Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

U.S. Court Challenges Trump's Use Of Troops In California


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) A federal court in San Francisco has ruled that President Donald Trump broke American law when he sent soldiers to Los Angeles this summer.

Judge Charles Breyer found that the deployment of 4,000 National Guard members and about 700 active-duty Marines crossed a legal red line.

The order says troops acted like police-blocking streets, controlling crowds, and supporting immigration raids-which violated the Posse Comitatus Act, the 1878 law that bars the military from policing civilians unless Congress or the Constitution clearly allow it.

Trump had ordered the deployment on June 7, 2025, under a statute that lets the president take temporary control of state Guard units. The decision came after protests against large-scale immigration raids in Los Angeles.

Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, challenged the move, arguing the president had overstepped his authority. The court agreed, ruling on September 2 that the law was broken, but it delayed enforcement until September 12 to give the government time to appeal.



This case matters because it tests one of the most sensitive boundaries in the U.S. system: when and how the president can use the military inside the country. The record shows local police had already handled the unrest.
Court Upholds Civilian Over Military in Policing
Los Angeles police reported 29 arrests, minor property damage, and one federal officer injured. The judge said those figures showed civilian law enforcement was capable of managing the situation without soldiers taking on police roles.

Behind the ruling lies a broader political and legal battle. Trump 's first term saw many Democratic-led states file lawsuits to block his actions, from immigration bans to attempts to divert funds for a border wall.

Some of those cases went to the Supreme Court , which sometimes backed Trump and sometimes ruled against him. The California case now adds a new chapter: a clash over the limits of military power at home.

For outsiders, the point is straightforward. The U.S. legal system protects a sharp separation between civilian police and the armed forces. Businesses, residents, and communities rely on that separation to avoid sudden disruptions from military intervention.

The upcoming appeals, possibly even at the Supreme Court, will decide whether that line holds firm-or whether presidents can stretch it further in times of domestic unrest.

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