Norms Impact
Gov. Newsom Joins Critics Calling DHS Border Video ‘Fascist’ After SS Look-Alike Claims Go Viral
DHS used propaganda-style imagery and absolutist slogans to promote an enforcement commander while federal courts demanded answers—blurring the line between public service and authoritarian messaging.
Nov 2, 2025
⚖ Legal Exposure
Sources
Summary
The Department of Homeland Security posted a promotional video on X featuring Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino, prompting widespread comparisons online to Nazi-era SS imagery and condemnation from California Gov. Gavin Newsom. The episode reflects a normalization of militarized, absolutist political branding in federal law-enforcement messaging while active court oversight of enforcement tactics is being contested. The practical consequence is a further erosion of public trust in neutral administration of immigration enforcement, as propaganda-style communication collides with judicial scrutiny and accusations of excessive force.
Reality Check
When a federal law-enforcement agency broadcasts “WE WILL NOT BE STOPPED” while a judge is demanding accountability for alleged excessive force, we are watching the government condition the public to accept power without limits—and that precedent ultimately narrows our own rights. This conduct is not clearly criminal on the facts given; absent evidence of threats, fraud, or misuse of appropriated funds for prohibited political campaigning, it is unlikely to fit federal criminal statutes like 18 U.S.C. § 242 or § 241. The danger is institutional: DHS is projecting contempt for oversight and adopting rhetoric that frames dissent as “terror or anarchy,” a classic pathway to weaponizing enforcement against political opponents and insulating operations from judicial scrutiny.
Legal Summary
The article supports an ethics/appearance issue stemming from DHS’s stylized promotional video and combative messaging while the subject is under active court scrutiny. It does not describe a transactional quid-pro-quo, personal enrichment, or concrete obstructive acts tied to an identifiable proceeding. On these facts, exposure is best characterized as an ethics and institutional integrity concern rather than prosecutable structural corruption.
Legal Analysis
<h3>5 C.F.R. Part 2635 — Standards of Ethical Conduct (improper use of authority; appearance concerns)</h3><ul><li>DHS promotional messaging (“WE WILL NOT BE STOPPED,” references to “radical terror or anarchy,” and alleged SS-like stylization) risks creating an appearance of bias, intimidation, or politicized law-enforcement posture inconsistent with ethical constraints on official communications.</li><li>Release timing alongside active federal court oversight of Bovino’s immigration sweeps heightens the appearance that agency messaging is being used to project defiance or pressure rather than neutral public information.</li></ul><h3>18 U.S.C. § 1503 / § 1505 — Obstruction of justice / obstruction of proceedings (elements not clearly met on stated facts)</h3><ul><li>The article describes a court order and appellate pause, but does not allege threats, witness tampering, destruction of evidence, or corrupt intent to impede judicial proceedings.</li><li>Absent facts showing the video was intended to influence the judge or interfere with compliance/reporting, the conduct reads as inflammatory public relations rather than prosecutable obstruction.</li></ul><h3>18 U.S.C. § 242 — Deprivation of rights under color of law (insufficient factual predicate in article)</h3><ul><li>Accusations of “excessive force” are referenced, but no specific acts, victims, or willful rights-deprivation details are provided in the article to evaluate criminal exposure.</li></ul><b>Conclusion:</b> The described conduct primarily reflects provocative/politicized government messaging and appearance-based ethics risk, not a money-access-official-action corruption pattern or clearly chargeable criminal obstruction on the stated facts.</p>
Media
Detail
<p>DHS posted a promotional video on X showing Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino outside a federal courthouse in Chicago, intercut with a stylized black-and-white portrait of Bovino in a calf-length black coat with star collar pins and a close-cropped haircut. The video included overlaid text stating “WE WILL NOT BE STOPPED” and used a fast remix of Coldplay’s “Viva la Vida.” DHS captioned the post by saying Bovino “is putting his life on the line to protect our citizens” and that “no amount of radical terror or anarchy will stop us in our mission.”</p><p>The same day the video was released, U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis ordered Bovino to report daily to her Chicago courtroom to explain ongoing immigration sweeps that have prompted accusations of excessive force. The 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals later paused the daily check-in requirement while it considers the Justice Department’s objection that the order would cause “irreparable harm.” Bovino told Fox News he welcomed a direct audience with the judge. Newsom reposted the DHS video and called it evidence of “fascism and authoritarianism.”</p>