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Tag: National Guard

  • ‘It’s not fully over’: DC leaders talk about what’s next after the crime emergency ends – WTOP News

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    Now that the federal law enforcement surge in D.C. has come to an end, many don’t believe there will be a sudden disappearance of police and National Guard.

    Now that the federal law enforcement surge in D.C. has come to an end, many don’t believe there will be a sudden disappearance of police and National Guard. However, one Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner said he’s heard of fewer interactions with residents.

    “It’s not fully over, but I think there is a decrease in the number of instances I’m hearing about,” said Jeremy Sherman, who represents ANC single-member district 1A04 in Columbia Heights.

    But he added, “There are neighbors who are still afraid and scared and so I think this is a rebuilding time.”

    Sherman’s colleague in 1A06, Anthony Thomas-Davis, agreed there were lessons learned during the surge.

    “I think the surge exposed some gaps in our system that require some level of attention,” Thomas-Davis said. “That was largely around public safety and how our officers are deployed in certain manners across the neighborhoods … and largely how our public spaces are being maintained to either discourage crime or to incentivize public space activation in a way that may also deter crime.”

    Thomas-Davis said while D.C. residents, for the most part, did not want the law enforcement surge, as evidenced by the massive protests held over the past month, he does think lessons can be taken from it.

    “I hope as we pivot from the emergency, a lot of residents come together to push District government to address these issues,” Thomas-Davis said, adding that it was his hope D.C. can continue to develop in a way that would not give the Trump administration “an excuse” to impose another emergency.

    “We want to see MPD get back to community policing and not infringing upon neighbors’ rights and building positive relationships,” Sherman said. “On the positive side, a lot of neighbors have come together. … There are a lot of WhatsApp and Signal groups that have formed over the past month, and those continue to be places for neighbors to connect and support each other.”

    Sherman and Thomas-Davis represent areas in Columbia Heights with a large Hispanic population and the location of several interactions with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. They said they expect some of those interactions to continue.

    Sherman said he is hoping the city will come together now and support their neighbors and local businesses.

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    Alan Etter

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  • Is Trump’s troop buildup in U.S. cities a declaration of war — or something else?

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    Over the weekend, President Trump shared a doctored AI image of himself as Lt. Col. Bill Kilgore, the crazed cavalry commander in the 1979 Vietnam War film, “Apocalypse Now,” crouched in a black Stetson hat in front of a flaming Chicago skyline abuzz with black helicopters.

    “‘I love the smell of deportations in the morning,’” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “Chicago about to find out why it’s called the Department of WAR.”

    Trump has long promised to deploy the National Guard to America’s major urban hubs. But his unprecedented push this summer to deploy military convoys into Los Angeles and Washington, D.C. — and drumbeat of threats to send yet more into cities from Baltimore to San Francisco — has left many Americans divided on whether his administration is trying to protect people in Democratic-controlled cities or wage war on them.

    When Trump first sent troops into L.A. in June, he argued federal immigration agents needed protection from locals who tried to obstruct them from fulfilling their mission. In August, he deployed the National Guard to Washington, D.C., seizing on instances of violent crime to claim a public emergency.

    And now he has paired the issues of crime and immigration as he threatens Chicago, deploying militaristic imagery and rhetoric that break longstanding American norms.

    As Trump goads Democratic-led cities, dubbing them poorly run “hellholes,” Americans are grappling with a fundamental question of American democracy: Is Trump simply fulfilling his election mandate to ramp up deportations and combat crime, as he and his supporters argue, or ushering in a new era of American authoritarianism?

    Trump’s critics warn that he is exaggerating crime in American cities to score political points. In deploying troops to Los Angeles and D.C., they argue, Trump is setting up a military police state that targets political opponents, tramples on due process, installs loyalists over institutionalists, and erodes longstanding distinctions between the military and domestic law enforcement.

    “This is how authoritarians behave, this is not how the leader of a free democracy behaves.” said Elizabeth Goitein, senior director of the Liberty and National Security Program at the Brennan Center for Justice. “He is taking a page from authoritarian rulers around the world who have used crime as an excuse to consolidate power and suppress rights.”

    Conservatives tend to brush aside such concerns, arguing that Trump’s deployment of troops simply delivers on a campaign promise. They note he ran on a platform of mass deportations and fighting crime in major cities.

    “There’s a problem to be dealt with there,” said James E. Campbell, professor emeritus of political science at the University at Buffalo. “He has the constitutional authority to employ the National Guard, and that’s part of the powers of commander in chief in Article II. What’s peculiar here is some cities don’t want the help — or at least the leaders of the cities.”

    While the courts will ultimately settle the legal questions of what Trump can do, he seems to be betting that he can put Democratic leaders in a defensive position at a time when polls show the vast majority of Americans are worried about crime.

    When Illinois’ Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker pushed back this weekend against Trump’s Chicago plans, accusing the president of “threatening to go to war with an American city,” Trump insisted he was not spoiling for a fight.

    “We’re not going to war,” Trump told reporters at the White House. “We’re going to clean up our cities.”

    Democrats say Trump is scaremongering about crime in American cities to score points against his political enemies, noting that homicides and other violent crimes have dropped over the last five years in cities across the nation.

    According to a recent analysis by the Council on Criminal Justice, a policy think tank, violent crime is lower in most cities than the pandemic peak of 2020-21. But the report noted that most of the decline in the national homicide rate has been driven by large drops in cities with high homicide rates, such as Baltimore and St Louis. More than half of sample cities continue to experience homicide levels above pre-2020 rates.

    For many Americans, crime remains a potent political issue.

    About 81% of Americans and 68% of Democrats, according to a recent survey from the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, see crime as a “major problem” in large cities.

    But it remains to be seen if Americans will warm to Trump’s hard-line tactics: about 55% of Americans in the AP poll said it’s acceptable for the U.S. military and National Guard to assist local police in big cities, but less than a third support federal troops taking control of city police departments.

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    Throughout the 2024 election, Trump threatened to deploy the National Guard to fight crime.

    “In cities where there has been a complete breakdown of law and order, where the fundamental rights of our citizens are being intolerably violated,” he promised in his Agenda47 campaign platform. “I will not hesitate to send in federal assets including the National Guard until safety is restored.”

    Still, there was some shock when Trump deployed the National Guard and U.S. Marines to L.A. in June after a clash erupted in the heavily Latino city of Paramount as immigration agents ratcheted up his deportation agenda.

    The conflict fell short of an all-out collapse of law and order. After Border Patrol agents were spotted setting up a staging area outside a Home Depot, hundreds of protesters gathered, some hurled rocks at federal vehicles as agents fired tear gas and flash-bang grenades at the crowd. Within hours, Trump ordered 2,000 National Guard soldiers to L.A.— against the will of California Gov. Gavin Newsom — to protect federal agents and property.

    Sending in the National Guard without a governor’s consent was a highly unusual step. The last time it happened was in 1965, when Lyndon B. Johnson federalized the Alabama National Guard to protect civil rights marchers marching from Selma to Montgomery.

    But L.A. was not a one-off for Trump. In August, Trump announced he would take federal control of Washington, D.C.’s police department and activate National Guard troops to help “reestablish law and order.” The city, he said, had been “overtaken by violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals, roving mobs of wild youth, drugged-out maniacs and homeless people.”

    Dist. Atty. Brian Schwalb, the elected attorney general of the District of Columbia, argued “there is no crime emergency” in D.C. “Violent crime in DC reached historic 30-year lows last year,” Schwalb noted, “and is down another 26% so far this year.”

    But Trump put Democrats on the defensive as he seized on a handful of violent cases in the nation’s capital: two Israeli embassy staffers fatally gunned down in May, a congressional intern shot dead in June and an administration staffer assaulted in an attempted carjacking in August.

    And he has adopted a similar strategy as he threatens to send troops to Chicago, highlighting a violent Labor Day weekend, in which nine people were killed and more than 50 injured across the city.

    Chicago has long struggled with violent crime, but city officials note that homicides and shootings have declined, putting the city on track for its lowest homicide rate in half a century.

    Mayor Brandon Johnson said homicides are down 30% in the last year in Chicago and his police department has taken 24,000 guns off the street, most of which came from Republican-led states, since he took office in May 2023.

    “This stunt that this president is attempting to execute is not real. It doesn’t help drive us towards a more safe, affordable, big city,” Johnson said last month as he called on Trump to release $800 million in violence prevention funds that the federal government cut in April.

    Already, Trump has declared implausibly quick results in curbing crime in Washington, D.C..

    “D.C. was a hellhole and now it’s safe,” the president declared less than two weeks after deploying troops to the nation’s capital. “Within one week, we will have no crime in Chicago.”

    When asked about Trump’s strategy, Adam Gelb, the president and chief executive of the Council on Criminal Justice, said the obvious challenge was the Trump administration’s solutions tended to be, “by definition, short term dopamine hits and not sustainable long term solutions.”

    “That’s what history tells us: we can have short-term impact with shocks to the system like this, but they tend to be fleeting.”

    Asked what would happen if the shock to the system was permanent, Gelb said he did not know.

    “It hasn’t been tested,” Gelb said, “not in this country with respect to deployment of troops in massive numbers.”

    Ultimately, Gelb said, Trump’s incursion into cities was “testing Americans’ tolerance for crime and militarization.”

    “If there’s a perception that these tactics are responsible for dramatic reductions in crime,” he asked, “will people become more tolerant of them?”

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    Trump has suggested that Americans will allow him unlimited powers if he is perceived as stopping crime.

    “Most people are saying, ‘If you call him a dictator, if he stops crime, he can be whatever he wants,’ ” Trump said last month in a televised Cabinet meeting. “I am not a dictator, by the way,”

    “I’m the president of the United States,” he added. “If I think our country is in danger — and it is in danger in these cities — I can do it.”

    Daniel Treisman, a professor of political science at UCLA, said Trump is “the most extreme case yet of a leader who comes to power in a long-established democracy and wants to act like an authoritarian — to break down all restrictions on his power and intimidate his enemies.”

    Most alarming of all, he said, was the Trump administration’s purging of professionals from federal agencies such as the Department of Justice and Federal Bureau of Investigation in favor of loyalists.

    The co-author of “Spin Dictators: The Changing Face of Tyranny in the 21st century,” Treisman said Trump’s aims appeared to closely resemble those of Viktor Orbán, prime minister of Hungary, or Nayib Bukele, president of El Salvador.

    “I would like to believe that he will face a lot more obstacles than those leaders did,” Treisman said.

