from the this-won't-end-well dept
This story was originally published by ProPublica. Republished under a CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 license.
When Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers stormed through Santa Ana, California, in June, panicked calls flooded into the cityâs emergency response system.
Recordings of those calls, obtained by ProPublica, captured some of the terror residents felt as they watched masked men ambush people and force them into unmarked cars. In some cases, the men wore plain clothes and refused to identify themselves. There was no way to confirm whether they were immigration agents or imposters. In six of the calls to Santa Ana police, residents described what they were seeing as kidnappings.
âHeâs bleeding,â one caller said about a person he saw yanked from a car wash lot and beaten. âThey dumped him into a white van. It doesnât say ICE.â
One womanâs voice shook as she asked, âWhat kind of police go around without license plates?â
And then this from another: âShould we just run from them?â
During a tense public meeting days later, Mayor Valerie Amezcua and the City Council asked their police chief whether there was anything they could do to rein in the federal agents â even if only to ban the use of masks. The answer was a resounding no. Plus, filing complaints with the Department of Homeland Security was likely to go nowhere because the office that once handled them had been dismantled. There was little chance of holding individual agents accountable for alleged abuses because, among other hurdles, there was no way to reliably learn their identities.
Since then, Amezcua, 58, said she has reluctantly accepted the reality: There are virtually no limits on what federal agents can do to achieve President Donald Trumpâs goal of mass deportations. Santa Ana has proven to be a template for much larger raids and even more violent arrests in Chicago and elsewhere. âItâs almost like he tries it out in this county and says, âIt worked there, so now let me send them there,ââ Amezcua said.
Current and former national security officials share the mayorâs concerns. They describe the legions of masked immigration officers operating in near-total anonymity on the orders of the president as the crossing of a line that had long set the United States apart from the worldâs most repressive regimes. ICE, in their view, has become an unfettered and unaccountable national police force. The transformation, the officials say, unfolded rapidly and in plain sight. Trumpâs DHS appointees swiftly dismantled civil rights guardrails, encouraged agents to wear masks, threatened groups and state governments that stood in their way, and then made so many arrests that the influx overwhelmed lawyers trying to defend immigrants taken out of state or out of the country.
And although they are reluctant to predict the future, the current and former officials worry that this force assembled from federal agents across the country could eventually be turned against any groups the administration labels a threat.
One former senior DHS official who was involved in oversight said that what is happening on American streets today âgives me goosebumps.â
Speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation, the official rattled off scenes that once wouldâve triggered investigations: âAccosting people outside of their immigration court hearings where theyâre showing up and trying to do the right thing and then hauling them off to an immigration jail in the middle of the country where they canât access loved ones or speak to counsel. Bands of masked men apprehending people in broad daylight in the streets and hauling them off. Disappearing people to a third country, to a prison where thereâs a documented record of serious torture and human rights abuse.â
The former official paused. âWeâre at an inflection point in history right now and itâs frightening.â
Although ICE is conducting itself out in the open, even inviting conservative social media influencers to accompany its agents on high-profile raids, the agency operates in darkness. The identities of DHS officers, their salaries and their operations have long been withheld for security reasons and generally exempted from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act. However, there were offices within DHS created to hold agents and their supervisors accountable for their actions on the job. The Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, created by Congress and led largely by lawyers, investigated allegations of rape and unlawful searches from both the public and within DHS ranks, for instance. Egregious conduct was referred to the Justice Department.
The CRCL office had limited powers; former staffers say their job was to protect DHS by ensuring personnel followed the law and addressed civil rights concerns. Still, it was effective in stalling rushed deportations or ensuring detainees had access to phones and lawyers. And even when its investigations didnât fix problems, CRCL provided an accounting of allegations and a measure of transparency for Congress and the public.
The office processed thousands of complaints â 3,000 in fiscal year 2023 alone â ranging from allegations of lack of access to medical treatment to reports of sexual assault at detention centers. Former staffers said around 600 complaints were open when work was suspended.
The administration has gutted most of the office. Whatâs left of it was led, at least for a while, by a 29-year-old White House appointee who helped craft Project 2025, the right-wing blueprint that broadly calls for the curtailment of civil rights enforcement.
Meanwhile, ICE is enjoying a windfall in resources. On top of its annual operating budget of $10 billion a year, the so-called One Big Beautiful Bill included an added $7.5 billion a year for the next four years for recruiting and retention alone. As part of its hiring blitz, the agency has dropped age, training and education standards and has offered recruits signing bonuses as high as $50,000.
