Border czar Tom Homan said on Feb. 15 that he doesn’t like that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents wear masks during operations but said that face coverings are necessary for their protection.
“I don’t like the masks either, but because threats against ICE officers, you know, are up over 1,500 percent, actual assaults and threats are up over 8,000 percent, these men and women have to protect themselves,” Homan said during an interview with fill-in anchor Ed O’Keefe on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”
Proposals include requiring ICE agents to show IDs, wear body cameras, remove their masks during operations, obtain judicial warrants before they enter private property, and stop the alleged racial profiling of people on the street.
“They want to say, stop racial profiling. That’s just not occurring,” Homan said.
“I mean, ICE will detain, briefly detain and question, but question somebody based on reasonable suspicion. It has nothing to do with racial profiling.”
“Just yesterday, the director of ICE, his wife, was filmed walking to work,” he said.
“His home address has been doxed. His kids have been doxed and filmed. So no, I don’t know of another agency in this country that has an 8,000 percent increase [in assaults and threats].”
The Epoch Times contacted ICE for additional information but did not hear back by publication time.
During the Feb. 15 interview, Homan defended how immigration enforcement searches take place.
“Congress themselves wrote the Immigration Nationality Act that gave power on the administrative warrant to arrest somebody, and that’s what’s set up in federal statutes,” he said.
“So if Congress wants that change, then Congress can legislate. But right now, ICE is acting within the framework of federal statutes enacted by Congress and signed by a president.”
Two of the clashes with demonstrators took a deadly turn in Minnesota.
On Jan. 7, an ICE officer fatally shot a protester, Renee Good, in her SUV, as she allegedly hit him with her car during an ICE operation in Minneapolis.
Federal authorities said the officers acted in self-defense during the shootings.







