Millions of Americans access federal buildings where the government provides necessary services. The Federal Protective Service, or FPS, is tasked with securing those facilities and keeping government employees and visiting members of the public safe. This important work of securing access to public institutions has its roots in a small cadre of officers formed shortly after the Revolutionary War to protect public sites. This function grew rapidly during the New Deal expansion of federal agencies, and FPS’s scope, powers, and access to data were further expanded after the attacks of September 11, 2001.
In 2002, FPS became part of the newly created Department of Homeland Security, and its activities and authorities have expanded dramatically in the years since. FPS now operates well beyond the bounds of federal property. It has the power to bring into its operations the other large police forces under the control of DHS, including Customs and Border Protection (CBP), Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and the Secret Service. FPS also works with other federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies as well as defense contractor personnel.
But this expansion in the scope of its operations has not been matched by the development of rules to ensure that the agency’s operations are legitimate and transparent, and this has led FPS to overreach under political pressure. In 2020, for example, FPS oversaw and facilitated a months-long DHS-led crackdown on racial justice demonstrators in Portland, Oregon. While some vandalism — broken windows and graffiti — did occur at a federal courthouse, the government response, which invoked FPS’s legal authority to protect federal property, included camouflage-clad Border Patrol special forces officers whisking protesters off the streets into unmarked vans and the DHS intelligence office creating dossiers on protesters and monitoring journalists.
Now, the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 has called for further exploiting FPS’s protective mission for political ends. Project 2025 proposes to deploy FPS to quash mass protests while making the agency directly responsive to political decision makers.
The DHS inspector general has documented FPS’s lack of processes and safeguards to prevent this type of abuse. FPS’s permissive operating environment has allowed DHS political leadership to deploy it to facilitate crackdowns on demonstrations, monitor nationwide protest movements, and intimidate people speaking their mind about hot-button topics online. Moreover, a broad mandate and lack of clear safeguards have likely undermined FPS’s core physical security mission, as evidenced in numerous oversight inquiries about its inability to manage its contractor workforce.
To address these persistent problems, three main steps are needed. First, Congress should narrow and clarify FPS’s purpose. Second, FPS must strengthen transparency to Congress and the public about how it secures federal facilities. And third, states and localities should prepare, as they have at times in the past, to defend their constituents against overreach by DHS law enforcement through legislation and executive order.