02/13/2026 | News release | Distributed by Public on 02/13/2026 14:52
As Mayors of America's largest cities and economic engines, we bear direct responsibility for public safety in the most diverse communities in the nation. We know what keeps communities safe. Public safety depends on trust between residents and law enforcement. When federal agents operate in our streets without identification, without warrants, and without accountability, that trust is shattered. The result is not safety - it is disorder, fear, and the erosion of local authority to govern and protect its residents.
We stand united with Democratic Leaders Hakeem Jeffries and Chuck Schumer in demanding immediate reform and an end to ICE's unchecked and reckless operation in American cities. All of us agree that for so long as the agency exists, new funding for the Department of Homeland Security must be conditioned on the comprehensive 10-point framework released last week.
In Minneapolis, the world witnessed the ultimate cost of unchecked federal power. The tragic deaths of Renee Good, a mother of three, and Alex Pretti, an intensive care nurse helping another resident being harmed by federal law enforcement, both U.S. citizens, are not isolated events. They are the foreseeable yet devastating reality of allowing a federal agency to operate as a violent paramilitary force in American cities, shielded by immunity and emboldened by impunity. It is time for Congress to exercise its authority and hold DHS accountable.
As Congress approaches the February 13th funding deadline, we issue a somber warning: what happened and is continuing to happen in Minneapolis and in our cities is part of a terrifying and intentional pattern of violent tactics used by federal law enforcement targeting residents - regardless of immigration status -, instilling fear in communities, undermining our constitutional protections, and corroding the democratic values we are sworn to uphold. These things are not just happening in Minneapolis. In addition:
The federal government must be held to the same standard we demand of our local police departments. The 10-point accountability framework is not "radical" or impractical. It is not optional. It represents the bare minimum standard for lawful, professional conduct in a constitutional democracy. The demands set forth in the 10-point accountability framework include:
Professionalism does not hinder law enforcement; it legitimizes it. Anonymity and impunity are the tools of a police state, not a free republic.
We call on Speaker Johnson and Leader Thune to accept these necessary guardrails before the February 13th funding deadline. We urge Congress to hold the line: no blank checks without reform. We cannot support a budget that funds the terrorizing of our communities.
Signed,
Brandon Scott, Mayor of Baltimore
Michelle Wu, Mayor of Boston
Brandon Johnson, Mayor of Chicago
Mike Johnston, Mayor of Denver
Karen Bass, Mayor of Los Angeles
Jacob Frey, Mayor of Minneapolis
Helena Moreno, Mayor of New Orleans
Keith Wilson, Mayor of Portland
Supporting Organizations: African American Mayors Association, Inc; National Forum for Black Public Administrators; National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives.