Barr’s black-shirted private army stands guard with no badges, no nameplates, no insignia
By
Terry H. Schwadron, DCReport Opinion Editor
Do the act, face the
consequences – legal, political. ethical.
It’s the rewrite of
what we grew up hearing about crime – do the crime, do the time.
That’s the conundrum
of what we’ve been seeing from the White House, where Donald Trump through
Atty. Gen. William P. Barr has been unleashing armed government agents stripped
of personal or even agency identity.
The question,
obviously, is why? What sense does this make, and what is Barr trying to
achieve for the White House other than intimidation of would-be looters and
peaceful protesters alike?
From all that has been reported, Barr organized his small army from the Drug Enforcement Administration and the FBI, who did wear identifying information without names, but also officers from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF); the U.S. Marshals; and the federal Bureau of Prisons; Homeland Security officers, the Capitol Police, the Federal Protective Service, the Secret Service and the District of Columbia National Guard.
The imagery of federal troops – or agents that look like federal troops – guarding the steps of the Lincoln Memorial and other public places was strong, which, of course, was the “dominating” force that Trump wanted.
It is also strong enough to reflect what we would expect in an authoritarian regime.
A senior Justice
Department official was quoted as crediting Barr with the idea of bringing in
federal prison corrections officers, calling it an example of Barr’s “outside
the box” thinking. “He brought those people in,” the official said, because
dealing with riots is “exactly what they do best.”
Who ARE these guys? |
Indeed, there reportedly was confusion in pushing protesters out of the one-block path for Trump to walk to what has become his ill-fated photo op holding a Bible in front of St. John’s Episcopal Church.
Barr had to extend a
safety perimeter around the White House, and the only way to do it at that
moment was to push the protesters out with aerial irritants—the White House
says it wasn’t tear gas, though others said it was–and physical force. All for
a photo that was pretty dumb by itself.
Among the people who
think deploying anonymous federal police is wrong is Michael Bromwich, the
former inspector general of the Justice Department who oversaw internal
investigations, who said anonymity “creates a huge problem” for oversight.
“It completely undermines the ability to hold law enforcement personnel who engage in misconduct accountable,” said Bromwich. “You’ve got to know who they are, and certainly which agency they represent.”
“It completely undermines the ability to hold law enforcement personnel who engage in misconduct accountable,” said Bromwich. “You’ve got to know who they are, and certainly which agency they represent.”
As it turns out, the
Bureau of Prisons, for example, has no internal affairs systems to hold
officers accountable.
Six years ago, after
the Ferguson, Mo., violence, the Justice Department found that police anonymity
was abuse by itself, an act that “conveys a message to community members that,
through anonymity, officers may seek to act with impunity.”
Christy Lopez, the
former Justice Department official who warned Ferguson about the lack of
nameplates, said the anonymity of officers on the streets of D.C. was “an
indication of how upside-down this administration is.”
Congressional Moves
House Judiciary
Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler ( D-N.Y.) has formally requested information on
the various agencies policing protesters in D.C. Sen. Elizabeth Warren
(D-Mass.) has asked that the DOJ inspector general investigate Barr’s role.
Rep. Don Beyer (D-Va.) and Eleanor Holmes Norton, the non-voting representative of Washington, D.C., have a bill to require federal law enforcement officers in uniform to clearly show their names and agencies.
Rep. Don Beyer (D-Va.) and Eleanor Holmes Norton, the non-voting representative of Washington, D.C., have a bill to require federal law enforcement officers in uniform to clearly show their names and agencies.
Without
offering evidence, Barr said that foreign powers may be using the cover of
protest to advance their own agendas against the United States.
Meanwhile, he continued to mention publicly only abuses from far-left anarchists without mentioning the arrests of far-right groups.
Meanwhile, he continued to mention publicly only abuses from far-left anarchists without mentioning the arrests of far-right groups.
Fear of street
violence notwithstanding, our government is creating new fears about the
government itself.
We clearly now have confusion among military leaders who are resisting Trump’s attempts to politicize protests for partisan purposes. We have disagreement at every level of government about curfews and police deployment to protect buildings rather than people.
We clearly now have confusion among military leaders who are resisting Trump’s attempts to politicize protests for partisan purposes. We have disagreement at every level of government about curfews and police deployment to protect buildings rather than people.
No, we should not be
deploying active U.S. troops against Americans. But we should all agree that we
know who is doing the policing.