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Immigration police say they mask to stop retribution. They may be risking trust.

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Michael Nigro/Sipa USA/Sipa/AP
Federal agents patrol the halls of immigration court at the Jacob K. Javitz Federal Building on July 23, 2025 in New York City. Lawmakers in New York are introducing a bill that would ban law enforcement officers, including federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, from wearing masks.

For several months now, Americans have watched while federal law enforcement officers, faces hidden under neck gaiters and balaclavas, have carried out immigration-related arrests as the Trump administration demands thousands of such arrests per day to try to meet its deportation quotas.

The agents鈥 badges and vests, bearing the initials of law enforcement agencies, can often be seen. But their identities are otherwise unknown.

While the Trump administration has insisted that the masks are essential for safety, masked police forces seem counterintuitive 鈥 if not contrary 鈥 in the United States, where law enforcement aspires to a reputation for courage, transparency, and adherence to democratic principles.

Why We Wrote This

Masked immigration officers are facing pushback in a country where people expect police transparency. Some argue that in an era of increased political violence, masks keep officers safe. Others say they erode public trust.

As a result, a growing number of communities have begun to push back, grappling with how 鈥 and when 鈥 their officers will wear masks, and whether that is even the democratic thing to do. Masked agents, particularly those in plain clothes or using unmarked cars, create a climate of fear and resemble a 鈥渟ecret police鈥欌 force, which erodes public trust, critics argue.

Masking, while not illegal, 鈥渋s in direct conflict with our mission to be part of the community and to be transparent,鈥 says James Dudley, a former police officer and 32-year veteran officer in the San Francisco Police Department, now a faculty lecturer at San Francisco State University.

But 鈥渟ome of the cops who worked for me were doxed and attacked, and there were phone calls in the middle of the night that the family answers 鈥 鈥業鈥檓 going to maim, dismember, and rape; I know your address鈥 鈥 and all of that comes into play.鈥

The masks have become a trend, both particular and peculiar, as the Trump administration pushes to fulfill a campaign promise of the largest mass deportation in U.S. history.

Eric Gay/AP
Masked federal agents escort a man to a transport bus after he was detained after an appearance at immigration court in San Antonio, July 22, 2025.

Enforcement meets resistance

Since January, the administration has targeted the more than 10 million unauthorized immigrants living in the United States while moving to revoke legal protections from others. Since then, data shows border crossings have dropped, Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests have doubled in some areas, and the number of those detained is at an all-time high, according to researchers at Syracuse University and The Marshall Project.

But the deportation tactics have not gone unchallenged. ICE agents have reported being shot at, doxed, assaulted, and even dragged down the street in one case as a suspect tried to evade arrest.

In the first six months of this year, the Department of Homeland Security recorded 79 assaults on its ICE officers, up from 10 the year before, according to Fox News.

As the federal deportation efforts begin to involve more local police, pressure is mounting for local officers to adopt the masking tactic in certain circumstances. Even after outlawing masks worn by protesters last year, Nassau County, New York, this month moved to allow its officers to mask up while helping ICE.

鈥淧olicing is a tough job,鈥 says Ian Adams, a former West Jordan, Utah, police officer and now a criminologist at the University of South Carolina.

鈥淏ut it becomes extremely hard if you are showing up in a firestorm where people are angry about policies you don鈥檛 have any control over,鈥欌 he says. 鈥淎nd then you have this understandable reaction of, 鈥業 don鈥檛 want my name posted on the dark web.鈥欌

Much of the action is taking place as the administration focuses manpower on 鈥渟anctuary鈥 cities and states such as California, New York, and Illinois, where local authorities often limit cooperation with federal agents executing mass deportation arrests. Legal filings and legislative efforts are also challenging the use of masks by law enforcement officers across the country.

A group of 21 state attorneys general 鈥 all Democrats 鈥 has urged Congress to pass a law prohibiting federal immigration agents from wearing masks that conceal their identities, and requiring them to display the insignia or name of the agency for which they work.

But police aren鈥檛 alone in seeking anonymity in a heightened threat environment. In California, just as lawmakers have proposed a 鈥淣o Secret Police Act鈥欌 bill that would from wearing masks, they are also to make elected officials more anonymous, given an increase in politically motivated violence.

Federal authorities say that some of their officers are facing threats and attacks from anarchist groups that have 鈥渄oxed鈥欌 agents, publishing their names, pictures, personal addresses, and other identifying information on websites to embarrass or harass them.

At the Prairieland Detention Center in Texas, for example, immigration agents were ambushed and shot at by a group of alleged anarchists on July 4.

鈥淭here are definite threats to law enforcement today that weren鈥檛 relevant in 2015, 鈥16, 鈥17, 鈥18, OK?鈥 says Scott Mechkowski, a retired ICE official.

Etienne Laurent/AP
Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons speaks at a news conference about the protests against deportation arrests in Los Angeles, June 12, 2025.

Are masks affecting public trust?

But the question remains about the impact the masks are having, both on community and police morale and on America鈥檚 sense of justice.

鈥淚t drives distrust higher when our law enforcement officers hide their identities,鈥 says Professor Adams, who studies the intersection of technology and policing. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a reason why in almost every agency across America the officer鈥檚 name is right there on their chest, inches away from their face.鈥

While ICE personnel may feel vulnerable due to publicity around recent arrests, he says, masking could make outcomes worse not just for the public interest, but also for public safety 鈥 including officer safety.

Another concern is that allowing law enforcement officials to move about anonymously makes it easier for people聽to impersonate them聽for nefarious reasons.

Last month, former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, were killed by a man who came to their home, impersonating a uniformed police officer.

鈥淭he trend [in policing] has been toward more accountability and ethics, and now you have the feds saying not only are you not accountable, you鈥檙e anonymous, and deliberately so,鈥 adds Patrick Skinner, a homicide detective with the Savannah, Georgia, Police Department. 鈥淲ithout accountability, everything else is smoke and mirrors.鈥

A in police found that it is highest in two types of societies: autocratic ones, such as China, and full democracies, like the U.S., where police accountability has been a focus in recent years.

This is the result of the public鈥檚 trust that police are carrying out the judicial process in a fair manner. But there is little research on what happens when that trust wanes due to a dramatic policy shift, says Daniel McCarthy, a criminologist at the University of Surrey, in Guildford, England.

鈥淚n democratic societies, we find that people tend to judge the police by their level of public engagement, trust, responsiveness, and legitimate behavior, as opposed to in autocracies, where the emphasis might include some of those factors mixed in with deference to police because of their status,鈥 he says.

Ultimately, the professionalism of agents, even while masked, is likely to be key to whether the administration鈥檚 tactics will retain the public鈥檚 trust.

And even as the Trump administration hails the agents as heroic and courageous, the operation has led to among some agents, Mr. Mechkowski says.

Publicly, ICE officials have painted the threat as coming primarily from protesters and Democratic officials.

But some agents are also aware of potential blowback from their home communities, he says.

鈥淎ll these officers and agents are part of a community somewhere, and this is a very polarizing issue for everybody,鈥 says Mr. Mechkowski, former deputy field office director for ICE in New York City. 鈥淥ur officers and their families are grounded members in the community 鈥 they鈥檙e not trying to tear their community down; they鈥檙e trying to protect their communities.鈥

Moreover, he says, masked agents 鈥渁re worried not because they鈥檙e doing something illegal, but what happens in three and a half years when Trump鈥檚 out of office?鈥 What happens if the next administration rejects President Trump鈥檚 policies and punishes those officers who enforced them? he says.

鈥淧oliticians come and go. But your job doesn鈥檛.鈥

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