Provision Added To Defense Bill That Would Make Federal Officers Policing Protests Identify Themselves

from the accountability-increases! dept

We’ve heard a lot about the latest defense authorization bill in recent days, thanks mainly to President Trump’s (empty) threats to withhold funding for the military (the guys he says he loves!) if it doesn’t include a Section 230-stripping poison pill (aimed at the guys he hates!). Congress has belatedly developed a backbone and is threatening to override the President’s promised veto — something Trump is promising to do because, apparently, funding the military is less important than making sure people on Twitter don’t treat him like the idiot he is.

Trump’s tantrum notwithstanding, the bill will pass with or without his support. No other mildly rational legislator actually believes preventing social media platforms from being sued over third-party content is a “national security” issue. Plus, the sitting president will soon be forced to stand, pack his shit into file boxes, and make his way towards the exit.

There’s some good stuff in the NDAA (National Defense Authorization Act), even if you believe America isn’t obligated to protect the world from everyone. Yes, America’s war machine is a trillion dollar industry that shows little sign of slowing down. Its excesses allow cops to avail themselves of war gear and the nastiest end of its spectrum sends legislator-blessed death from above to perform extrajudicial killings.

But, as Dan Friedman reports for Mother Jones, there’s an addition to the latest NDAA that would prevent Gestapo-esque bullshit from being carried out by federal agents sent to quell anti-government protests in American cities. If this bill passes as written, there will be no more disappearing of protesters by unidentified federal cops. Going forward in 2021, federal law enforcement agents will have to be clearly identified while tossing protesters into unmarked vehicles.

Congress is set to approve a defense policy bill that bars unidentified federal law enforcement officers from policing protests. The bill responds to a phenomenon that Mother Jones flagged in June: Unidentified federal law enforcement officers with no identifying insignia joined in the Trump administration’s coordinated crackdown on protests against police violence in several cities earlier this summer.

This would also allow people whose rights have been violated to figure out who they need to sue. Officers who fail to identify themselves make it difficult to name defendants. A lack of identifiable defendants allows the government to sidestep a lot of litigation and prevents plaintiffs from shoring up their allegations. This NDAA provision makes it easier for citizens to hold the government accountable for its abuses and rights violations.

On top of that, it makes it easier for citizens everywhere to see who’s doing what in their name. Taxpayers are paying for this “protection.” The least the government can do is make it clear to everyone who’s providing this “protection” and which officers are overstepping their bounds.

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Comments on “Provision Added To Defense Bill That Would Make Federal Officers Policing Protests Identify Themselves”

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That One Guy (profile) says:

A horrifying need

The fact that it needs to be made explicitly clear in the form of a law that if you’re working in ‘law enforcement’ you aren’t allowed to do so anonymously is all sorts of horrifying, and indicative of just how ugly and corrupt things have gotten.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: A horrifying need

The only problem is, assuming this measure is adopted, it is only as good as the work of the chief executive who is sworn to uphold it. Trump ignored – and had his people ignore – house subpeonas with disdain and impunity. A future Trump (and there will, I fear, be one, be he or she republican or democrat)j will likely just ignore this provision. What then? WIll state police arrest federal LEOs? It is easy to imagine a scenario where that would lead a gun fight between the two, followed by the army being sent in (legality be damned) and, worst case, federal versus state national guard fights leading to a civil war that (almost) noone wants.

There is a desperate need to reduce the power of the presidency, mostly by congress reclaiming some of the powers they have abdicated to the president and actually doing their collective job.

Mike says:

Re: Re: Re: A horrifying need

It is easy to imagine a scenario where that would lead a gun fight between the two, followed by the army being sent in (legality be damned) and, worst case, federal versus state national guard fights leading to a civil war that (almost) noone wants.