âSupercharging this law enforcement agency and at the same time you have oversight being eliminated?â said the former DHS official. âThis is very scary.â
Michelle BranĂ©, a longtime human rights attorney who directed DHSâ ombudsman office during the Biden administration, said Trumpâs adherence to âthe authoritarian playbook is not even subtle.â
âICE, their secret police, is their tool,â BranĂ© said. âOnce they have that power, which they have now, thereâs nothing stopping them from using it against citizens.â
Tricia McLaughlin, the DHS assistant secretary for public affairs, refuted descriptions of ICE as a secret police force. She called such comparisons the kind of âsmears and demonizationâ that led to the recent attack on an ICE facility in Texas, in which a gunman targeted an ICE transport van and shot three detained migrants, two of them fatally, before killing himself.
In a written response to ProPublica, McLaughlin dismissed the current and former national security officials and scholars interviewed by ProPublica as âfar-left champagne socialistsâ who havenât seen ICE enforcement up close.
âIf they had,â she wrote, âthey would know when our heroic law enforcement officers conduct operations, they clearly identify themselves as law enforcement while wearing masks to protect themselves from being targeted by highly sophisticated gangsâ and other criminals.
McLaughlin said the recruiting blitz is not compromising standards. She wrote that the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center is ready for 11,000 new hires by the beginning of next year and that training has been streamlined and boosted by technology. âOur workforce never stops learning,â McLaughlin wrote.
White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson also praised ICE conduct and accused Democrats of making âdangerous, untrue smears.â
âICE officers act heroically to enforce the law, arrest criminal illegal aliens and protect American communities with the utmost professionalism,â Jackson said. âAnyone pointing the finger at law enforcement officers instead of the criminals are simply doing the bidding of criminal illegal aliens and fueling false narratives that lead to violence.â
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, the Trump pick who fired nearly the entire civil rights oversight staff, said the move was in response to CRCL functioning âas internal adversaries that slow down operations,â according to a DHS spokesperson.
Trump also eliminated the departmentâs Office of the Citizenship and Immigration Services Ombudsman, which was charged with flagging inhumane conditions at ICE detention facilities where many of the apprehended immigrants are held. The office was resurrected after a lawsuit and court order, though itâs sparsely staffed.
The hobbling of the office comes as the White House embarks on an aggressive expansion of detention sites with an eye toward repurposing old jails or building new ones with names that telegraph harsh conditions: âAlligator Alcatrazâ in the Florida Everglades, built by the state and operated in partnership with DHS, or the âCornhusker Clinkâ in Nebraska.
âIt is a shocking situation to be in that I donât think anybody anticipated a year ago,â said Erica Frantz, a political scientist at Michigan State University who studies authoritarianism. âWe mightâve thought that we were going to see a slide, but I donât think anybody anticipated how quickly it would transpire, and now people at all levels are scrambling to figure out how to push back.â
âAuthoritarian Playbookâ
Frantz and other scholars who study anti-democratic political systems in other countries said there are numerous examples in which ICEâs activities appear cut from an authoritarian playbook. Among them was the detention of Tufts University doctoral student RĂŒmeysa ĂztĂŒrk, who was apprehended after co-writing an op-ed for the campus paper that criticized the schoolâs response to the war in Gaza. ICE held her incommunicado for 24 hours and then shuffled her through three states before jailing her in Louisiana.
âThe thing that got me into the topic of âmaybe ICE is a secret police forceâ?â said Lee Morgenbesser, an Australian political science professor who studies authoritarianism. âIt was that daylight snatching of the Tufts student.â
Morgenbesser was also struck by the high-profile instances of ICE detaining elected officials who attempted to stand in their way. Among them, New York City Comptroller Brad Lander was detained for demanding a judicial warrant from ICE, and U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla was forcibly removed from a DHS press conference.
And David Sklansky, a Stanford Law School professor who researches policing and democracy, said it appears that ICEâs agents are allowed to operate with complete anonymity. âItâs not just that people canât see faces of the officers,â Sklansky said. âThe officers arenât wearing shoulder insignia or name tags.â
U.S. District Judge William G. Young, a Ronald Reagan appointee, recently pointed out that use of masked law enforcement officers had long been considered anathema to American ideals. In a blistering ruling against the administrationâs arrests of pro-Palestinian protesters, he wrote, âTo us, masks are associated with cowardly desperados and the despised Ku Klux Klan. In all our history we have never tolerated an armed masked secret police.â The Trump administration has said it will appeal that ruling.
