The Face of Fascism: Feds Wearing Masks is Lawless, Authoritarian and anti-American
U.S. immigration enforcement agents hiding their faces from the citizens they allegedly serve are cowards who fear accountability for their actions
By Adam Kinzinger
Let’s get one thing straight: in the United States of America, law enforcement officers work for the people. They are public servants, sworn to uphold the Constitution, bound by law, and answerable to those they protect. That’s the theory, anyway.
So why—why—are we now seeing federal agents storm the streets in masks?
This isn’t about undercover work. It’s not about imminent danger or some classified mission. No—this is about ICE raids, street-level detentions, and protest crackdowns where agents—often in full tactical gear—are wearing masks to conceal their identities from the very public they are policing.
Let’s be clear: This is not normal. It is not acceptable. And it is not compatible with a functioning democracy.
Channeling Putin. Federal officers are now being deployed in American cities to conduct ICE raids and snatch people from sidewalks and demonstrations—without visible name tags, without badge numbers, and often without even identifying what agency they work for. Just masked men grabbing citizens off the street and throwing them into unmarked vehicles.
That’s not law enforcement. That’s authoritarianism. It’s what we expect from Putin’s Russia, not the United States of America.
And let’s dispense with the excuses. There is no valid reason why agents operating in public, on American soil, engaging with American citizens, should be wearing masks that shield them from accountability. None.
Masks in this context are not about safety—they’re about impunity. Wearing a mask emboldens some to do bad things, similar to comments behind a fake name on the internet.
You can’t file a complaint against a badge number you can’t see. You can’t document misconduct from an officer whose face is hidden. You can’t demand justice when the enforcer of the law is acting like a member of a secret police force.
Legal case for accountability. Some have pointed to tactical necessity, or fear of doxxing. Let me say this: if an agent is not willing to be publicly accountable for their actions—then they shouldn’t be doing the job in the first place.
Public service demands public accountability. If that’s too much to ask, you’re in the wrong line of work.
The courts have weighed in on related issues. In Hiibel v. Sixth Judicial District Court of Nevada (2004), the Supreme Court upheld that individuals can be required to identify themselves during lawful stops.
That decision emphasized the government’s interest in knowing who it’s dealing with. Well, guess what? That interest cuts both ways. If the public has to identify themselves to law enforcement, law enforcement sure as hell better identify themselves to the public.
And in Kolender v. Lawson (1983), the Court struck down a vague law that allowed police to demand identification without clear standards, citing the risk of arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.
What we’re seeing now is worse. This isn’t just vague—it’s cloaked. We are watching law enforcement operate anonymously, shrouded in secrecy, while detaining American citizens under color of federal authority. That’s not just dangerous. It’s lawless.
Unconstitutional terror. Let me speak plainly: this is cowardice. You do not serve justice by hiding your face. You do not build trust with a community by terrorizing it from behind a mask. And you sure as hell do not defend the Constitution by violating it in the dark.
And where is Congress? Where are the oversight hearings? Where is the legislation mandating that any law enforcement officer operating in a public-facing capacity must display clear identification at all times?
The silence is deafening. The cowardice is bipartisan.
This is not about partisan politics. You can be for secure borders. You can believe in strong law enforcement. I do. But if you’re okay with masked agents hauling people off the streets with no names, no faces, and no accountability—you’ve crossed a line.
That’s not conservatism. That’s authoritarianism.
And if we tolerate this kind of behavior now, during raids and protests, what’s to stop it from expanding? What’s to stop a future president—any president—from deploying masked agents to harass political opponents, suppress dissent, or stifle journalism?
Bottom line. Accountability is not optional in a democracy. It is foundational. If we give that up—if we allow the government to enforce the law from behind a mask—we will lose far more than we imagine. We will lose the very principle that government is answerable to the people.
So I’ll say it again: Take off the masks. Show us your faces. Show us your names. Stand behind your actions—or step aside.
Because in this country, we don’t live under secret police rule.
Not now. Not ever.
Adam Kingziner, a former member of the House of Representatives who was one of two Republicans who served on the special committee investigating the January 6 insurrection, is the author of Renegade: Defending Democracy and Liberty in our Divided Country. Subscribe to his newsletter here.
Image: Adam Kinzinger Substack.