    Even if a majority of Americans think Trump is right that crime is a problem — or a substantial number support indefinite occupations of American cities or the elimination of due process — some argue that doesn’t make it democratic.

    “There’s no such thing as electing a president to undo democracy and violate the rule of law,” Goitein said. “He can’t say, ‘Well, the American people elected me to shred the Constitution.’ ”

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    Jenny Jarvie

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  • ICE confirms 4 Chicago-area arrests as Trump administration’s ‘Midway Blitz’ operation gets underway

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Immigrant advocates say they have already received a large volume of calls to their hotline about Immigration and Customs Enforcement encounters in the Chicago area in recent days.

    Some elected leaders worry that this just the start of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in the area.

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    “It’s obvious that operations have begun in Chicago, and it’s even more obvious they’re going to be targeting our communities here in the Southwest Side again. We’re afraid. Our neighbors are afraid,” said Any Huamani, who is on the Brighton Park Neighborhood Council and is a Southwest Side Rapid Response team member.

    The Department of Homeland Security says their operation “Midway Blitz” in the Chicago area is underway. They say they are targeting violent offenders who are here illegally.

    On social media, ICE posted a picture of one of their SUVs with the Chicago skyline behind it, saying they are here to remove the dangerous public safety threats.

    Late Monday, ICE said agents arrested at least four men from Mexico in the Chicago area on Sunday. They are accused of crimes like DUI, vehicular burglary, armed robbery, domestic battery, assault and sexual assault of a child, ICE said.

    “So far, it’s been successful. We have successfully arrested some criminal aliens over the last few days. We just began our surge. We’re going to be bringing in our our partners, our other DHS partners, DOJ partners, CBP partners coming in. So, they’ll be coming in and participating in this ICE-led operation,” said ICE official Marcos Charles.

    SEE ALSO | Katie Abraham’s father speaks out on DHS’ operation ‘Midway Blitz’ in Chicago area

    ICE said one arrest was made at 47th and Archer and another was made at 49th and Archer. ICE did not provide locations for the other two arrests.

    Video provided to ABC7 shows federal agents wearing badges that say “ICE” handcuffing a man near Archer and Pulaski. Neighbors say that man is a flower vendor.

    “We have confirmed in my ward… detained in my ward… there have been three people. One in 50th and Pulaski; he a was a street vendor selling flowers. The other, a couple of blocks down in Archer, was just standing on the sidewalk. The third one was waiting on the bus on 47th and Archer,” said Ald. Jeylu Gutierrez, who represents the 14th Ward. “This was never about arresting the worst of the worst. It’s been about terrorizing our community.”

    Gutierrez says the wife of the flower vendor has been notified, and the family is figuring out their next steps.

    On Monday morning, the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights says their teams were deployed to 61st and Kildare on Chicago’s Southwest Side after reports of immigration agents in the area.

    LIVE UPDATES | Chicago federal intervention: Tracking surge in immigration enforcement operations

    “What we do know is they attempted arrests, and there has been at least one arrest for today,” said ICIRR Senior Director of Deportation Defense Rey Wences.

    While announcing the immigration blitz on Monday, DHS also listed 11 specific people agents are looking for in Chicago.

    Many of those people were detained in the Cook County Jail for criminal cases, but later released.

    DHS accuses the jail of not cooperating. But in a statement on Monday night, the Cook County Sheriff’s Office says state law prohibits them from releasing any detainees into the custody of federal immigration authorities without a signed arrest warrant from a judge.

    Meanwhile, Evanston is also preparing for possible ICE raids in the coming days. The mayor there was tipped off by the governor’s office and sent out an email blast, letting residents know.

    “We’re also working with community partners. So for example, this morning, the high school sent an email blast as well to all of their families, knowing that some people might get ours and not theirs, some people might get theirs and not ours,” said Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss.

    The Evanston City Council will vote on a resolution calling for the state to address ICE agents wearing masks on Monday night.

    “We believe that it is just fundamentally wrong in a democracy for an agent of the state to use the power of the state without identifying themselves clearly with transparency and accountability,” Biss said.

    Many people in the Chicago area are wondering if this past weekend was the calm before the ICE storm.

    “Operation ‘Midway Blitz’ is not public safety. It’s a declaration of war on Mexicans and Latinos in Chicago,” said state Rep. Aaron Ortiz, who represents the 1st District.

    Immigrant advocates reminded the public to not provoke federal agents and to take video of any encounters from a safe distance.

    Religious leaders rally against immigration crackdown in Chicago: ‘Faith over fear’

    Religious leaders from a diverse group of faith backgrounds stood with one voice on Daley Plaza to decry the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.

    Meanwhile, more than one dozen faith leaders came together on Monday, taking a stand against ICE raids and rallying in support of immigrants in a campaign they are calling Faith Over Fear.

    “ICE cannot survive the fire of a forge,” said Reverend David Black with the First Presbyterian Church of Chicago.

    “But what he’s done is rallying us together. I’ve not seen this in a long time. He’s fighting with all his weapons of his mouth and weapons of the army. We’re fighting for something. It’s our DNA, our faith, our faith is essential of who we are. He’s not ready for this and he’s not more powerful,” said Fr. Michael Pfleger with St. Sabina Church.

    Religious leaders from a diverse group of faith backgrounds stood with one voice on Daley Plaza to decry the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown and the possibility of a National Guard deployment in Chicago, as the White House border czar says the use of National Guard troops to protect and support immigration enforcement operations is “on the table.”

    “This morning, as I dropped my kids off at school. Like so many of us in Chicago did this morning, we took our kids to school, but today felt different,” said Rev Sandra Van-Opstal with Lawndale Christian Community Church.

    “I’ve got to tell you, there’s a lot of fear. I live in the Pilsen/Little Village area, and it’s been quieter these past few days, and so, we suspect that people will be navigating the conditions in our city cautiously,” said Ray Wences with the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights.

    Little Village is all decked out in Mexican colors in advance of this weekend’s Independence Day celebration. Many street vendors are selling flags and other items for those gearing up for the festivities.

    “God stood on the side of the vulnerable and the oppressed,” said Mishkan Chicago founder Rabbi Lizzi Heydemann. “God split the sea for them and said to the world, the way that you treat the least among you, the strangers, the slaves, the servants, the way that you treat them is a test of your society.”

    The faith leaders are preparing to support those families who may be impacted by ICE detentions.

    “As a way to be able to walk with the families after something has happened, we’re going to reactivate a lot of the resource network that we had during the new arrivals mission and be able to partner with churches and other groups to be able to get emergency items out to all of them,” said New Life Centers CEO Matt DeMateo.

    SEE ALSO | ‘We’re not going to war’ with Chicago, Trump says, after sharing ominous meme

    A protest and a march against the operation are set to get underway in the Loop late Tuesday afternoon.

    Trump, meanwhile, continues to focus on Chicago crime as operation “Midway Blitz” ramps up.

    “And I don’t know why Chicago isn’t calling us saying, ‘Please give us help,’ when you have, over just a short period of time, 50 murders and hundreds of people shot, and then, you have a governor that stands up and says how crime is just fine. It’s really crazy,” Trump said.

    In an op-ed piece in the New York Times, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson addressed a possible National Guard deployment to address crime, saying in part, “lowering crime rates here does not require an occupation of our city by armed members of the National Guard, as the White House continues to threaten us with…. Sending in the National Guard is the wrong solution to a real problem.”

    Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker responded to the ICE post about coming after dangerous criminals, saying it is not about fighting crime, and that if it were, his administration would have heard from the Department of Homeland Security to coordinate efforts. The governor says this is about scaring Illinoisans.

    The ICIRR Family Support Network was founded to connect immigrant communities with support. They can be reached at 855-435-7693.

    A spokesperson for Pritzker, issued a statement, saying, “The Governor’s Office has received no formal communication or information from the Trump Administration. Like the public and press, we are learning of their operations through their social media as they attempt to produce a reality television show. As Trump has said himself, this is not about seriously fighting crime or reforming immigration – it’s about Trump’s plan to go to war with America’s third-largest city. If he cared about delivering real solutions for Illinois, then we would have heard from him. Unlike Trump’s reality show, we don’t like keeping people in the dark. Since we have learned of the Trump Administration’s plans to deploy federal agents and active-duty military to Illinois, Gov. Pritzker has shared information with the public and the Governor’s Office has remained in regular contact with leaders and partners at the City of Chicago, Cook County, the Illinois congressional delegation, state legislature, and mayors and representatives from the collar counties.”

    Johnson also issued a statement, saying, “We have received no notice of any enhanced immigration action by the Trump administration. We are concerned about potential militarized immigration enforcement without due process because of ICE’s track record of detaining and deporting American citizens and violating the human rights of hundreds of detainees. ICE sent a 4-year-old boy with stage 4 kidney cancer to Honduras, even though the child was an American citizen. There are more than 500 documented incidents of human rights abuses at detention facilities since Trump took office, including deaths of detainees and alleged cases of sexual abuse of minors by federal immigration agents. Because of these incidents and more, we remain opposed to militarized immigration enforcement that runs afoul of the Constitution in our city. We encourage residents to visit www.Chicago.gov/KYR to stay informed on their rights.”

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    Jasmine Minor

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  • Trump not at war with Chicago but with cartels, Tom Homan says

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    White House border czar Tom Homan is doubling down on President Donald Trump’s stated plans to send the National Guard to Chicago, telling CNN that the next steps in the White House crime crackdown could come to the fore next week.

    “Absolutely,” he told Jake Tapper on Sunday on “State of the Union.” “You can expect action in most sanctuary cities across the country. President Trump’s prioritized sanctuary cities because sanctuary cities knowingly release illegal alien public safety threats to the streets every day. That’s where the problem is.”

    Trump dispatched National Guard troops to Washington and took control of the city’s police department in August — much to the chagrin of city residents who overwhelmingly oppose the takeover. But boasting that the nation’s capital is “NOW A CRIME FREE ZONE,” the president has looked to cities such as Chicago, New Orleans and Baltimore as perhaps next in his nationwide immigration and crime crackdown.

    “We’re going in,” he said of a coming National Guard deployment to Chicago last Tuesday.

    “They’re a force multiplier,” Homan told Tapper. “They’re on the table. I mean, they have been used by every administration since I have been working for the government starting in 1984. Every administration has used the Guard and the military on the border. And they have been very beneficial.”

    But Trump only further inflamed tensions on Saturday, when he took to Truth Social with an image depicting himself as Lt. Col. Bill Kilgore from the 1979 Vietnam War epic “Apocalypse Now.”

