U.S. Sens. Alex Padilla and Adam Schiff requested a detailed breakdown from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth of military deployments to Los Angeles amid immigration enforcement protests. They sought specifics on how thousands of National Guard troops and 700 Marines were used, whether they engaged in law enforcement, and the taxpayer cost. Deployments occurred over objections from Gov. Gavin Newsom, Mayor Karen Bass and other local officials and prompted a state lawsuit alleging illegality; a federal judge ruled in the state's favor. The senators called military support for immigration operations inappropriate, potentially unlawful, and harmful to public-military relations. The Department of Defense said it would respond directly.
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,
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