The No Masks for ICE Act, launched by Rep. Nydia Velázquez (D-New York) and co-sponsored by greater than a dozen Democrats, would make it unlawful for federal brokers to cowl their faces whereas conducting immigration enforcement until the masks had been required for his or her security or well being.

The invoice would additionally require brokers to obviously show their title and company affiliation on their garments throughout arrests and enforcement operations.

Rep. Laura Friedman (D-Burbank), who’s co-sponsoring the invoice, mentioned Tuesday that the laws would create the identical degree of accountability for federal brokers as for uniformed police in California, who’ve been required by legislation for greater than three many years to have their title or badge quantity seen.

“When agents are masked and anonymous, you cannot have accountability,” Friedman mentioned. “That’s not how democracy works. That’s not how our country works.”

The invoice would direct the Division of Homeland Safety, which oversees Immigration and Customs Enforcement, to arrange self-discipline procedures for officers who didn’t comply and report yearly on these numbers to Congress.

A DHS spokeswoman didn’t instantly reply to a request for remark. The division has beforehand warned of a spike in threats and harassment in opposition to immigration brokers.

The masks invoice has no Republican co-sponsors, which means its possibilities of getting a listening to within the GOP-controlled Home are slim.

“I would think that there’s Republicans out there who are probably hearing the same thing that I’m hearing from my constituents: ‘I don’t like the idea of people jumping out of a truck, carrying very large guns with masks over their faces, and I have no idea who they are,’” Friedman mentioned.

Friedman mentioned she hoped that Republicans involved about governmental overreach and the so-called “deep state” — the thought that there’s a secretive, coordinated community inside the federal government — would help the invoice too.

The proposal comes after weeks of immigration raids in Southern California performed by masked federal brokers wearing road garments or camouflage fatigues, driving unmarked automobiles and never displaying their names, badge numbers or company affiliations. Social media websites have been flooded with movies of brokers violently detaining folks, together with dragging a taco stand vendor by her arm and tossing smoke bombs right into a crowd of onlookers.

The raids have coincided with a rise in folks impersonating federal immigration brokers. Final week, police mentioned they arrested a Huntington Park man driving a Dodge Durango SUV outfitted with red-and-blue lights and posing as a Border Patrol agent.

In Raleigh, N.C., a 37-year-old man was charged with rape, kidnapping and impersonating a legislation enforcement officer after police mentioned he broke right into a Motel 6, instructed a girl that he was an immigration officer and that he would have her deported if she didn’t have intercourse with him.

And in Houston, police arrested a person who they are saying blocked one other driver’s automotive, pretended to be an ICE agent, performed a pretend site visitors cease and stole the person’s identification and cash.

Burbank Mayor Nikki Perez mentioned Tuesday that metropolis officers have obtained questions from residents like, “How can I know if the masked man detaining me is ICE or a kidnapper? And who can protect me if a man with a gun refuses to identify himself?”

These points got here to a “boiling point” final weekend, Perez mentioned, when a person confronted a girl on the Mystic Museum in Burbank, requested to see her paperwork and tried to “act as a federal immigration agent.” Workers and patrons stepped in to assist, Perez mentioned, however the incident left behind a “newfound sense of fear, an uncertainty.”

“Why is it that we hold our local law enforcement, who put their lives on the line every day, to a much higher standard than federal immigration officers?” Perez mentioned.

The invoice within the Home follows the same invoice launched in Sacramento final month by state Sen. Scott Wiener that may bar immigration brokers from sporting masks, though it’s unclear whether or not states can legally dictate the conduct or uniforms of federal brokers.