    “Chicago about to find out why it’s called the Department of War,” the post read, referencing an order he signed Friday rebranding the Defense Department.

    Immediately, Democrats in Illinois and throughout the Windy City raised alarm at the veiled threat.

    Homan played down their concerns, telling Tapper that Trump’s quip was taken out of context, and that the president intends to go to war not with the city of Chicago, but with its criminal cartels.

    “President Trump and this administration, yes, we’re at war with the criminal cartels and those who want to murder and rape American citizens,” he said. “You’re damn right.”

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  • Trump roils Chicago Democrats with ‘Apocalypse Now’ meme hinting at National Guard deployment

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    President Donald Trump on Saturday gave possibly his strongest hint yet that he may deploy federal troops to Chicago by posting a parody meme of himself as a commander at war with Chicago. The post drew a swift rebuke from Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and other officials who said it amounted to a threat.

    In the image, Trump, known to provoke his opponents with his savvy use of social media, is styled as Robert Duvall’s character in “Apocalypse Now,” a Vietnam War epic about a decorated U.S. officer who has gone rogue deep in the Cambodian jungle.

    “I love the smell of deportations in the morning…” Trump wrote above the image, a play on the famous quote from the hit 1979 film.

    “Chicago is about to find out why it’s called the Department of WAR,” he wrote, followed by three helicopter emoji. It came a day after he signed an executive order changing the Defense Department’s name to the Department of War.

    ‘SLAP IN THE FACE’: MAJOR BLUE STATE GOVERNOR SIGNS BILL OPENING FINANCIAL AID TO ILLEGALS

    Trump shared a digitally altered meme depicting himself as a commander “at war” with Chicago, drawing backlash from Illinois leaders. (President Donald Trump via Truth Social)

    The post appeared aimed at provoking Pritzker and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, who have both strongly opposed Trump’s threats to activate the National Guard in the Windy City to clamp down on crime and help enhance immigration enforcement efforts. 

    In the image, Trump is dressed in military fatigues resembling Duvall’s character, Lt. Col. Bill Kilgore, a flamboyant and fearless air cavalry officer who leads a helicopter air assault on a Vietnamese village.

    Helicopters fly over the Chicago skyline in a fiery background, evoking Vietnam War scenes.

    The text “Chipocalypse Now” is scrawled on the bottom of the image, a riff on “Apocalypse Now,” with “Chi” referring to Chicago.

    Trump’s goading appeared to work. Within an hour, Pritzker shot back, with Johnson also weighing in.

    ILLINOIS GOV CALLS FOR MASS PROTESTS AGAINST TRUMP ADMIN: GOP ‘CANNOT KNOW A MOMENT OF PEACE’

    President Donald Trump points while speaking in the Oval Office

    President Trump on Saturday gave possibly his strongest hint yet that he may deploy federal troops to Chicago by posting a parody meme of himself as a commander at war with Chicago (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

    “The President of the United States is threatening to go to war with an American city,” Pritzker wrote on X “This is not a joke. This is not normal. Donald Trump isn’t a strongman, he’s a scared man. Illinois won’t be intimidated by a wannabe dictator.”

    Johnson conveyed similar words of warning. 

    “The President’s threats are beneath the honor of our nation, but the reality is that he wants to occupy our city and break our Constitution,” Johnson wrote. “We must defend our democracy from this authoritarianism by protecting each other and protecting Chicago from Donald Trump.”

    JB Pritzker holds a press conference

    Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker speaks during a press conference amid reports of possible federal deployments to Chicago Sept. 2, 2025.  (Kamil Krazaczynski/AFP via Getty Images)

    Another outspoken Trump critic, Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., also decried the post on Saturday during remarks before a parade in Chicago’s Pilsen neighborhood.

    “This tweet this morning was disgusting to suggest that the troops are coming into Chicago or that the Department of War is going to be engaged is an embarrassment,” Durban said, according to Fox 32 Chicago. 

    Trump has repeatedly floated the idea of deploying the National Guard in Chicago, replicating operations in Washington, D.C., which has also seen the federal government take control of the local police. 

    National Guard units sent without state approval are generally restricted to defending federal property and personnel. When Guard troops were deployed to Los Angeles in June over anti-U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement protests, they were confined to federal buildings and escort duties for immigration agents. In Washington, D.C., which is under federal jurisdiction, Guard units have conducted armed patrols alongside local police.

    Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson speaks at a press conference following President Donald Trump’s comments about possibly sending U.S. troops to Chicago and Baltimore.

    Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson (Getty Image/ Kamil Krazaczynski)

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    Chicago recorded 573 homicides in 2024, marking the 13th straight year Chicago has led the nation in total murders, according to Chicago Police Department data compiled by Wirepoints.

    According to the Council on Criminal Justice’s year-end 2024 update, aggravated assaults declined by 4% compared to 2023 but remained 4% higher than in 2019. The council reported that gun assaults fell 15%, though they were still 5% above 2019 levels, and that carjackings dropped 32% year-over-year, yet were 25% higher than in 2019.

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  • Hundreds of additional National Guard personnel coming to DC – WTOP News

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    There are growing signs that the deployment of the National Guard in D.C isn’t going to end soon and that President Donald Trump’s federal law enforcement surge will continue into the fall.

    For all the latest developments in Congress, follow WTOP Capitol Hill correspondent Mitchell Miller at Today on the Hill.

    There are growing signs that the deployment of National Guard personnel in D.C isn’t going to end any time soon and that President Donald Trump’s federal law enforcement surge in the District will continue into the fall.

    Georgia’s governor announced Friday that his state will send 300 more National Guard personnel to D.C. later this month.

    Exactly how long the 2,200 National Guard troops currently in D.C. will be on District streets remains an open question.

    In order to be extended, the president’s declared crime emergency for D.C. is supposed to be voted on by Congress within 30 days. That would place the deadline for a vote on Sept. 10.

    But no votes on whether to extend the crime emergency are scheduled in the House or Senate next week.

    Republican leaders have reportedly decided not to hold votes, citing Mayor Muriel Bowser’s cooperation with the Trump administration as it works with her office on developing a plan to beautify the city and make it safer.

    But House Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters that GOP lawmakers are still working out several proposals to fight crime.

    “We’re working through various ideas on what that can entail, and really, a nationwide crime bill is one of the things on the table,” he said.

    Bowser, however, said this week that she still considers next Wednesday the deadline for extending the crime emergency.

    “The only way it can be extended, legally, is by the Congress,” Bowser said.

    Trump has indicated that he intends to keep the National Guard on D.C.’s streets for the foreseeable future.

    The Army said Thursday that the D.C. National Guard’s active-duty orders have been extended through Nov. 30. But officials indicated that was for administrative purposes, to ensure personnel remain eligible for their benefits.

    As of now, there is no specific date set for the deactivation of about 950 D.C. National Guard personnel. Also, the order does not apply to the more than 1,200 National Guard members from six states who have been deployed in D.C.

    Georgia sending more troops to DC

    Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp announced Friday that about 300 of his state’s National Guard members will deploy to D.C. at the request of the Trump administration.

    They are expected to arrive in the District in mid-September.

    “Georgia is proud to stand with the Trump administration in its mission to ensure the security and beauty of our nation’s capital,” Kemp said in a statement.

    The governor said the troops will go to D.C. “to aid in restoring public safety.”

    Georgia will be the seventh state to send National Guard personnel to D.C. All of the states are led by Republican governors.

    D.C. Attorney General Brian Schwalb on Thursday filed a lawsuit to try to stop Trump from deploying National Guard personnel in the District.

    Senator questions deployment

    U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia is a strong supporter of the military, but he questions how National Guard members are being utilized.

    Kaine, a Democrat, said if the Senate voted on whether to extend the law enforcement surge in D.C., he believes it would be defeated. He said the Trump administration’s use of the National Guard is “just for show.”

    Kaine said this week he was walking near Lincoln Park, which is about a mile east of the U.S. Capitol and saw about six members of the National Guard there.

    “I walk through Lincoln Park all the time. It’s very safe, it’s very peaceful,” he said. “It was no more safe or peaceful than it was before.”

    Kaine, who’s a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said he enjoys seeing people in uniform and saying hello to them.

    “But I wouldn’t be surprised if some of these guard members who are here are wondering, ‘Why are we here?’” he said.

    National Guard members generally have to leave their jobs when they are called for duty.

    It is estimated that the cost of the deployment of the 2,200 National Guard members in the District is more than $1 million a day.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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  • DC Sues Trump Over – KXL

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    WASHINGTON, DC – Officials in the nation’s capital are filing a lawsuit against President Trump over the deployment of National Guard troops. The lawsuit argues Mr. Trump “has run roughshod over a fundamental tenet of American democracy — that the military should not be involved in domestic law enforcement.”

    This legal action comes after a federal judge ruled earlier this week that the Trump administration’s deployment of National Guard troops in California was illegal.

    According to a senior official familiar with planning, the administration is working on an extension that could keep troops in the nation’s capital through December.

    More about:


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  • DC leaders react to lawsuit aimed at ending National Guard deployment – WTOP News

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    D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser said her focus remains on planning for the exit out of President Donald Trump’s declared crime emergency, while council members supported the lawsuit.

    As legal and political tensions escalate over federal intervention in the District, Mayor Muriel Bowser is turning her attention toward the end of President Donald Trump’s declared crime emergency — while council members rally behind a lawsuit challenging the continued deployment of the National Guard.

    At a news conference on Thursday morning following the announcement of the lawsuit filed by D.C. Attorney General Brian Schwalb challenging the use of the National Guard, Bowser said, “This has been a legal question throughout the emergency, not just today. And I will just reiterate that my focus, and the focus of our emergency operations center, is on planning for the exit out of the emergency next week.”

    The Army later said it’s extending orders for the D.C. National Guard to remain in the nation’s capital through Nov. 30, two U.S. officials told ABC News on Thursday.

    The crime emergency is scheduled to end Sept. 10.

    Bowser said she has not been consulted on any possible extension.

    “I’m not sure that that’s an indication of how long they’ll be deployed. I know that there’s a lot of reporting about how weary they are. And I get that, because deployments are hard. People are away from their families, and they may not necessarily think they’re on mission,” Bowser said.

    “So, I think that the deployments themselves are running their course,” she added. “We are organized to best use our own public safety resources and any additional public safety resources. And I think that’s a message for the Congress.”

