A federal judge on Thursday ordered the Trump administration to end its monthslong deployment of National Guard troops to help police the nation's capital.
US District Judge Jia Cobb concluded that President Donald Trump's military takeover in Washington, D.C., violates the Constitution and illegally intrudes on local officials' authority to direct law enforcement in the district. She put her order on hold for 21 days to allow for an appeal, however.
District of Columbia Attorney General Brian Schwalb sued to challenge the Guard deployments. He asked the judge to enjoin the White House from deploying Guard troops without the mayor's consent.
In August, President Donald Trump issued an executive order declaring a crime emergency in Washington. Within a month, more than 2,300 National Guard troops from eight states and the district were patrolling the city under the command of the Secretary of the Army. Trump also deployed hundreds of federal agents to assist in patrols.
It's unclear how long the deployments will last, but attorneys from Schwalb's office said Guard troops are likely to remain in the city through at least next summer.
Our constitutional democracy will never be the same if these occupations are permitted to stand, they wrote.
Government lawyers said Congress empowered the president to control the D.C. National Guard's operation. They argued that Schwalb's lawsuit is a frivolous political stunt threatening to undermine a successful campaign to reduce violent crime in the district.
There is no sensible reason for an injunction unwinding this arrangement now, particularly since the District's claims have no merit, Justice Department attorneys wrote.
Trump's Guard deployments have led to other court challenges. On Monday, a federal appeals court suspended an order blocking Trump from taking command of 200 Oregon National Guard troops.
In September, a federal judge ruled that the Trump administration illegally sent Guard troops to the Los Angeles area after days of protests over immigration raids.
In Washington, the Trump administration deputized Guard troops to serve as special US Marshal Service deputies. Schwalb's office said out-of-state troops are impermissibly operating as a federal military police force in DC, inflaming tensions with residents and diverting local police resources.
Every day that this lawless incursion continues, the District suffers harm to its sovereign authority to conduct local law enforcement as it chooses, his office's attorneys wrote.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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