A close-up shows a helmeted law enforcement officer wearing a black face covering and reflective sunglasses, with a crowd of demonstrators and flags visible in the mirrored lenses.
FILE - A U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agent looks on during a protest outside the Federal Building on Friday, June 13, 2025, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Wally Skalij)

SACRAMENTO, CA., 9/12/25 – After a summer characterized by masked federal agents detaining immigrants in Los Angeles, the California Legislature passed two measures Thursday that seek to force law enforcement officers to identify themselves.

Senate Bills 627 and 805 were among the most controversial to pass in the final days of this year’s legislative session. They would ban local, out-of-state and federal law enforcement officers from wearing face coverings, as well as require officers to be readily identifiable, respectively. 

  • State Sen. Scott Wiener, a San Francisco Democrat and lead author of SB 627: “As we go through this horrific era of mass deportation and a Supreme Court that allows this authoritarian regime to do whatever the heck it wants to do — including straight-up racial profiling of Latino people — California should lead and put a stop to the secret police.”

The measures passed along party lines, with Republicans in opposition. Police unions also oppose the proposed mask ban.

  • GOP Sen. Tony Strickland of Huntington Beach, in a statement: “This is a reckless anti-law enforcement proposal that puts law enforcement officers and their families at real risk, undermining the safety of the men and women who bravely protect our communities.”

Though today should be the last day of session, lawmakers are expected to extend their work through Saturday to give final votes to some last-minute deals they struck this week. Those that pass will head to Gov. Gavin Newsom’s desk for his signature or veto, and those that don’t are dead for the year.

Other proposals awaiting Newsom’s decision, include: 

  • Regulate companion bots: SB 243 would put tighter regulations on online chatbots powered by artificial intelligence to limit their risks on young users.
  • Higher car dealer fees: SB 791 would raise the cap car dealers can charge to process documents from $85 to $260.
  • Wage boost for incarcerated firefighters: AB 247 would increase the minimum wage for incarcerated firefighters fighting active wildfires to $7.25 an hour.
  • Abortion pill protections: AB 260 would help protect California pharmacists, doctors and hospitals from penalties for dispensing the abortion pill mifepristone to out-of-state patients, and remove the names of patients and providers from abortion medication prescriptions.
  • Kill mute swans: AB 764would make it easier for hunters and landowners to kill the invasive species.
  • Ban plastic glitter: AB 823 would enforce a first-in-the-nation ban on the sale of personal care products that contain plastic glitter or plastic microbeads.
  • Save the bees: AB 1042 would create a health program for managed honey bees that would provide grants to beekeepers, farmers and others for projects and research supporting the struggling population.

Watch your legislators like a hawk: Sign up for beta access to My Legislator, your weekly report on what your state legislators said, voted on, introduced and more. Our beta version runs weekly until Sept. 15, and we’d love your feedback on what works, what doesn’t, and what you want to see.

CalMatters events: Join us Sept. 24 in Sacramento for a special event celebrating CalMatters’ 10th anniversary and Dan Walters’ 50th year covering California politics. Hear directly from Dan as he reflects on five decades watching the Capitol. Plus, attendees can enter a raffle and win a private dinner with Dan. Members can use the code “MEMBER” at checkout for a discounted ticket. Register here.

Lynn La is the newsletter writer for CalMatters, focusing on California’s top political, policy and Capitol stories every weekday. She produces and curates WhatMatters, CalMatters’ flagship daily newsletter...

Join the Conversation

1 Comment

  1. Again, california leads the ‘anti-America’ way. Let criminals wear masks to commit crimes but prevent law enforcement from wearing masks to prevent leftists from targeting them. America voted to secure the border, stop the illegal invasion, and to start sending the invaders out of our country. Democrats hate America, law & order.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *