Since the start of the new Trump administration (early 2025), we’ve seen an increase in federal law enforcement operations in major U.S. cities. In New York, Chicago, and Denver, federal agents (especially Immigration and Customs Enforcement — ICE) have conducted widespread immigration enforcement actions, often without coordination with local police. In Newark, residents filmed armed federal officers making arrests outside schools. In Los Angeles, reports emerged of families afraid to take their children to medical appointments for fear of encountering enforcement teams.
Public opposition to ICE activities has been intense. These operations are eroding the already fragile trust between local police and the communities they serve.
Police–community relations have been a problem for decades. Since at least the 1950s, police chiefs, police commissioners, and directors of public safety have tried one initiative after another (e.g., “neighborhood watch,” community policing, etc.) to build, strengthen, or improve their relationship with racial and ethnic minorities.Programs like Cincinnati’s collaborative agreement after the 2001 riots showed how sustained engagement could reduce tension and crime simultaneously. Other efforts, like superficial “listening sessions” without follow-through, produced only cynicism.
But the principle has remained constant across both successes and failures: trust is the foundation of effective policing. Without it, witnesses don’t come forward. Victims don’t report crimes. Communities become less safe for everyone.
Many chiefs hesitate to speak out, worried about jeopardizing federal funding streams or creating conflicts with federal partners they depend on for task forces and resources. These are important considerations. But they pale in comparison to the damage being done right now to relationships that took years to build and can be destroyed in weeks.
If today’s chiefs truly believe that community trust matters, they can’t stay silent while federal agents damage the very relationships they’ve spent careers trying to repair. Speaking out doesn’t require grandstanding. At least four possible actions can be taken:
- Issuing Joint statements from organizations such as the Major Cities Chiefs Association or the International Chiefs of Police, making clear that uncoordinated federal enforcement undermines local public safety
- Make Public announcements (via media channels, at city or county councils, etc.) that local officers will not participate in or provide information for immigration enforcement operations.
- Directly communicate with affected communities about what role local police will and won’t play.
- Collect and disseminate data that indicates how these operations impact crime reporting and community cooperation.
Admittedly, this will create tension with federal authorities. But protecting community trust isn’t a partisan position. It’s a professional imperative. Chiefs (and those coming up in police organizations behind them) who’ve built their careers on the principle that legitimacy matters can’t abandon it when political winds shift.
Silence is complicity. And it’s long past time for leadership.