Federal judge strikes down California's mask ban targeting ICE agents, citing unconstitutional discrimination
A federal judge in Los Angeles blocked California from enforcing a law that would have compelled ICE agents to remove their masks during immigration enforcement operations, ruling that the state singled out federal officers in violation of the Supremacy Clause.
Judge Christina Snyder, a Clinton appointee, granted the preliminary injunction on Monday against the so-called "No Secret Police Act" — finding that California's law exempted its own state officers while penalizing federal agents. That distinction, the court held, constituted unlawful discrimination.
"The Court finds that federal officers can perform their federal functions without wearing masks. However, because the No Secret Police Act, as presently enacted, does not apply equally to all law enforcement officers in the state, it unlawfully discriminates against federal officers."
A separate provision, the "No Vigilantes Act," which requires all officers to display agency affiliation and a personal identifier such as a badge number, was allowed to remain in effect, Fox News reported.
Sacramento wrote a law it couldn't defend
Governor Gavin Newsom signed both measures into law last September, framing them as a response to federal enforcement operations in California. Enforcement was set to begin January 1, 2026, but was paused while the court considered the federal government's request for an injunction.
California's legal argument was straightforward — and thin. State attorneys argued the challenged provisions were a "legitimate exercise of California's police powers" that "at most, only incidentally affects" federal law enforcement activities. They claimed the act does not "control, impede, or grant 'virtual power of review' over federal law enforcement activities, and therefore it does not amount to an unconstitutional direct regulation."
The court disagreed on the mask provision. And the reason it disagreed should embarrass every legislator who voted for the bill: they wrote a law that applied one standard to federal officers and a different standard to their own. That's not a close constitutional question. That's a law designed to obstruct federal enforcement dressed up as a civil liberties measure.
If California genuinely believed masked law enforcement was a threat to civil rights, it would have banned masks for every officer in the state — local, state, and federal. It didn't. The carve-out for California's own agents tells you everything about the law's actual purpose.
Newsom calls a partial loss a 'clear win.'
The governor's response was remarkable in its creativity. Newsom framed the ruling — which struck down half his legislative package — as a victory:
"A federal court upheld California's law requiring federal agents to identify themselves – a clear win for the rule of law. No badge and no name mean no accountability."
"California will keep standing up for civil rights and our democracy."
This is the political equivalent of losing a two-car garage and celebrating that you still have a driveway. The centerpiece of Sacramento's resistance effort — the mask ban specifically targeting federal agents — was the provision the court blocked. The surviving provision requires identification, something federal agencies already broadly practice.
But Newsom has mastered the art of the partial-loss press release. In Sacramento, every court defeat is rebranded as a principled stand. Every injunction is just another chapter in the fight. The pattern is familiar: pass an aggressive law, lose in court, claim moral victory, repeat.
The DOJ's winning streak continues
Attorney General Pamela Bondi struck a different tone — and had more reason to. She posted on X shortly after the ruling:
"ANOTHER key court victory thanks to our outstanding @TheJusticeDept attorneys."
"Following our arguments, a district court in California BLOCKED the enforcement of a law that would have banned federal agents from wearing masks to protect their identities."
Bondi zeroed in on the operational reality that California's law ignored:
"These federal agents are harassed, doxxed, obstructed, and attacked on a regular basis just for doing their jobs. We have no tolerance for it."
"We will continue fighting and winning in court for President Trump's law-and-order agenda — and we will ALWAYS have the backs of our great federal law enforcement officers."
The Justice Department's argument was built on bedrock constitutional law. The Supremacy Clause isn't an obscure legal theory — it's the foundational principle that prevents fifty states from running fifty different foreign policies, immigration regimes, and federal obstruction playbooks. When a state law conflicts with federal authority, federal law wins. California knows this. It just keeps testing how far it can push before a court says stop.
The real stakes behind the masks
Strip away the legislative branding — "No Secret Police Act" is a name designed for cable news chyrons, not legal precision — and what California attempted was straightforward: make it harder, more dangerous, and more personally costly for ICE agents to do their jobs in the state.
An agent whose face is exposed during an enforcement operation becomes a target. Not hypothetically. The entire reason tactical law enforcement units across every level of government use face coverings is force protection. Local SWAT teams wear them. Federal task forces wear them. California didn't object to masks on law enforcement until the officers underneath them were enforcing immigration law.
That selectivity is the tell. California's political class has no problem with masked officers serving drug warrants in Oakland or conducting gang sweeps in Fresno. The objection begins and ends with immigration enforcement — because the policy goal isn't accountability. It's an obstruction with a civil-liberties wrapper.
What comes next
The injunction is preliminary, meaning the legal fight isn't over. California will almost certainly continue pressing its case, and the surviving "No Vigilantes Act" provision gives Newsom enough to maintain his resistance branding. But the core confrontation — whether a state can impose unique burdens on federal officers to hamper enforcement of federal law — has already been answered by this court. The Supremacy Clause isn't optional, even in California.
The broader pattern matters more than any single ruling. Sacramento has spent years constructing a legal architecture designed to frustrate federal immigration enforcement — sanctuary policies, non-cooperation mandates, and now laws targeting the protective equipment of individual agents. Each measure is crafted to stay just inside the constitutional line. Monday's ruling is a reminder that California keeps drawing that line in the wrong place.
A Clinton-appointed judge looked at California's law and saw what everyone outside Sacramento could see from the beginning: a state that wrote one set of rules for its own officers and a harsher set for the federal agents it wanted to stop. The Constitution doesn't allow that. No amount of press releases will change the outcome.