    Council members react to lawsuit

    Speaking to WTOP, Ward 3 Council member Matthew Frumin and At-Large Council member Robert White expressed support for the lawsuit.

    “There was just a decision that said the president has improperly deployed the National Guard in other places,” Frumin said. “So, the fact that the attorney general would capitalize on those findings in other jurisdictions to try to get us to where we want to be, which is not having armed soldiers on our streets, makes sense.”

    White echoed that support, saying he believes AG Schwalb has built a “strong case.”

    “What the president is doing is illegal. He’s not respecting Congress, he’s not respecting Home Rule, he’s not respecting D.C. residents,” White said.

    Frumin also spoke about the mayor’s position, describing it as “incredibly difficult.” He acknowledged the criticism Bowser has faced but said she is trying to find a way forward.

    “If we could get to a place where the ICE activity got under control and the National Guard left, that would be a vast improvement over where we are,” he said.

    He said Bowser likely has the clearest sense of what might lead to the end of the emergency, given her direct communication with federal officials.

    “I have to believe she knows this might not work, but she’s made the determination that this is the best, most constructive path forward. And I want to support her in that,” Frumin said.

    White, however, took a sharply different view. He warned the mayor’s recent order establishing an operations center to coordinate with federal law enforcement could send the wrong message and undermine D.C.’s autonomy.

    “We have to protect D.C., Home Rule and democracy,” White said. “It’s hard for national voices, other governors, members of Congress, to say ‘stop what’s happening in D.C.’ if they’re getting a message that D.C. welcomes it. D.C. does not welcome it.”

    Bowser, in responding to criticism on Wednesday, said her goal is to end the emergency, not to invite federal intervention.

    Still, White accused the mayor of trying to appease the president, a strategy he believes is bound to fail.

    “It’s not going to work,” he said. “We have to make sure we work with our allies, those who believe in democracy and Home Rule, to protect it.”

    The White House has defended the federal effort. On Tuesday, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said the deployment of federal law enforcement and National Guard troops in D.C. “has yielded tremendous results in such a short time. Violent crime has plummeted, and dangerous criminals are being removed from the streets every single night.”

    Frumin acknowledged the drop in crime but cautioned that the current approach is not sustainable. He said some residents now feel unsafe while simply being outside.

    White agreed. He warned that while crime may be down, the long-term damage to the community’s trust in the government could make the city less safe in the future.

    “So, when the military leaves our city, we are left with that broken reputation that’s going to make us less safe,” he said.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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  • Clergy members gather in DC to pray and protest federal law enforcement surge – WTOP News

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    Members of the D.C. faith community gathered on Freedom Plaza, just steps from the White House and the Wilson Building, to both pray and protest the federal law enforcement surge in the nation’s capital.

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    Clergy gather in DC to pray and protest federal law enforcement surge

    On Thursday, members of D.C.’s faith community gathered on Freedom Plaza, just steps from the White House and the Wilson Building, to both pray and protest the federal law enforcement surge in the nation’s capital.

    The gathering comes amid a growing national debate over federal intervention in local policing in D.C.

    “We’ve gathered together today, God, to come against legislation and policies that would impose itself on the rights of the citizens of the District of Columbia,” said the Rev. Keith William Byrd Sr., pastor of the historic Zion Baptist Church in Northwest D.C.

    One by one, faith leaders stepped up to the microphone, offering prayers for the city and its leaders during what they called an “illegal occupation.”

    “Heavenly Father, we just ask you to be in this place right now — this place called the District of Columbia,” the Rev. Patricia Fears said.

    While the White House credits the deployment of federal officers and National Guard troops with helping reduce crime in the city, the faith leaders said they’re standing up against actions they called unconstitutional.

    “What we see going on is wrong. What we see is not right. It’s not constitutional. We cannot abide by it,” the Rev. Clarence Cross said.

    They were joined by D.C. Council members Matthew Frumin and Robert White, who stood with the crowd in prayer and song.

    “We’re here not just as elected officials, but as neighbors and allies,” Frumin said.

    “At some point, we will get to those pearly gates, and we will be asked what you did in this time. And I don’t know about you, but I know what my answer will be. It’s going to be that I did everything I could,” White said.

    Faith leaders said the vigil is just the beginning. Weekly prayer services and community forums are planned throughout September.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Mike Murillo

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  • ‘This is not personal’: Maryland Gov. Moore joins WTOP to talk about his digs at Trump – WTOP News

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    Last week, President Donald Trump threatened to deploy the National Guard into other major Democratic cities, including Chicago, New Orleans and Baltimore, that he claims have “out of control” crime.

    Last week, President Donald Trump threatened to deploy the National Guard into other major Democratic cities, including Chicago, New Orleans and Baltimore, that he claims have “out of control” crime.

    Trump, who said earlier this week on social media that D.C. is now “crime free” as a result of his federal emergency declaration weeks ago, has his eyes set on sending in federal law enforcement to Baltimore, which he called a “hell hole” during a news conference Tuesday.

    Trump said, as president, he has “the right to do it, because I have an obligation to protect this country. And that includes Baltimore.”

    The pushback by leaders from the targeted cities and their state’s governors continues.

    Maryland Gov. Wes Moore joined WTOP’s Anne Kramer and Shawn Anderson to talk more about the president’s latest threats.


    Listen to the interview below:

    Maryland Gov. Wes Moore joined WTOP to discuss President Trump’s latest threats to deploy the National Guard in Baltimore.

    The transcript below has been lightly edited for clarity.

    • Anne Kramer:

      The President just said this week that the people of Baltimore want federal agents to come in and get crime under control in the city. He even called Baltimore a “hellhole.” Can you actually do something to stop the federal law enforcement coming into Baltimore? And if so, what can you do?

    • Maryland Gov. Wes Moore:

      That’s why I’ve been very clear that what the president is urging and what the president is talking about with the activation of the National Guard, it’s not sustainable. I mean, he is literally spending over a million dollars a day to have the National Guard raking mulch and picking up trash. That is not scalable, and that is also a violation of the 10th Amendment, and individual states’ rights.

      So my declaration that I will not authorize the Maryland National Guard to be able to patrol our cities, because it is not either mission aligned or mission critical, stands. And so we are very clear about what the Constitution holds and upholds, about where presidential limitations begin and end, and also what my responsibilities are as the Commander in Chief of the Maryland National Guard.

    • Shawn Anderson:

      Now, you’ve been pretty tough on President Trump here in the last few weeks. Are your responses the right way to go when it comes to handling the president, let’s say, compared to D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, a Democrat as well. She seems to be walking the line much more carefully, even parsing her comments about the president.

      Tell us about the different approaches here in dealing with President Trump.

    • Moore:

      Well, this is not personal between myself and the president. I mean, the president’s attack, and frankly, the ignorant comments that he continues to make from the Oval Office, he’s trying to make it about me versus him. This is not, in my opinion, about anything about me and him. This is about me defending my people. This is about me protecting Marylanders.

      And when you’re making these comments saying Baltimore is a hell hole or a death scape; when you’re making comments about our children, saying that they’re “natural born killers”; when you’re talking about doing things like taking away Key Bridge funding that you never authorized in the first place; when you’re saying you’re not going to support our people in Western Maryland, who have had to endure historic floods; when you’re firing our federal workers — and Maryland has had more federal workers fired than any state in this country.

      When you’re coming after our people, people know that I’m a soldier, and I will fight for and protect our people, and that is all I’m doing. This is not about trying to fight Donald Trump. This is about me fighting for Marylanders.

    • Kramer:

      Is there any wiggle room there? So if President Trump came to you and said, “Hey, I acknowledge the fact that crime is getting under control in Baltimore. But would you like some more help from the federal agents? I could send them in.” Because, yes, violent crime, particularly murders, are down in Baltimore, but people in Baltimore City are still complaining about carjackings, armed robberies in places like Harbor East, Fells Point, Fed Hill. Any thoughts about that?

    • Moore:

      I’m very clear that my number one priority is public safety, and if one person does not feel safe, then we will stop at nothing to make sure that everybody in our communities are safe.

      We’re watching very encouraging results, and it’s not just homicides, it’s non-fatal shootings, it’s auto theft, it’s carjacking. It’s across the board, that year-on-year, we are down over 25% in pretty much every single statistical category within Baltimore and across our state. So we’re very proud of the progress that’s being made in the state of Maryland, even though we know the work is not done.

      And I have said to the president that we would we would absolutely and gratefully accept more federal support on things that actually make sense. And so instead of doing things like cutting $30 million from violence prevention programs, which he did, instead of doing things like proposing like in his proposed budget, where he cut funding for the FBI and the ATF, we would love to have more support for FBI and ATF and to get these illegal guns out of our neighborhoods and off of our streets.

      We would love to be able to have more support for local law enforcement, the way that in our state budget, I have actually increased funding for local law enforcement by historic numbers in the state of Maryland. We would absolutely welcome more federal supports. But what I do not want is performative measures like advancing the National Guard inside of our communities to do jobs that they’re not even trained for.

    • Anderson:

      President Trump has said he would consider withholding funding for the replacement Key Bridge in this war of words with you. Can he do that?

    • Moore:

      The president never authorized funding for the Key Bridge, so the president can’t take away funding for the Key Bridge.

      Key Bridge funding was authorized through Congress, and Congress was the ones, both Republicans and Democrats, who understood that the Port of Baltimore is a crucial avenue to our American economy, that two thirds of the country receive their goods from the Port of Baltimore, and the Key Bridge is an absolutely historic and important measure to make sure that you have a fully functioning Port of Baltimore.

