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For officers’ sake and ours, the masks need to come off
Los Angeles Times
|September 27, 2025
[Chabria, from B1]
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A MAN is detained by agents after leaving an immigration hearing in New York.
(MICHAEL M. SANTIAGO Getty Images)
reach is not inciting violence, and calls for Democrats to stop attacking Trump's policies are just calls to silence dissent - one more attack on free speech at a moment when it's clear this administration is intent on demolishing opposition.
If we are serious about preventing further political violence, trust in our justice system must be a priority. And you know what's really eroding trust? Scary masked agents on our streets who refuse to even say what agency they work for.
In recent days, about 6,700 federal workers from agencies outside of ICE have been pulled into its immigration mission, according to the nonpartisan Niskanen Center.
The anxiety brought on by an unaccountable and unknowable federal force, one that is expected to grow by thousands in coming years, is what is raising the temperature in American politics far more than the words from either side, though I am not here to argue that words don't have power.
Ending the fear that our justice system is devolving into secrecy and lawlessness will reduce tension, and the potential for violence. Want to protect officers - and our democracy?
Ban masks.
"Listen, I understand that it being a law enforcement officer is scary," former Capitol police officer Harry Dunn told me Wednesday during a press event for the immigration organization America's Voice.
Dunn was attacked, beaten and called racial slurs during the political violence on Jan. 6, 2021.
"Nobody ever signed up to be harassed, to be targeted. That should never happen," he said.
But Dunn said he'd never don a mask, because it harms that public trust, that mission to serve and protect.
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