In a significant ruling, U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer has decided that federalized National Guard troops stationed in Los Angeles must be handed back to California Governor Gavin Newsom (D).
Judge Breyer made it clear, stating, “It’s been six months since these troops were federalized, yet there’s still about 300 Guardsmen under control of federal authorities, with no proof that keeping them there is actually necessary for enforcing federal law in any way.”
The judge called the current deployment unlawful, mentioning that it might silently pave the way for establishing a national police force using state troops.
The White House has stepped in, filing an appeal that puts the final decision about the deployment into the hands of higher courts.
White House representative Abigail Jackson remarked, “President Trump used his legal authority to deploy National Guard troops to assist federal agents following violent protests that local officials, whom we call ‘Newscum,’ didn’t manage to handle. We’re optimistic about our eventual success on this matter.”
While the appeal is still active and Breyer’s ruling hasn’t yet finalized, the appellate court’s response has effectively stalled the troop deployment as they delve into whether President Trump had the right to keep the Guardsmen under federal rule.
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