In the early 1990’s the Georgia Supreme Court banned the KKK from wearing the hood part of their costumes in public. They could still wear their robes but could not obscure their faces. I’m not certain if that case is still law in Georgia but if you can ban the KKK from obscuring their faces, some of the same arguments could be argued to apply even more strongly to masked federal agents.
In the early 1990’s the Georgia Supreme Court banned the KKK from wearing the hood part of their costumes in public. They could still wear their robes but could not obscure their faces. I’m not certain if that case is still law in Georgia but if you can ban the KKK from obscuring their faces, some of the same arguments could be argued to apply even more strongly to masked federal agents.
In the early 1990’s the Georgia Supreme Court banned the KKK from wearing the hood part of their costumes in public. They could still wear their robes but could not obscure their faces. I’m not certain if that case is still law in Georgia but if you can ban the KKK from obscuring their faces, some of the same arguments could be argued to apply even more strongly to masked federal agents.