  1. State and local police are not going to fire on federal agents who are breaking this law anymore than federal agents are going to arrest any local cop who violates a similar ordinance.
  2. State and local cops who do fire on federal agents for violating this rule will be charged with second degree murder by their own agency.
  3. If God forbid your scenario does happen, Posse Comitatus actually allows the US Army to be deployed to arrest the local and state cops.
  4. If the National Guard "rises up" in such a case, every officer and NCO will be executed for mutiny if they are forced to surrender by the Army and its allied militias (and there will be a lot of militias siding with it)
Mike says:

Re: Re: Re:3 A horrifying need

aren’t most militia members more likely

Nope. All of those groups that actively train and scare the hell out of the left? They’re literally militias too. As is the "unorganized militia" that is all able-bodied men 17-45. The feds can accept volunteer outfits to serve with them during war operations and can also solicit volunteers to raise new militia units to help them. Teddy Roosevelt even lead one such unit in combat operations during the Spanish-American war.

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:5 A horrifying need

"Arguing about whether BillyBob Bozos wandering around in public with loaded weapons are to be referred to as Militia, is amusing."

Less amusing when you consider that among the extreme right/white supremacy-oriented groups and organizations a very worrying proportion are, in fact, trained law enforcement personnel. An FBI agent named Mike German went undercover in such groups and later wrote a book on what he found – with the most shocking and disgusting discovery being that there is a high overlap between white supremacist militiamen and the local police.

That BillyBob Bozo wandering around in public with a loaded weapon is less amusing when you consider the only cops on the scene looking sharp are BillyBob Bozos pals and drinking buddies.

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:7 A horrifying need

"Hopefully those with combat training on any "side" use their brains a bit more than the juvenile delinquents causing most of the trouble…"

Problem with that is that the white supremacy militias and no small number of other alt-right affiliated militias have formed their militia and train explicitly in preparation for when the time comes to finally rid the USA of "liberals and leftists". And brown people. LGBTQ. And of course any traitorous fifth-columnist white straight men who side with any of the above.

It’s a matter of when, not if, some cadre of Proud Boys decide the time has come to storm Fort Sumter again.

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Uriel-238 (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:6 Hezbollah

Hezbollah actually engages in crisis response actions such as distributing food and care. They’re also hired by NGOs such as Red Cross to provide defense and monopoly of force to preserve order.

When volunteer militias in the US engage in this sort of service-oriented behavior, I have much more respect for them.

Sadly, many of them are siding with law enforcement and boogaloos to accelerate tensions between establishment and the oppressed and underserved.

Rittenhouse was there to help the police and guard property, not respond hurt protestors. He took a side.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: You are flat LYING about the cause!

Yes, it did, so I conclude that a switch was flipped after an Admin saw about thirty experiments this time.

Some go in after repeated Resend.

Some only go in after piecing up.

So, it’s Techdirt’s fault for this sprawl. I don’t mind as makes any first glance at site look what it is, a walled garden that censors even mild opposition.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 You are flat LYING about the cause!

To be accurate, Techdirt is:

A) NOT a "private" site, but OFFERS a plain HTML box to anyone

B) Violates its Form Contract especially its stated principles by not just the initial blocking after one comment, but the subsequent EDITING with warning that means Techdirt actually chooses to be the Publisher of all comments here, not immune under Section 230. — Though it’ll hide behind false claims of that mere statute while ranting how loves the First Amendment and "open arena", brag of this being a discussion forum…

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Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 You are flat LYING about the cause!

"NOT a "private" site, but OFFERS a plain HTML box to anyone"

The same way a pub offers every bypasser the right to sit at the bar. Your argument would mean the bouncer does something unlawful as they evict you for pissing on the floor or screaming at the other patrons.

" Violates its Form Contract especially its stated principles…"

Obviously not true since the Form Contract doesn’t mean what you think it means.

Did you have any arguments other than "Hey, I’m an idiot and I shall now prove it to you!", Baghdad Bob? Private property does not cease to be private property just because it offers open access.
Nor does the owner of that property give up his or her right to evict or bar people from their premises who can not abide by the rules.

