum seekers,the Djo store listing confirmed. The page noted a sticker would be included with every purchase but did not specify its content.

Shipments began arriving in late February and early March 2026.

Fans who purchased@djotime’s charity t-shirt are also receiving “FUCK ICE” bumper stickers with their order📸:@mafisonnpic.twitter.com/SzEY68VDxP

Joe Keery speaking against trump, okay lets gopic.twitter.com/dZyuVdyKXf

The charity merch launch followed an earlier public statement from Keery on US immigration enforcement. On 8 January 2026, the 33-year-old posted 'Zero human decency. Stop this man' on his Instagram Stories. He shared a screenshot of President Donald Trump's Truth Social post about the fatal shooting of 37-year-old Renee Good by an ICE agent in Minneapolis the day before,Parade reported.

Good was shot on 7 January during an ICE operation in Minneapolis. Trump wrote on Truth Social that the woman driving was 'very disorderly, obstructing and resisting' and that the agent appeared to have acted in self-defence. He did not address Good's death in his post.

The charity t-shirt went on sale approximately two weeks later. Keery has not issued any public statement specifically about the inclusion of the anti-ICE stickers or the rights guide since fans began receiving their orders.

Source: International Business Times UK