      And so the President of the United States does not have the authority to pull funding for the Key Bridge. Only Congress can do that, and I don’t think Congress would want to hamstring the American economy by making a decision like pulling away from the 100% cost share and agreement that we have between the state of Maryland and our federal government.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Ciara Wells

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  • District of Columbia sues over Trump’s deployment of the National Guard

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    The District of Columbia on Thursday sued to stop President Donald Trump’s deployment of National Guard during his law enforcement intervention in Washington.The city’s attorney general, Brian Schwalb, said the surge of troops essentially amounts to an “involuntary military occupation.” He argued in the federal lawsuit that the deployment, coinciding with an executive order Aug. 11, that now involves more than 1,000 troops is an illegal use of the military for domestic law enforcement.A federal judge in California recently ruled that Trump’s deployment of National Guard troops to Los Angeles after days of protests over immigration raids in June was illegal.The Republican administration is appealing that decision and Trump has said he is ready to order federal intervention in Chicago and Baltimore, despite staunch opposition in those Democrat-led cities. That court ruling, however, does not directly apply to Washington, where the president has more control over the Guard than in states.The White House did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment to the new lawsuit.Members of the D.C. National Guard have had their orders extended through December, according to a Guard official. While that does not necessarily mean all those troops will serve that long, it is a strong indication that their role will not wind down soon.Several GOP-led states have added National Guard troops to the ranks of those patrolling the streets and neighborhoods of the nation’s capital.Schwalb’s filing contends the deployment also violates the Home Rule Act, signed by President Richard Nixon in 1973, because Trump acted without the mayor’s consent and is wrongly asserting federal control over units from other states.The city’s attorney general, an elected official, is its top legal officer and is separate from Washington’s federal U.S. attorney, who is appointed by the president.The lawsuit is the second from Schwalb against the Trump administration since the president asserted control over the city’s police department and sent in the Guard, actions that have been with protests from some residents.Trump has said the operation is necessary to combat crime in the district, and Mayor Muriel Bowser, a Democrat, has pointed to a steep drop in offenses such as carjackings since it began.Violent crime has been an issue in the capital for years, though data showed it was on the decline at the start of Trump’s intervention.

    The District of Columbia on Thursday sued to stop President Donald Trump’s deployment of National Guard during his law enforcement intervention in Washington.

    The city’s attorney general, Brian Schwalb, said the surge of troops essentially amounts to an “involuntary military occupation.” He argued in the federal lawsuit that the deployment, coinciding with an executive order Aug. 11, that now involves more than 1,000 troops is an illegal use of the military for domestic law enforcement.

    A federal judge in California recently ruled that Trump’s deployment of National Guard troops to Los Angeles after days of protests over immigration raids in June was illegal.

    The Republican administration is appealing that decision and Trump has said he is ready to order federal intervention in Chicago and Baltimore, despite staunch opposition in those Democrat-led cities. That court ruling, however, does not directly apply to Washington, where the president has more control over the Guard than in states.

    The White House did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment to the new lawsuit.

    Members of the D.C. National Guard have had their orders extended through December, according to a Guard official. While that does not necessarily mean all those troops will serve that long, it is a strong indication that their role will not wind down soon.

    Several GOP-led states have added National Guard troops to the ranks of those patrolling the streets and neighborhoods of the nation’s capital.

    Schwalb’s filing contends the deployment also violates the Home Rule Act, signed by President Richard Nixon in 1973, because Trump acted without the mayor’s consent and is wrongly asserting federal control over units from other states.

    The city’s attorney general, an elected official, is its top legal officer and is separate from Washington’s federal U.S. attorney, who is appointed by the president.

    The lawsuit is the second from Schwalb against the Trump administration since the president asserted control over the city’s police department and sent in the Guard, actions that have been with protests from some residents.

    Trump has said the operation is necessary to combat crime in the district, and Mayor Muriel Bowser, a Democrat, has pointed to a steep drop in offenses such as carjackings since it began.

    Violent crime has been an issue in the capital for years, though data showed it was on the decline at the start of Trump’s intervention.

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  • Cannabis Not A Part Of Crime Ridden Cities

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    Crime in cities are a hot topic with the public right now – cannabis is not part of the problem

    Currently, crime ridden cities having the national guard arrive in cities at the request of the current administration. But as it turns out, cannabis not a part of crime ridden cities. For years, critics of marijuana legalization have warned opening dispensaries and decriminalizing marijuana would send crime rates soaring. But new data and research show a different story: the U.S. cities struggling with the highest levels of violent crime are not experiencing those problems because of legal cannabis.

    RELATED: Say Goodbye Grilling Season With The Ultimate Steak

    According to recent FBI and local crime data, cities such as St. Louis, Missouri; Detroit, Michigan; Baltimore, Maryland; Memphis, Tennessee; and Cleveland, Ohio rank among the highest in violent crime per capita. Several of these states now allow recreational or medical cannabis. Michigan legalized marijuana in 2018, Missouri in 2022, and Maryland in 2023. Despite fears, legalization has not fueled crime spikes in these urban centers. Instead, researchers point to systemic issues such as poverty, education gaps, and opioid trafficking as the true drivers of urban violence.

    Photo by Jeff Vinnick/Stringer/Getty Images

    National studies from institutions including the Cato Institute and peer-reviewed journals support this finding. Analyses of crime rates before and after legalization show violent crime typically stays flat or even declines slightly once legal cannabis markets are established. In some border states, legalization has helped reduce illicit drug trafficking, which historically contributed to organized crime.

    Property crimes tell a similar story. While dispensaries—often forced to operate as cash-heavy businesses due to federal banking restrictions—may attract occasional theft, these incidents are rare and not enough to sway overall crime rates. In fact, some research suggests a regulated, taxed cannabis market reduces illicit street dealing and violence can accompany it.

    Local law enforcement in legalized states have also acknowledged marijuana enforcement is no longer a priority, allowing police resources to focus on more serious crimes. This shift has not only eased pressure on the court system but also helped reduce unnecessary confrontations between communities and police.

    RELATED: Immersive Events Redefine Millennial Nights

    What explains the persistently high crime rates in certain cities? Experts consistently highlight deep-rooted economic inequality, underfunded schools, limited job opportunities, and the devastating toll of opioids and fentanyl. These structural issues far outweigh any influence cannabis legalization could have.

    As cannabis becomes more mainstream, with 24 states now allowing recreational use, the evidence is clear: legal marijuana does not drive urban crime. Instead, it provides new tax revenues, reduces black market activity, and creates jobs. For cities struggling with crime, the solutions lie in economic development, education, and public health—not rolling back cannabis reform.

    Legal cannabis is here to stay, and it is not the villain behind America’s toughest crime statistics. The real work is addressing the social and economic conditions fuel violence, while allowing cannabis to contribute positively to communities across the country.

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    Terry Hacienda

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  • Gov. JB Pritzker expecting federal ‘actions’ by weekend as local officials brace for 300 immigration agents

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    Amid growing angst, anxiety and even annoyance over the continued sketchy details surrounding the Trump administration’s threats to deploy forces into Chicago, Gov. JB Pritzker on Wednesday said he expects federal agents to assemble here by the end of the week, and suburban officials have been told to expect about 300 immigration agents to be sent to the area as part of increased operations.

    “They haven’t confirmed any of that to us, but what we’re hearing is that they’ll be assembled, ready to go on Friday, and that they will begin actions on Saturday,” Pritzker said, referring to possible additional immigration enforcement in the Chicago area.

    Pritzker’s latest comments came after President Donald Trump once again said he wanted the two-term governor to ask him to send in the National Guard to help stem crime in Chicago — a move Pritzker has repeatedly vowed he would not do, arguing it’s unnecessary and an authoritarian move to put troops on the streets of the nation’s third-largest city.

    While Trump has said the issue of sending troops to Chicago isn’t political, his campaign team sent out a fundraising email Wednesday stating, “WE’RE GOING INTO CHICAGO” and declaring as “breaking news,” “CHICAGO WILL BE LIBERATED.”

    The email sought donations of as little as $15 to “join the MAGA Blitz and say: LIBERATE CHICAGO – SAVE AMERICA – STAND WITH TRUMP!”

    “The Radical Left Governors and Mayors of crime ridden cities don’t want to stop the radical crime. I wish they’d just give me a call. I’d gain respect for them,” Trump was quoted in the email from his political team. “This isn’t a political thing; We have the right to do it because I HAVE AN OBLIGATION TO KEEP AMERICA SAFE!”

    During his comments in Washington, Trump claimed Chicagoans want him to send the National Guard into the city and that politicians who oppose such a move, including Pritzker, are “out of tune” with their constituents.

    As Trump attempted to lure Pritzker into asking for the president’s help, he did find another governor — Louisiana Republican Gov. Jeff Landry — asking for federal assistance, with Trump pivoting to say he might send Guard troops to New Orleans.

    The move appeared to be aimed at cutting into the criticism from Democratic governors that the White House was only focusing on blue states.

    “We have a great thing going. I could do that with Chicago. We could do that with New York. We could do it with Los Angeles,” Trump said. “So we’re making a determination now, do we go to Chicago, or do we go to a place like New Orleans, where we have a great governor?”

    Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, right, listens during a bilateral meeting between President Donald Trump, left, and Polish President Karol Nawrocki, not pictured, in the Oval Office at the White House on Sept. 3, 2025, in Washington. (Alex Wong/Getty)

    Pritzker, a 2028 presidential aspirant, maintained on Wednesday that he thought the Trump administration was staging the Texas National Guard for deployment in Illinois, even after a report from the Houston Chronicle on Tuesday said Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s office had denied that claim.

    “I’m not suggesting that I am absolutely certain of whether or not the Texas National Guard will, in fact, end up in the state of Illinois. What I know is that we’ve been told by people who seem to have the credentials to know,” Pritzker said Wednesday at the Metropolitan Peace Academy on the Lower West Side.

    The governor also reiterated that the state “cannot stand in the way” of federal law enforcement.

    “It’s not like we’re going to have armed men standing in between,” he said, but rather, the state could combat potential illegal actions in court.

    As the politicians spoke with reporters, local law enforcement near the Naval Station Great Lakes in North Chicago, which is expected to act as the nerve center for the federal effort, met with federal authorities who on Wednesday morning briefed them on the roughly 300 agents’ arrival and the potential for the National Guard’s deployment, according to Gregory Jackson, chief of staff for North Chicago Mayor Leon Rockingham Jr. The city’s police chief, Laz Perez, was among those in attendance, Jackson said.

    As a result, Rockingham and Waukegan Mayor Sam Cunningham said they are taking steps to ensure the safety of people in their communities, where there is fear of family separation in mixed families where some members are documented and others are not.

    “I don’t believe that a time has come in our country where the National Guard and ICE are coming into our community to basically scare the Latino population,” Rockingham said. “I didn’t think our country would ever get to that point.”

    The officers will stay in hotels in Waukegan, Gurnee and possibly other area communities. National Guard troops will be used as they were in Los Angeles to protect federal buildings, Jackson said.

    Federal buildings in the area include the Navy base, the James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center and an FBI firing range in North Chicago, as well as a U.S. Social Security Office in Waukegan.

