logo
Sen. Chris Murphy slams ICE, says allowing masked officers will enable 'depravity' and 'vigilantism'

Sen. Chris Murphy slams ICE, says allowing masked officers will enable 'depravity' and 'vigilantism'

Fox News23-07-2025
Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., condemned the Trump administration's aggressive immigration enforcement tactics Tuesday, warning that plans to expand Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and allow agents to operate in masks could lead to "vigilantism" and "depravity."
Speaking on "The Bulwark" podcast, Murphy criticized the administration's push to hire more ICE officers to execute mass deportations—a centerpiece of President Donald Trump's immigration agenda. He argued that such rapid expansion, coupled with the anonymity provided by masks, could attract undesirable candidates and create dangerous conditions for misconduct.
Murphy said that officers wearing masks can be "just a cover for illegality and for brutality, because if nobody can identify the law enforcement officer that's beating the hell out of an immigrant, then everybody can get away with it."
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has raised concerns about the doxxing of ICE agents, claiming attacks have skyrocketed by 830% since January. The DHS has called on the Justice Department to prosecute anyone suspected of "doxxing" ICE agents by posting agents' photos and personal information online or in public.
Murphy said he wants federal agents to be treated with respect but warned that as Trump beefs up ICE by hiring more officers, "There is an element of folks who are going to be drawn to these jobs that see it as a bonus that they can get away with masked vigilantism."
"As you hire into ICE so quickly, the standard for who you hire is going to go down and down and down," he said. "If ICE decides to hire 10,000 people this year, man, there are going to be some pretty unsavory people who get hired, and the masks allow them to sort of get away with a level of depravity that none of us should accept."
He compared the hiring pace to the Border Patrol, which, he claimed, struggles to find even 1,000 people a year who meet their criteria.
Bulwark host Tim Miller suggested that immigration raids by masked officers seem "pretty risky" in a heavily armed country like the United States, and Murphy offered a theory.
"One of my colleagues was speculating that the reason that these very high-profile raids are happening in a place like California and not happening, at least as visibly, in places like Arizona, is because of the worry that in a community with folks who have concealed weapons, it's going to lead to a shootout," he said.
"And that shouldn't ever be the reason why you aren't enforcing the law, that you're worried you're going to get shot at," he added.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

They Paved Paradise? A Closer Look at Trump's New White House Rose Garden
They Paved Paradise? A Closer Look at Trump's New White House Rose Garden

Vogue

time9 minutes ago

  • Vogue

They Paved Paradise? A Closer Look at Trump's New White House Rose Garden

In the spring of 1963, toddler John F. Kennedy Jr. was photographed in a powder-blue suit wandering the freshly mulched paths of the White House Rose Garden. Dwarfed by clipped hedges and tulips flashing red and yellow, he stood just beyond a pristine green lawn—its first spring since the garden's sweeping redesign the year prior by Rachel 'Bunny' Mellon, the patrician horticulturist charged with bringing order and poetry to the presidential grounds. Commissioned by President Kennedy and guided by First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy, Mellon's garden became a living emblem of the Camelot era, as fleeting as it was idyllic. Which is why, decades later, newly released images of that same lawn—now paved over with pale stone by President Trump—have left White House nostalgists and gardeners alike wondering: Why trade greenery for granite? John F. Kennedy, Jr. (JFK, Jr.) in the Rose Garden, April 26, 1963. Photo: Courtesy of the JFK Library But the Rose Garden was never meant to be a static relic. Its defining layout—still largely recognizable six decades later—was tailored not only for beauty, but for utility. 'My grandmother was always open to treating gardens with the idea that you had to pull a tree out when it was too old, or you had to update a design element if it didn't make sense anymore,' says Thomas Lloyd, Mellon's grandson, a trustee of the Oak Spring Garden Foundation and editor of Garden Secrets of Bunny Mellon. 'Mr. Kennedy knew the advent of television was a huge new technology and a component of his success as a politician,' he continues. 'He wanted to have an outdoor area to do press conferences and really utilize that space in a very beautiful way.' To that end, Mellon—introduced to JFK by Jacqueline Kennedy—transformed what had once been a loosely structured garden first planted in 1913 by Ellen Wilson. She widened the central step leading from the lawn to the Oval Office into a low platform, creating an outdoor pulpit for presidential addresses. Carefully plotted hedges in diamond formation softened the classical lines of the White House. Crabapple trees added seasonal drama. The grassy expanse was left uninterrupted, spacious enough to stage televised diplomacy and stateside pageantry. 'The president proposed to her: make a plan for this garden space where I can have a beautiful place to give a press conference,' Lloyd explains. 'That was her job. It wasn't, 'Hey, make me a beautiful rose garden that looks like your garden at Oak Spring in Upperville.' It was all about JFK's direction.'

Bryce Harper and His Nine Figures Can't Front MLB's Pay Fight
Bryce Harper and His Nine Figures Can't Front MLB's Pay Fight

Bloomberg

time9 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Bryce Harper and His Nine Figures Can't Front MLB's Pay Fight

Bryce Harper, star first baseman for the Philadelphia Phillies, got in the face of Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred during a team meeting recently. Manfred, according to ESPN, was discussing baseball's challenging economics. Harper, who is in the midst of a $330 million contract, used an expletive to tell the commissioner to leave if he intended to talk about a salary cap. Manfred fired back, and then cooler heads eventually prevailed, allowing the meeting to continue — without a salary cap discussion. The now-infamous confrontation is just the latest skirmish in an intensifying battle between MLB owners and players over how to fairly distribute baseball's riches and maintain competitive balance. The league and its owners believe a salary cap is a tool that can accomplish both goals. The players' union, which has long opposed a cap, argues that the concept will only serve to protect the economic interests of owners.

Civilian Office of Police Accountability investigating shooting involving police officer on Southwest Side
Civilian Office of Police Accountability investigating shooting involving police officer on Southwest Side

CBS News

time9 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Civilian Office of Police Accountability investigating shooting involving police officer on Southwest Side

The Civilian Office of Police Accountability is investigating a shooting involving a police officer on Sunday morning on the city's Southwest Side. The shooting happened in the 4800 block of South Bishop Street in the New City neighborhood. A large police presence is currently at the scene. Officers were also seen placing a number of evidence markers on the ground. It is unclear what led to the shooting or if anyone was injured. The office is asking anyone with information about the incident to call their office at 312-746-3609 or visit This is a developing story. CBS News will continue to update as information becomes available.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store