Feb 26, 2026
A federal judge in West Virginia has invoked a more than decade-old lawsuit against Chicago police officers to underscore what he called a constitutional failing in the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement tactics: the use of masked agents.In an order last week, Judge Joseph Goodwin dire cted the release of an El Salvadoran man from federal custody and condemned masked U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents for concealing their identities during a Jan. 7 traffic stop they conducted because there was a plastic cover on the man’s license plate. The man said he was in the United States legally with a pending asylum case, a work permit and a driver’s license.“An anonymous government is no government at all,” Goodwin wrote. “It cannot be held accountable. A masked agent freely uses force without justifying his actions, and the public cannot name him to challenge his conduct. A regime of secret policing has no place in our society.”He said the traffic stop violated the Fourth and Fifth amendments of the Constitution. The ruling, issued Feb. 19, doesn’t bind courts in Chicago, which are in a different federal appeals circuit. Still, lawyers said the opinion could be viewed as persuasive authority in cases challenging arrests by ICE or the Border Patrol in Illinois and elsewhere. U.S. Border Patrol agents tell journalists and residents of the Edison Park neighborhood to stay back while conducting a deportation operation Oct. 31 in the 7400 block of North Oconto Avenue. Candace Dane Chambers / Sun-Times Goodwin pointed to a case that began in Chicago on a cold February night in 2013. Joseph Doornbos, then 35, stepped off a CTA Red Line L train at the Wilson Avenue station in Uptown after leaving work at a Loop law firm where he was a customer service manager. He was headed to a friend’s house to watch a Blackhawks game when three plainclothes Chicago police officers approached him outside the station.According to court records, Doornbos said one of the cops, whom he described as disheveled, ordered him to stop, but didn't identify himself as a police officer. Doornbos later said he thought he was about to be robbed, so he shouted for help, prompting bystanders to call 911. When Doornbos tried to flee, one officer tackled him, and two others joined the struggle.The officers said they stopped him because he was carrying an open beer can in a paper bag, which he denied. During the arrest, the officers said they found $5 worth of marijuana in his coat pocket. Doornbos was charged with drug possession and resisting arrest but was acquitted after a Cook County trial.He then sued the officers in federal court. He lost, but the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the verdict in 2016, ruling that the judge had improperly instructed jurors.“The jury asked the judge whether plainclothes officers are required to identify themselves when they conduct a stop,” the appeals court ruling said. “The judge said no. We conclude that the answer is yes.”With limited exceptions, the appeals court found, officers in plain clothes must identify themselves when initiating a stop.In 2018, Chicago city officials agreed to pay $100,000 to settle the case.The question of identification has since taken on new urgency as immigration enforcement has intensified in cities including Chicago and Minneapolis. During deportation operations last year in Chicago, masked agents deployed tear gas and other “less than lethal” crowd control munitions against protesters. In two episodes last fall, masked immigration officers shot people in vehicles: An immigrant driver was killed in Franklin Park, and a woman who’s a U.S. citizen was wounded in Brighton Park.In Washington in early February, House Democrats moved to partially withhold funding from the Department of Homeland Security, demanding changes to immigration enforcement practices, including a prohibition on masks. Congress remains at a stalemate on the issue. Related Masked immigration agents erode trust and intimidate, former No. 2 DEA boss, others say In his ruling, Goodwin said there’s a key difference between the Chicago case and what’s going on with DHS agents wearing masks.“Immigration enforcement is distinguishable from the Doornbos officer in a material way: We are not merely dealing with a plainclothes officer who fails to self-identify — we are dealing with groups of masked individuals arriving in unmarked vehicles, without badges or a means of discerning who they are," the judge wrote. "They are the problem that the court in Doornbos foreshadowed: a presence indistinguishable from lawbreakers."Goodwin rejected the government’s position that masks are necessary to ensure the safety of the federal agents. Attorney Torreya Hamilton.LinkedIn Torreya Hamilton, a former Cook County prosecutor who was one of Doornbos’s lawyers in the 2013 lawsuit, said Goodwin’s reliance on the case reflects the novelty of the issue.“These judges are having to scour all over the country to find legal opinions to cite because, until recently, our law enforcement officers have not worn masks and driven around in rental cars without license plates,” Hamilton said. “The reason the West Virginia judge is citing to our Chicago case is because there is not a lot of law out there on this topic. It has long been a forbidden practice for an officer to hide his identity while acting on behalf of the government.”She said the principle is a basic one. “Like the police officers in my case, these ICE and Border Patrol agents are government employees, and therefore we are their employers," Hamilton said. “And we have every right to hold them accountable for their conduct, which we can’t do unless we know who they are.” Related In fiery meeting, Rep. Delia Ramirez reminds DHS head Noem of plans to pursue her impeachment Greg Bovino’s the star of Trump’s deportation show. We trace his roots. Tear gas, car crashes, chokeholds: Risky tactics have driven Trump’s Chicago deportation ‘blitz’ Masked ICE agents put damper on Oak Park Girl Scout food drive: ‘It’s heartbreaking as a mom’ Masked immigration agents erode trust and intimidate, former No. 2 DEA boss, others say Some federal immigration officers drive cars without license plates ...read more read less
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