    Along with representatives of law enforcement from neighboring communities, Jackson said U.S. Navy personnel and naval police were at the briefing, as well as representatives of ICE, U.S. Customs and Border Patrol and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

    The main gate of Naval Station Great Lakes before sunset on Sept 2, 2025. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
    The main gate of Naval Station Great Lakes before sunset on Sept 2, 2025. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)

    With the naval base in North Chicago becoming a focal point of the federal effort, Illinois U.S. Sens. Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth, both Democrats, said they had requested a meeting with the secretary of the Navy about “Trump’s plan to use Naval Station Great Lakes to house ICE officers.”

    Durbin, the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, also demanded the committee’s chair schedule a hearing on “Trump’s threats to deploy the military to Chicago and other American cities,” according to his office.

    Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told Fox News on Wednesday that he thought a federal judge’s ruling this week that found the deployment of the National Guard to Los Angeles to be unconstitutional would be overturned.

    In June, Trump sent more than 2,000 Guard members to California following protests over stepped-up immigration enforcement actions. But a federal judge in California on Tuesday issued an injunction that prohibits the Trump administration from using federalized National Guard troops and military personnel in that state for law enforcement activities.

    Hegseth touted the cooperation the Trump administration has received from Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser as “the right kind of collaboration with state, local, city law enforcement” and called it a “template” for other cities.

    But the District of Columbia is not a state. Rather, it is a federal district where Trump has greater latitude than he does in dealing with state governors and state sovereignty.

    Hegseth declined to provide a timeline for potential Guard intervention in Chicago, saying that the decision lies with the president.

    “Whether it’s Chicago or Baltimore or New Orleans, wherever it is, we will be proud to partner with law enforcement that will partner with us. But, as the president has said, he wants governors to invite us in. And, unfortunately, you have got some governors that aren’t willing to do that in Illinois and Maryland,” Hegseth said.

    Gov. JB Pritzker speaks with reporters after leaving a meeting with community violence intervention leaders Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2025, at Metropolitan Peace Academy in the Pilsen neighborhood of Chicago. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)
    Gov. JB Pritzker talks with reporters after leaving a meeting with community violence intervention leaders Sept. 3, 2025, at Metropolitan Peace Academy in the Pilsen neighborhood of Chicago. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)

    Pritzker on Wednesday said he thought the president might be floating actions in the more Trump-friendly state of Louisiana in response to Tuesday’s court ruling.

    The governor also suggested the administration was pushing for him to call the president in order to help in possible future litigation.

    “He’s going to end up in court,” Pritzker said, “and that will be a fact that they will use in court, that the governor called to ask for help, and I’m sorry, I’m not going to provide him with evidence to support his desire to have the court rule in his favor.”

    Steve Sadin is a freelance reporter.

    Originally Published:

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    Olivia Olander, Steve Sadin, Rick Pearson

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  • Gov. JB Pritzker braces Chicagoans for federal incursion as Trump says ‘we’re going in’ but won’t say when

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    In the face of continued and confusing threats that Chicago would be subjected to a federal incursion over immigration and crime, Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday sought to brace Chicagoans for a spike in raids from federal authorities and even potentially the National Guard in coming days.

    “Let’s be clear, the terror and cruelty is the point, not the safety of anyone living here,” Pritzker said at a downtown news conference, standing alongside Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, Cook County President Toni Preckwinkle and other state leaders.

    While Trump remained ambiguous — even in his most recent comments Tuesday — about a timeline or the details of a federal crackdown in Illinois, Pritzker made it clear his administration thinks Trump plans to deploy armed military personnel to Chicago’s streets and direct immigration enforcement agents to “raid Latino communities” in the coming weeks.

    The deployments would look similar to recent actions the Trump administration took in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., Pritzker said, citing conversations with unnamed sources and journalists, though he acknowledged the administration’s plans are blanketed in rumors and speculation, and the governor blamed Washington for a lack of coordination.

    The governor’s announcement in Chicago came just hours after Trump told reporters in Washington that it was a matter of when — not if — he would send members of the National Guard into Chicago over the city’s crime problem.

    “Well, we’re going in. I didn’t say when we’re going in,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. “Look, I have an obligation. This isn’t a political thing. I have an obligation when we lose, when 20 people are killed over the last two and a half weeks, and 75 are shot with bullets.”

    But Pritzker countered that the move was not only political but authoritarian, adding that he specifically has “reason to believe that the Trump administration has already begun staging the Texas National Guard for deployment in Illinois.” The Texas Military Department didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on Pritzker’s remarks, but in a published report in the Houston Chronicle Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s office disputed the claim.

    How Trump’s moves would actually occur, however, remained unclear. Earlier Tuesday, a federal judge in California issued an injunction that prohibits the Trump administration from using federalized National Guard troops and military personnel in that state for law enforcement activities. The judge said the Trump administration “willfully” broke federal law by sending Guard troops to the Los Angeles area in early June after days of protests over immigration raids. Trump dismissed the ruling as a decision from a “radically left judge.”

    Pritzker said the state has heard from representatives within the Trump administration that it planned to soon send agents from the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency to assist ICE agents in Chicago. Already, the administration is “staging military vehicles on federal property,” including at the Naval Station Great Lakes in North Chicago, Pritzker said.

    Federal officials are preparing for raids, Pritzker said, potentially timed to coincide with planned celebrations for Mexican Independence Day this month — though he later added he was not suggesting people change their plans in anticipation of potential immigration enforcement actions.

    Gov. JB Pritzker, center, invites Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson to talk about the planned deployment of federal military and Department of Homeland Security personnel to Chicago during a news conference on Sept. 2, 2025. Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton is at right. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

    The governor said Trump would be looking for “any excuse” to send active duty military to Chicago.

    “If someone flings a sandwich at an ICE agent, Trump will try to go on TV and declare an emergency in Chicago,” Pritzker said, apparently referring to a widely shared incident in Washington in which a person threw a sandwich at a federal officer. “I’m imploring everyone, if and when that happens, do not take the bait.”

    The governor said he expected the amplified federal presence to last around one month.

    The latest intelligence relayed by the governor came after the head of Illinois State Police received a phone call from Trump border official Gregory Bovino over the weekend “indicating that ICE would be deployed to Chicago,” Pritzker told reporters. It is the first outreach the state has received from the Trump administration on the issue, the governor said.

    Bovino spearheaded Trump’s immigration crackdown in Los Angeles and is known for his aggressive tactics and social media videos promoting his agents’ role in deporting thousands of immigrants.

    “Bovino was short on details and long on rhetoric,” Pritzker said Tuesday.

    Pritzker continued to call for Chicagoans to peacefully protest against Trump’s actions, look out for neighbors and know their rights in the face of immigration enforcement. Chicagoans should also “film things that you see happening in your neighborhoods and your streets and share them with the news media,” he said.

    “Our goal is not to scare anyone but to prepare everyone to face some ugly realities in the coming days,” Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton said at the same news conference Tuesday. “Many Illinoisans who look a certain way are going to spend this time living in deep fear.”

    A man runs south on Main Street past the main gate at the Naval Station Great Lakes on Sept 2, 2025, in North Chicago. Gov. JB Pritzker said the administration is "staging military vehicles on federal property," including at the Naval Station Great Lakes in North Chicago. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
    A man runs south on Main Street past the main gate at the Naval Station Great Lakes on Sept 2, 2025, in North Chicago. Gov. JB Pritzker said the administration is “staging military vehicles on federal property,” including at the Naval Station Great Lakes. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)

    Before Pritzker’s public comments Tuesday, Trump renewed his criticisms of the Democratic governor and said he’s responsible for crime in Chicago.

    “There’s no place, there’s no place in the world, including you can go to Afghanistan. You can go to places that you would think of, they don’t even come close to this. Chicago is a hellhole right now,” he said.

    The president’s comments came following a Labor Day weekend that saw more than four dozen people shot and eight killed between 10 p.m. Friday and 5 p.m. Monday.

    Even though the spotlight was once again turned on Chicago violence with the threat of Trump sending in the National Guard, CPD records show the 2025 Labor Day weekend’s killing total actually was slightly down compared to other recent years. Records reviewed by the Tribune show that the Labor Day weekend in Chicago has on average in recent years resulted in 11 killings and about 38 other nonfatal shootings.

    The worst recent year came in 2020, when 14 people were killed and 44 were wounded over that holiday period. This year’s figure comes during a continuing trend of better violence numbers in the city since the COVID-19 pandemic. Before the weekend began, Chicago had recorded 266 homicides in 2025, according to the Police Department. That was a 32% decline in killings from the same time period in 2024. Total shooting incidents were also down 36% citywide.

    Trump had previously warned of National Guard intervention in Chicago but had said he would like to be invited by Pritzker — something the two-term Democratic governor said would not happen.

    President Donald Trump spoke about sending National Guard troops to Chicago during a press conference in the Oval Office at the White House on Sept. 2, 2025. (Mark Schiefelbein/AP)
    President Donald Trump talks about sending National Guard troops to Chicago during a news conference in the Oval Office at the White House on Sept. 2, 2025. (Mark Schiefelbein/AP)

    Also during the news conference, Trump contended that a morning TV show interviewed a dozen people urging Guard intervention in Chicago.

    “Most of them were African American. They were Black. And they were saying, ‘Please, please, please, let the president send it.’ These were people from Chicago. ‘Please. We need help. We need help. We can’t walk outside. We’re petrified,’” Trump said.

    “If the governor of Illinois would call up, call me up. I would love to do it now. We’re going to do it anyway. We have the right to do it because I have an obligation to protect this country,” he said.

    Asked about violence in Chicago, Johnson pointed the finger back at Trump for the city’s ongoing gun violence epidemic — including this past holiday weekend because “the president continues to allow tens of thousands of guns to be trafficked into our state and our city.”

    “Every time someone is shot, every time someone loses their life to violence, it’s a tragedy,” Johnson said. “The fact of the matter is, is that we have illegal guns that are being trafficked in our city. That’s the problem, right? We have done everything in our power locally getting guns off the streets of Chicago.”

    The mayor also staunchly rejected the notion Trump would help the situation by sending in troops and instead said local leaders will “take every single measure that we can to protect our people from these threats.”

    Trump, who federalized law enforcement in Washington, D.C., as well as deployed the National Guard, said the nation’s capital “serves as a template, and we’re going to do it elsewhere, but Chicago is certainly going to be high.”

    Gov. JB Pritzker and Mayor Brandon Johnson appear on a television screen in downtown Chicago on Sept. 2, 2025, as they respond after President Donald Trump said he's sending troops to the city. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)
    Gov. JB Pritzker and Mayor Brandon Johnson appear on a television screen in downtown Chicago on Sept. 2, 2025, as they respond after President Donald Trump said he’s sending troops to the city. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)

    But Trump has greater power to federalize resources, such as the Guard, in the District of Columbia, which is not a state. The president’s power is limited elsewhere by state sovereignty.

