During her latest appearance before a Senate committee, Attorney General Pam Bondi covered a fair amount of ground. The Republican struggled with a question about the administration following court orders, clumsily tried to dodge a question about why she thinks the availability of automatic firing devices on semiautomatic weapons would make Americans “safer,” and took the hearing in a rather intemperate direction after being asked about Donald Trump’s allegedly corrupt crypto schemes.
But there was another exchange that stood out to me as especially notable. The Guardian reported:
[Bondi] professed ignorance of reports of immigration officials hiding their faces with masks during roundups of undocumented people, despite widespread video evidence and reports that they are instilling pervasive fear and panic. Challenged at a Wednesday Capitol Hill subcommittee hearing by Gary Peters, a Democratic senator for Michigan, Bondi, who as the country’s top law officer has a prominent role in the Trump administration’s hardline immigration policy, implied she was unaware of plain-clothed agents concealing their faces while carrying out arrests but suggested it was for self-protection.
In fact, pressed on masked ICE agents, the attorney general responded, “Senator Peters, that’s the first time that issue has come to me, about them, you’re saying law enforcement officers when they cover their faces? … I’d be happy to look at that issue.”
PETERS: How are you gonna ensure the safety of the public & officers if they continue to not follow required protocol to ID themselves as law enforcement?BONDI: That's the first that issue has come to me. You're saying officers when they cover their faces? I do know they are being doxxed.
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-06-25T15:15:32.095Z
To be fair, Bondi didn’t explicitly say she was unfamiliar with the issue, but given the context, her sworn testimony certainly gave that impression. Indeed, she literally said this was “the first time” she’d been confronted with this, which seemed hard to believe given that this has been a subject of considerable public debate of late.
As for the attorney general’s suggestion that ICE agents are entitled to anonymity, to prevent “doxxing,” The New York Times’ Jamelle Bouie explained otherwise in his latest column.