I’m not sure whether your argument is rooted in the ideas of a truculent five year old or in old-style communism where the concept of property is suspect in itself, but no matter which it is it’s not a good look for you to metaphorically sit in the streets outside the pub you were just evicted from bellowing, across the city block, about how the bar owner silenced you by throwing you out.

I’d tell you to grow the fuck up but given that some ten years haunting this site has failed to show you growing any more mature it’s probably a lost cause.

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Uriel-238 (profile) says:

Sidestepped by PSCs

Right now a fuckton of police work (read goon work) is being done by private security contractors and private prison companies who are not under the same accountability provisions.

Does this change that?

If not, it may drive more law enforcement duties to goon-squad companies who don’t have to reveal themselves because technically they’re not in the state employ.

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Uriel-238 (profile) says:

Re: Position Clarification

This is not to say I think we shouldn’t old law enforcement fully accountable, but we should also hold company men performing law-enforcement duties just as accountable, if not more so.

Maybe fine the companies 3% of their gross worth for each act of brutality.

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That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: If a small stick doesn't work break out the redwood

Assuming just shutting down the companies isn’t on the table you can compensate for that by making the fines cumulative or multiplicative. Starts out at 3%(I’d probably go 10% or more myself), and double it with each incident, as a company might be able to account for a 3% hit but get a few more and they’d be looking at losing a quarter if not half of their gross worth.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Facts NOT at all has your LYING diversion has it:

No other mildly rational legislator actually believes preventing social media platforms from being sued over third-party content is a "national security" issue.

Twitter at very least prevented Trump’s messages and those of other persons from even being seen. It’s the new corporate censorship, getting around the First Amendment by reversing it into control of all speech by a handful of boy billionaires. For instance, the NYPost story about Hunter Biden’s crimes. Vastly different from your LIE.

Leftists only win by lying and everyone else being stifled. Seen every day here at Techdirt.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Until recent was a crime to be masked in public!

So your "antifa" thug fellow travelers should ALL be arrested just on that basis, their violent assemblies broken up by any means necessary.

Of course, leftists — like Portland mayor — actually encourage violence / rioting and prevent the police from taking obvious measures.

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Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: Yeah, except not.

"You’re taking up arms against the wrong side, my friend."

Not really. From his point of view persistently levying the accusation on the opposition is the right thing to do since that deflects from the fact that it’s his own side planning and executing violence.

Every accusation, a confession when it comes from the alt-right, remember? The revelations of that white supremacist militia getting arrested for planning kidnapping and murder must be shouted down, after all.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Sorry, can't approve of this

I approve of requiring (federal) officers to identify themselves when asked (and not in the middle of combat). I don’t approve of the Case act, or changing section 230 to appease The Donald, nor the indefinite detention rider added to the NDAA in 2011.

But: because I disapprove of the method, I have to disapprove of this too, despite my approval of the cause.

Withholding your vote to ensure your own hogs get slopped, or to spite someone else (I’m looking at you, <political party>. You too, <other political party>.) is venal. Blackmailing voters (in this case Senators and Representatives) with "the consequences if this bill doesn’t pass" is the same thing. Call it "realpolitik" if that makes you more comfortable, but it is corruption just the same. Are you voting because you think it is in the best interests of the nation, or so you have a trophy to show your constituents when it comes election time? (Or even a trophy that ‘incidentally’ lines your own pocket?)

This episode of Old Man Shouts at Cloud brought to you courtesy of the Too Much Time On My Hands institute, and the Looked At the Sausage Machine Group.

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mcherm (profile) says:

Re: Sorry, can't approve of this

I agree, and I am disappointed with Tim Cushing for not pointing this out. In the same article, he manages to decry the attempt to insert changes to section 230 of the copyright act into this unrelated defense bill, yet fails to even point out the connection when he discusses an attempt to include this rider about policing (which is also unrelated to defense).

I agree that the proposed changes to section 230 are undesirable and the proposed changes to policing are desirable. But that doesn’t justify complaining about the procedure for one and not the other.

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