    “It’s an honor to do it. … A lot of presidents wouldn’t do what I’m doing. I don’t need this heat. But when I watch television last night and I’m watching the news and I see that nine people were killed in Chicago and 54 were badly wounded with bullets. I say, ‘That’s not this country. We have to do something,’” Trump said. “We have a lot of people. We have a great force. We have a great military force.”

    After he spoke to reporters, the White House issued a statement asking, “For J.B. Pritzker, When Will Enough Be Enough?”

    “Pritzker is too blinded by Trump Derangement Syndrome to … act in the best interest of his constituents and end this bloodshed,” the statement said. “The Trump Administration’s message to Chicagoans and residents in Democrat-run cities nationwide is simple: You don’t have to live like this.”

    Chicago Tribune’s Alice Yin, Sam Charles and Dan Petrella contributed.

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  • Commentary: ‘What’s to prevent a national police force?’ Not this National Guard ruling

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    A federal judge ruled Tuesday that President Trump’s deployment of the National Guard in Los Angeles was illegal, which the sane and democracy-loving among us should applaud — though of course an appeal is coming.

    During the trial, though, a concerning but little-noticed exchange popped up between lawyers for the state of California and Maj. Gen. Scott Sherman, who was in charge of the federalized National Guard forces in L.A. It should have been an explosive, red-flag moment highlighting the pressure our military leaders are under to shake off their oath to the Constitution in favor of fealty to Trump.

    Sherman testified that he objected to National Guard involvement in a show-of-force operation in MacArthur Park, where Latino families often congregate.

    That action, Sherman said, was originally slated for Father’s Day, an especially busy time at the park. Internal documents showed it was considered it a “high-risk” operation. Sherman said he feared his troops would be pushed into confrontations with civilians if Border Patrol became overwhelmed by the crowds on that June Sunday.

    Gregory Bovino, in charge of the immigration efforts in L.A. for the Border Patrol, questioned Sherman’s “loyalty to the country,” Sherman testified, for just showing hesitation about the wisdom and legality of an order.

    It’s the pressure that “you’re not being patriotic if you don’t blow by the law and violate it and just bend the knee and and exhibit complete fealty and loyalty to Trump,” California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta said Tuesday. And it’s a warning of what’s to come as Trump continues to press for military involvement in civilian law enforcement across the country.

    For the record, Sherman has served our country for decades, earning along the way the prestigious Legion of Merit, the Bronze Star and the Meritorious Service Medal among other accolades.

    The MacArthur Park operation, according to the Department of Homeland Security, was itself little more than a performative display of power “to demonstrate, through a show of presence, the capacity and freedom of maneuver of federal law enforcement within the Los Angeles,” according to agency documents presented in court. It was dubbed Operation Excalibur, in honor of the legendary sword of King Arthur that granted him divine right to rule, a point also included in court documents.

    But none of that mattered. Instead, Sherman was pushed to exhibit the kind of blind loyalty to a dear leader that you’d expect to be demanded in dictatorships like those of North Korea or Hungary. Loyalty that confuses — or transforms — a duty to the Constitution with allegiance to Trump. Military experts warn that Sherman’s experience isn’t an isolated incident.

    “There’s a chilling effect against pushing back or at least openly questioning any kind of orders,” Rachel E. VanLandingham, a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel, told me. She’s former active duty judge advocate in the U.S. Air Force who now teaches at Southwestern Law School and serves as a national security law expert.

    VanLandingham sees the leadership of our armed forces under pressure “to not engage in the critical thinking, which, as commanders, they are required to do, and to instead go along to get along.” She sees Sherman’s testimony as a “telling glimpse into the wearing away” of that crucial independence.

    Such a shift in allegiance would undermine any court order keeping the military out of civilian law enforcement, leaving Trump with exactly the boots on the ground power he has sought since his first term. This is not theoretical.

    Through Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Trump has purged the top ranks of the military of those who aren’t loyal to him. In February, Hegseth fired the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, a Black soldier who championed diversity in the armed forces. Hegseth has also purged the head of the Pentagon’s intelligence agency, the head of the National Security Agency, the chief of Naval Operations, multiple senior female military staff and senior military lawyers for the Army, Navy and Air Force. In August, he fired the head of the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency after that general gave a truthful assessment of our bombing of Iran’s nuclear sites, angering Trump.

    At the same time, the military is being pushed farther into civilian affairs, and not just as erstwhile cops. The Associated Press reported Tuesday that Hegseth ordered 600 military lawyers to serve as temporary immigration judges.

    Not to dive too deep into the convoluted immigration system, but these are civilian legal positions, another possible violation of the Posse Comitatus Act, VanLandingham points out.

    And beyond that, can a military lawyer — trained and bound to follow orders — really act as an impartial judge in proceedings where the administration’s wish to deport is clearly known?

    Goodbye due process, goodbye fair trial.

    That “looks like martial law when you have militarized … judicial proceedings,” VanLandingham said. “How can we trust they are making unbiased decisions? You can’t.”

    And even though Sherman pushed back on a full-blown military presence in MacArthur Park, that raid did happen. Federal agents marched through, about three weeks after Father’s Day, with National Guard troops remaining in their vehicles on the perimeter. It was Hegseth himself who authorized the mission.

    Sherman also said on the stand that he was told there were “exceptions” to the Posse Comitatus Act — the law being debated in the trial that prevents the military from being used as civilian law enforcement — and that the president had the power to decide what those exceptions were.

    “So your understanding is that while [some actions] are on the list of prohibited functions, you can do them under some circumstances?” Judge Charles Breyer asked.

    “That’s the legal advice I received,” Sherman answered.

    “And the president has the authority to make that decision?” Breyer asked.

    “The president has the authority,” Sherman answered.

    But does he?

    Breyer also asked during the trial, if the president’s powers to both command troops and interpret law are so boundless, “What’s to prevent a national police force?” What, in effect, could stop Trump’s Excalibur-inspired inclinations?

    For now, it’s the courts and ethical, mid-level commanders like Sherman, whose common-sense bravery and decency kept the military out of MacArthur Park.

    Men and women who understand that the oaths they have sworn are to our country, not the man who would be king.

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  • Illinois Governor: I Don’t Want National Guard In Chicago – KXL

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    CHICAGO, IL – The governor of Illinois says President Trump is planning to send National Guard troops to Chicago.

    “We have reason to believe that Trump administration is already staging the Texas National Guard for deployment in Illinois,” said Governor J.B. Pritzker.

    Governor Pritzker told reporters he also believes other federal officers from various agencies will also soon enter the city.  He made his comments just moments after President Trump said he plans to deploy the Guard to the Windy City to help fight crime.

    Pritzker once again said he does not want troops on the streets of Chicago, and takes offense when Trump calls the city a “hell-hole.”  He vows to fight troop deployments in court.

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  • Trump on possible National Guard deployment to Chicago: “We’re going in”

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    President Trump suggested Tuesday he’s planning to send National Guard troops to Chicago, in what could be the latest salvo in his controversial push to use federal forces to address crime, drawing pushback from local political leaders.

    “We’re going in. I didn’t say when, we’re going in,” Mr. Trump said in an Oval Office event, after a reporter asked if he plans to send the Guard to Chicago.

    Mr. Trump did not specify whether his administration will primarily send Guard forces or federal law enforcement agents to Chicago. He also didn’t say how many Guard troops could be deployed, or where they will hail from.

    He later suggested Baltimore could also draw a federal response.

    The president has vowed for weeks to intervene in Chicago and Baltimore, arguing the two cities have failed to contain violent crime. Chicago could be the third city to face a crackdown under the Trump administration: Thousands of Guard troops and federal agents have been deployed to the streets of Washington, D.C., since last month as part of an anti-crime initiative, and Guard forces were sent to Los Angeles in June to protect immigration agents.

    Mr. Trump said he hopes Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker — a vociferous Trump critic — will call him and request that troops be sent to Chicago. But the president said: “We’re going to do it anyway. We have the right to do it because I have an obligation to protect this country.”

    In a press conference Tuesday, Pritzker called Mr. Trump’s comments “unhinged.”

    “No, I will not call the president asking him to send troops to Chicago,” he said.

    Pritzker said he expects federal agents from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other agencies to surge in Chicago in the coming days. He said the president could then “use any excuse” to deploy military personnel.

    The governor said his administration is “ready to fight troop deployments in court.”

    Any Guard deployment to Chicago would likely draw legal pushback.

    The D.C. National Guard is controlled by the president, but the 50 states’ Guard forces are typically run by governors. Mr. Trump called members of the California National Guard into federal service without Gov. Gavin Newsom’s permission by invoking a law that applies to rebellions or situations where the president can’t enforce the law with “regular forces.”

    Newsom sued the Trump administration over the move. An appeals court ruled that Mr. Trump likely had the right to call up the California National Guard, but a lower court judge on Tuesday ruled the deployment violated a 19th century law prohibiting the military from being used for domestic law enforcement.

    Trump calls Chicago a “mess” — Pritzker calls his claims “absurd”

    The president has zeroed in on cracking down on crime in the nation’s major cities, beginning with the effort in D.C. — despite data showing crime has declined in the city in recent years.

    When Mr. Trump announced the crackdown in the nation’s capital, he said the effort “will go further,” saying the administration is “starting very strongly with D.C.” and suggesting it could then move to other cities. Since then, he has publicly lashed out over Chicago’s murder rate.

    “We have other cities also that are bad. Very bad. You look at Chicago, how bad it is. You look at Los Angeles, how bad it is,” Mr. Trump said last month. “We’re not going to lose our cities over this.”

    The president later praised the National Guard’s work with the police in D.C., saying, “After we do this, we’ll go to another location, and we’ll make it safe, also.”

    “Chicago’s a mess, you have an incompetent mayor, grossly incompetent,” Mr. Trump said last month. “And we’ll straighten that one out, probably next – that will be our next one after this.”

    The president predicted that, within a week of a federal intervention in Chicago, “We will have no crime in Chicago just like we have no crime in D.C.”

    In Tuesday’s press conference, Pritzker said “there is no emergency that warrants deployment of troops.” He called Mr. Trump’s characterization of crime in Chicago “absurd” and pointed to recent reductions in homicides, shootings and other violent crimes according to city statistics.

    “One violent crime is too many, and we have more work to do,” Pritzker said. “But we have made important progress on safety that Trump is now jeopardizing.”

