HR-9068-119
Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary, and in addition to the Committees on Homeland Security, and Ways and Means, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
Sponsored by Joe Neguse (D-CO)
What it does
This bill would establish minimum hiring and background screening standards for newly hired immigration enforcement officers, including age, education, criminal history, social media, and psychological checks. It would require DHS immigration officers to wear identifiable uniforms, display their name and a unique identifier, and carry serialized photo ID cards. It would also mandate body-worn cameras for all officers who interact with the public, set rules for when cameras must be activated and when footage must be publicly released, and require specialized training on topics such as identity verification, de-escalation, language access, and civil rights protections.
Who benefits
Individuals who interact with immigration enforcement officers — including unauthorized immigrants, lawful permanent residents, U.S. citizens, and Native Americans — who would have greater ability to identify officers and access camera footage. People who are wrongfully detained or subjected to misconduct would gain new evidentiary tools. Civil rights organizations and attorneys representing detained individuals would benefit from stronger accountability mechanisms. Whistleblowers and oversight bodies would gain clearer standards to enforce. Communities with high rates of immigration enforcement activity, particularly Latino and immigrant communities, would benefit from increased officer accountability. Legitimate DHS officers who follow the rules would benefit from clearer standards that distinguish them from impostors.
Who is hurt
DHS, ICE, and CBP as agencies would face significant administrative and procurement costs to implement body-worn camera programs, update hiring pipelines, and deliver new training curricula. Taxpayers would bear those implementation costs. Officers conducting undercover or sensitive operations may face operational constraints from identification and camera requirements, even with the bill's exceptions. Applicants who would have been hired under current, less stringent standards — including those with certain disciplinary histories — would be screened out. Agencies may face staffing shortfalls if the enhanced screening requirements reduce the applicant pool during a period of high enforcement demand.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that recent immigration enforcement operations have produced documented cases of officers operating without visible identification, wearing generic "Police" markings, and detaining U.S. citizens and lawful residents — harms the bill's training and ID requirements are specifically designed to prevent. They contend that body-worn cameras have demonstrably reduced use-of-force complaints in municipal policing contexts and that applying the same accountability infrastructure to federal immigration enforcement closes a significant gap. They further argue that stronger hiring screens — particularly for domestic violence history, extremist affiliations, and psychological fitness — are standard practice in other federal law enforcement agencies and that immigration officers, who exercise significant coercive power, should meet no lesser standard.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's body-worn camera mandates, public release timelines, and evidentiary presumptions against officers would create serious operational security risks and expose ongoing investigations — particularly human trafficking and narcotics cases — even with the bill's undercover exceptions. They contend that the 21-day and 5-day public release windows for misconduct and death incidents are too short to protect active investigations and could compromise prosecutions. They further argue that the enhanced hiring screens, including social media reviews and psychological assessments, introduce subjective criteria that could be used to screen out qualified candidates based on viewpoint, and that the resulting reduction in the applicant pool would undermine DHS's ability to staff enforcement operations at congressionally directed levels.