Where the Fallout is Felt
The fallout is being felt in places like Hays County, Texas, not far from Austin, where ICE apprehended 47 people, including nine children, during a birthday celebration in the early morning of April 1.
The agencyâs only disclosure about the raid in Dripping Springs describes the operation as part of a yearlong investigation targeting âmembers and associates believed to be part of the Venezuelan transnational gang, Tren de Aragua.â
Six months later, the countyâs top elected official told ProPublica the federal government has ignored his attempts to get answers.
âWeâre not told why they took them, and weâre not told where they took them,â said County Judge Ruben Becerra, a Democrat. âBy definition, thatâs a kidnapping.â
In the raid, a Texas trooper secured a search warrant that allowed law enforcement officers to breach the home, an Airbnb rental on a vast stretch of land in the Hill Country. Becerra told ProPublica he believes the suspicion of drugs at the party was a pretense to pull people out of the house so ICE officers who lacked a warrant could take them into custody. The Texas Department of Public Safety did not respond to a request for comment.
The Trump administration has yet to produce evidence supporting claims of gang involvement, said Karen Muñoz, a civil rights attorney helping families track down their relatives who were jailed or deported. While some court documents are sealed, nothing in the public record verifies the gang affiliation DHS cited as the cause for the birthday party raid.
âThereâs no evidence released at all that any person kidnapped at that party was a member of any organized criminal group,â Muñoz said.
McLaughlin, the DHS spokesperson, did not respond to questions about Hays County and other raids where families and attorneys allege a lack of transparency and due process.
In Plain Sight
Months after ICEâs widely publicized raids, fear continues to envelop Santa Ana, a majority-Hispanic city with a large immigrant population. Amezcua, the mayor, said the raids have complicated local policing and rendered parents afraid to pick up their children from school. The city manager, a California-born citizen and Latino, carries with him three government IDs, including a passport.
Raids of car washes and apartment buildings continue, but the community has started to âpush back,â Amezcua said. âLike many other communities, the neighbors come out. People stop in the middle of traffic.â
With so few institutional checks on ICEâs powers, citizens are increasingly relying on themselves. On at least one occasion in nearby Downey, a citizenâs intervention had some effect.
On June 12, Melyssa Rivas had just started her workday when a colleague burst into her office with urgent news: âICE is here.â
The commotion was around the corner in Rivasâ hometown, a Los Angeles suburb locals call âMexican Beverly Hillsâ for its stately houses and affluent Hispanic families. Rivas, 31, the daughter of Mexican immigrants, belongs to Facebook groups where residents share updates about cultural festivals, church programs and, these days, the presence of Trumpâs deportation foot soldiers.
Rivas had seen posts about ICE officers sweeping through LA and figured Downeyâs turn had come. She and her co-worker rushed toward the sound of screaming at a nearby intersection. Rivas hit ârecordâ on her phone as a semicircle of trucks and vans came into view. She filmed at least half a dozen masked men in camouflage vests encircling a Hispanic man on his knees.
Her unease deepened as she registered details that âdidnât seem right,â Rivas recalled in an interview. She said the parked vans had out-of-state plates or no tags. The armed men wore only generic âpoliceâ patches, and most were in street clothes. No visible insignia identified them as state or federal â or even legal authorities at all.
âWhen is it that we just decided to do things a different way? Thereâs due process, thereâs a legal way, and it just doesnât seem to matter anymore,â Rivas said. âWhere are human rights?â
Video footage shows Rivas and others berating the officers for complicity in what they called a âkidnapping.â Local news channels later reported that the vehicles had chased the man after a raid at a nearby car wash.
âI know half of you guys know this is fucked up,â Rivas was recorded telling the officers.
Moments later, the scene took a turn. As suddenly as theyâd arrived, the officers returned to their vehicles and left, with no apology and no explanation to the distraught man they left on the sidewalk.
Through a mask, one of them said, âHave a good day.â
Filed Under: civil liberties, dhs, donald trump, gestapo, ice, intimidation, kristi noem, rights, secret police, tricia mclaughlin