California lawmakers want to ban police from covering faces
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California Senators introduced the No Secret Police Act, aiming to prohibit law enforcement from covering their faces for transparency and accountability, allowing exceptions for specific situations.
Local, state, and federal law enforcement officers who cover their faces while conducting official business could face a misdemeanor charge in California under a new proposal announced Monday.
As Republicans have pushed for mask bans to crack down on shadowy protesters and criminals, a pair of Democratic lawmakers in California want to prohibit law enforcement officers from wearing face
The settlement resolves an excessive force lawsuit over the shooting death of David Tovar, who was being sought by officers who sicced a police dog on him after he was fatally wounded.
Officers checking on a fallen man found a body still holding a dog’s leash, California police said. The man, in his 40s, was found on his back at 8:23 a.m. Saturday, June 14, San Leandro police said in a June 16 news release. He was pronounced dead at the scene.
Critics, including law enforcement associations, argue the bill could hinder undercover operations and endanger officers, especially federal agents. The acting director of ICE defended the use of face coverings in a statement to the Associated Press, citing death threats as a reason for the policy.
Law enforcement agencies across Southern California violated state law more than 100 times last month by sharing information from automated license plate readers with federal agents, records show.
An angry security guard “purposely struck” a child on a bicycle at a San Rafael shopping mall and drove away, California police reported.
Miami-Dade prosecutors filed six felony charges as part of three cases against a 26-year-old California man who detectives identified as a “pimp.”