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		Los Angeles County seeks ordinance preventing law enforcement from 
		concealing their identities
		[July 30, 2025]  
		By CHRISTOPHER WEBER 
		LOS ANGELES (AP) — Los Angeles County leaders want to prohibit law 
		enforcement officers from concealing their identities while on duty, a 
		response to recent immigration raids during which some federal agents 
		refused to identify themselves or covered their faces.
 The Board of Supervisors on Tuesday voted 4—0, with one abstention, to 
		direct county counsel to draft an ordinance that bars officers, 
		including federal agents, from wearing masks, with limited exceptions 
		such as for medical protection or during undercover operations. Officers 
		would also be required to visibly display identification and agency 
		affiliation while out in public.
 
 Since early June, immigration agents have swarmed Southern California, 
		arresting hundreds of people and prompting protests against the federal 
		raids and the subsequent deployment of the National Guard and Marines. 
		About half the Guard troops and all the Marines were pulled out of LA in 
		recent weeks.
 
 Supervisor Janice Hahn, who co-authored the motion, said the raids 
		carried out by the Trump administration have sparked fear and residents 
		have a right to know who is stopping, questioning or detaining them.
 
		“Across the county, people are being pulled out of their cars, beaten, 
		and ripped from their families by men in tactical gear with balaclavas, 
		no badges, and no names," Hahn said. “That’s not how law enforcement in 
		a democracy should operate.” 
		 
		Hahn conceded that it is unclear if the county will be able to enforce 
		the law when it comes to actions by U.S. Immigration and Customs 
		Enforcement and other federal agencies. “Ultimately, it might have to be 
		decided by a court,” she said.
 Legal scholar Erwin Chemerinsky said Tuesday that a court could have to 
		decide if the ordinance is interfering with the ability of officers to 
		carry out their duties.
 
 “They key is that it has to apply to all law enforcement. It can't just 
		apply to federal law enforcement,” said Chemerinsky, dean of the law 
		school at the University of California, Berkeley.
 
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            Federal agents stage at MacArthur Park Monday, July 7, 2025, in Los 
			Angeles. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes,File) 
            
			
			 
            Administration officials have defended the practice of officers 
			wearing masks, saying immigration agents have faced harassment as 
			they have gone about their enforcement. Officials said agents are 
			hiding their identities for their safety to avoid things like death 
			threats and doxing, where someone’s personal information is released 
			without their permission on the internet.
 “I’m sorry if people are offended by them wearing masks, but I’m not 
			going to let my officers and agents go out there and put their lives 
			on the line, their family on the line because people don’t like what 
			immigration enforcement is,” ICE acting director Todd Lyons said 
			last month.
 
 In the state legislature, a pending measure would ban local, state, 
			and federal police from covering their faces while conducting 
			operations in California. And a similar bill has been introduced 
			into the U.S. Congress by Democratic senators Alex Padilla, of 
			California, and Cory Booker, of New Jersey.
 
 Chemerinsky said the advantage of federal legislation is that it 
			would “clearly be constitutional” because Congress has the power to 
			regulate how federal law enforcement operates.
 
 County counsel has 60 days to submit the draft ordinance to the 
			board for approval.
 
 Supervisor Hilda Solis, the measure's other co-author, said local 
			officials must set expectations about how law enforcement should 
			conduct themselves while in the county.
 
 “The use of masks, tactical gear, and refusal to show identification 
			is not only alarming and confusing, but erodes public trust and 
			raises serious safety concerns,” Solis said.
 
			
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