Byย Lynn La | CalMatters
After a summer characterized by masked federal agents detaining immigrants in Los Angeles, the California Legislature passed two measures Thursday that seek to force law enforcement officers to identify themselves.
Senate Bills 627 and 805 were among the most controversial to pass in the final days of this yearโs legislative session. They would ban local, out-of-state and federal law enforcement officers from wearing face coverings, as well as require officers to be readily identifiable, respectively.
- State Sen.ย Scott Wiener, a San Francisco Democrat and lead author of SB 627: โAs we go through this horrific era of mass deportation and a Supreme Court that allows this authoritarian regime to do whatever the heck it wants to do โ includingย straight-up racial profiling of Latino peopleย โ California should lead and put a stop to the secret police.โ
The measures passed along party lines, with Republicans in opposition. Police unions also oppose the proposed mask ban.
- GOP Sen.ย Tony Stricklandย of Huntington Beach, in a statement: โThis is a reckless anti-law enforcement proposal that puts law enforcement officers and their families at real risk, undermining the safety of the men and women who bravely protect our communities.โ
Though today should be the last day of session, lawmakers are expected to extend their work through Saturday to give final votes to some last-minute deals they struck this week. Those that pass will head to Gov. Gavin Newsomโs desk for his signature or veto, and those that donโt are dead for the year.