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    Slim margin leaves Republicans in need of Democratic votes to avoid government shutdown

    Trump on potential National Guard deployment in Chicago: “We’re going in”

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  • Padilla, Schiff request detailed breakdown of National Guard, Marine deployments in L.A.

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    U.S. Sens. Alex Padilla and Adam Schiff have sent a letter to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth requesting a detailed breakdown of military deployments to Los Angeles amid recent immigration enforcement protests in the city.

    The two California Democrats wrote Monday that they wanted to know how thousands of National Guard troops and U.S. Marines were specifically used, whether and how they engaged in any law enforcement activity and how much the deployments have cost taxpayers to date.

    The deployments were made over the objections of Gov. Gavin Newsom, L.A. Mayor Karen Bass and other local officials, and sparked a lawsuit by the state alleging they were illegal. The letter came just hours before a federal judge agreed with the state in a ruling Tuesday that Padilla and Schiff both cheered.

    Padilla and Schiff wrote that the deployments were unnecessary and that greater detail was needed in light of similar operations now being launched or threatened in other American cities.

    “The use of the U.S. military to assist in or otherwise support immigration operations remains inappropriate, potentially a violation of the law, and harmful to the relationship between the U.S. public and the U.S. military,” they wrote.

    The Department of Defense declined to comment on the letter to The Times, saying it would “respond directly” to Padilla and Schiff.

    President Trump ordered the federalization of some 4,100 National Guard troops in California in June, as L.A. protests erupted over his administration’s immigration policies. Some 700 Marines were also deployed to the city. Most of those forces have since departed, but Padilla and Schiff said 300 Guard troops remain activated.

    Trump, Hegseth and other administration leaders have previously defended the deployments as necessary to restore law and order in L.A., defend federal buildings and protect federal immigration agents as they conduct immigration raids in local communities opposed to such enforcement efforts.

    Under questioning from members of Congress at the start of the deployments in June, Hegseth and other Defense officials estimated that the mission would last 60 days and that basic necessities such as travel, housing and food for the troops would cost about $134 million. However, the administration has not provided updated details as the operation has continued.

    Padilla and Schiff asked for specific totals on the number of California Guard troops and Marines deployed to L.A., and details as to which units they were drawn from and whether any out-of-state Guard personnel were brought in. They also asked whether any other military personnel were deployed to L.A., and how many civilian employees from the Department of Defense were assigned to the L.A. operation.

    The senators asked for a description of the “specific missions” carried out by the different units deployed to the city, and for a breakdown of military personnel who directly supported Department of Homeland Security teams, which would include Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. They also asked which units were assigned to provide security at federal sites or were “placed on stand-by status outside of the immediate protest or immigration enforcement areas.”

    They asked for “the number of times and relevant detail for any cases in which [Defense] personnel made arrests, detained any individuals, otherwise exercised law enforcement authorities, or exercised use of lethal force during the operation.”

    They also asked for the total cost of all of the work to the Department of Defense and for a breakdown of costs by operation, maintenance, personnel or other accounts, and asked whether any funding used in the operation was diverted from other programs.

    Padilla and Schiff requested that the Department of Defense provide the information by Sept. 12.

    Unless it is “expressly authorized by the Constitution or Act of Congress,” the use of military personnel for civilian law enforcement on U.S. soil is barred by law under the Posse Comitatus Act. The 1878 law applies to U.S. Marines and to Guard troops who, like those in L.A., have been federalized.

    In its lawsuit, California argued the deployments were a violation of the Posse Comitatus Act. In response, the Trump administration argued that the president has the legal authority to deploy federal troops to protect federal property and personnel, such as ICE agents.

    On Tuesday, a federal judge ruled for the state, finding that the deployments did violate the Posse Comitatus Act. The judge placed his injunction on hold for 10 days, and the Trump administration is expected to appeal.

    Schiff said Trump’s “goal was not to ensure safety, but to create a spectacle,” and that the ruling affirmed those actions were “unlawful and unjustified.”

    Padilla said the ruling “confirmed what we knew all along: Trump broke the law in his effort to turn service members into his own national police force.”

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    Kevin Rector

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  • Judge rules Trump’s National Guard use in Los Angeles protests is illegal

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    A federal judge ruled that President Donald Trump’s use of National Guard troops to aid immigration enforcement protests in Los Angeles earlier this year is illegal.

    Judge Charles Breyer said the Trump administration violated a 19th-century law when it sent about 4,000 troops and 700 Marines to California in June to quell violent protests and aid federal agents in immigration enforcement efforts.

    After Trump mobilized the troops, California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, sued the administration and argued they were in violation of the law that prohibits the military from enforcing domestic laws. However, the administration has argued the troops were in Los Angeles to protect federal officers and property and not to enforce laws.

    The Posse Comitatus Act is a statute from 1878 that prohibits a president from using the military as a domestic law enforcement agency without congressional approval. Breyer found the administration in violation of the statute by using troops for crowd control during protests.

    The issue began when Los Angeles residents began protesting the detention and deportation action being carried out by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Protests turned violent, prompting Trump to weigh in and federalize members of the California National Guard, despite Newsom and city leaders objecting.

    Trump’s order to call up the National Guard to Los Angeles and bypass the request of a governor is a move used infrequently by presidents.

    Judge Breyer, a Clinton appointee, had earlier issued an emergency order in June where he said Trump had to give control of the troops back to Newsom. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit overturned Breyer’s emergency order.

    The appeals court includes two Trump appointees and one appointee from former President Joe Biden. The panel said Trump had constitutional authority to deploy the guard against protesters since the demonstrations turned violent.

    The Trump administration will likely appeal Breyer’s latest ruling.

    In a statement posted online, Newsom’s office celebrated the ruling by saying the people of California “won much needed accountability against Trump’s ILLEGAL militarization of an American city!”

    The ruling comes as Trump has deployed National Guard troops in Washington, D.C., under the District of Columbia’s Home Rule Act, which allows the president to federalize the city’s law enforcement. Trump said crime in Washington was out of control, but is getting better with the federal oversight.

    He’s also threatened to send National Guard troops to other Democratic-led cities like Baltimore and Chicago. It sparked a battle with local leaders, who say they do not need troops in their cities to control crime, and said they would sue if Trump tried to send troops.

    Trump deployed the troops to Los Angeles by declaring there was an emergency need to protect the federal buildings in the area. But in Chicago or any other city, it would be a different story. Without a clear emergency as the reason to send troops, Trump would be openly defying the governor and beginning a legal battle. Even if he overrode the governor, the troops would be limited to only protecting federal assets and employees, nothing more.

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  • Judge rules Trump’s deployment of troops to Los Angeles violated federal law

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    Washington — A federal court in California ruled Tuesday that the Trump administration violated federal law when it deployed members of the National Guard and active-duty U.S. Marines to Los Angeles earlier this summer in response to protests against immigration enforcement operations.

    In a 52-page ruling, U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer found that the president and his administration violated the Posse Comitatus Act, a 1878 law that prohibits the use of the military for domestic law enforcement. Breyer blocked the Trump administration from deploying or using the National Guard currently deployed in California, and any military troops in the state, for civilian law enforcement.

    His decision restricts the use of service members to engage in arrests, apprehensions, searches, seizures and traffic and crowd control.

    Breyer’s ruling came after he held a three-day trial in the case brought by California Gov. Gavin Newsom in June. Newsom, a Democrat, sued in response to Mr. Trump’s decision to deploy members of California’s National Guard to Los Angeles to quell protests against immigration enforcement operations taking place in the area.

    The judge granted temporary relief to California officials in June that required the Trump administration not to deploy the California National Guard in Los Angeles and return control to Newsom. But a three-judge panel on the 9th Circuit found it likely that Mr. Trump lawfully federalized the California National Guard under a different law, Title 10.

    Those earlier proceedings did not involve the Posse Comitatus Act. Breyer held the trial on the merits of Newsom’s arguments that the president violated that 147-year-old law last month.

    The judge’s ruling

    The judge wrote in his ruling that the evidence put forth at the trial established that the Trump administration “systematically used armed soldiers (whose identity was often obscured by protective armor) and military vehicles to set up protective perimeters and traffic blockades, engage in crowd control, and otherwise demonstrate a military presence in and around Los Angeles. In short, Defendants violated the Posse Comitatus Act,” Breyer wrote.

    While the Pentagon withdrew roughly the 700 U.S. Marines who had been sent to Los Angeles, Breyer noted that there are still 300 National Guard members stationed there nearly three months after they were first mobilized.

    “Moreover, President Trump and Secretary Hegseth have stated their intention to call National Guard troops into federal service in other cities across the country — including Oakland and San Francisco, here in the Northern District of California — thus creating a national police force with the President as its chief,” Breyer wrote.

    The judge said that the Trump administration intentionally initiated the deployment of the National Guard and Marines to Los Angeles to establish a military presence there and enforce federal law. He called that conduct a “serious violation” of federal law prohibiting the use of the military for domestic law enforcement.

    “In fact, these violations were part of a top-down, systemic effort by Defendants to use military troops to execute various sectors of federal law (the drug laws and the immigration laws at least) across hundreds of miles and over the course of several months — and counting,” Breyer wrote.

    Breyer rejected the administration’s argument that the president’s constitutional powers allow him to override the restrictions in the Posse Comitatus Act.

    “Under this ‘constitutional exception,’ as Defendants call it, the President has inherent constitutional authority to protect federal property, federal personnel, and federal functions, so any actions that can be construed as such ‘protection’ are lawful in spite of the Posse Comitatus Act,” he wrote. “This assertion is not grounded in the history of the Act, Supreme Court jurisprudence on executive authority, or common sense.”

    Attorneys for California had sought an injunction that blocked National Guard forces from participating in and protecting federal agents during immigration enforcement operations, and Breyer agreed to grant their request.

    The judge wrote that while there is “no question that federal personnel should be able to perform their jobs without fearing for their safety,” the Trump administration cannot “use this as a hook to send military troops alongside federal agents wherever they go.”

    Since the 9th Circuit allowed the Trump administration to keep the National Guard in California, the president has moved to deploy troops to Washington, D.C. Mr. Trump has also teased sending the National Guard to other major cities throughout the country in what he casts as a looming crackdown against illegal immigration, violent crime and civil unrest.

    As of Monday, there are over 2,200 National Guard members in Washington, D.C., with over half of those troops sent by Republican governors throughout the country.

    Full interview: Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem

    Full Interview: Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker

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