Sen. Padilla Forcibly Removed From Kristi Noem's L.A. Press Conference
"Why did they get us here if they weren't going to let us in?" grumped a longtime KNX News reporter, one of two dozen media people queued up Thursday morning outside the federal building in West Los Angeles. Unlike the scenes in front of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) building downtown, where hundreds had been gathering since last Friday, there were no protesters around, apparently either not knowing or not caring that DHS Secretary Kristi Noem would be holding a press conference at 10:30 a.m.
By 10:45 a.m., when it became clear we were not going to be let inside, a few of us gathered around an L.A. Times reporter's phone to listen to a live feed coming from a local station. Noem started by thanking law enforcement ("They've been absolute rock stars") and reaffirming the Trump administration's commitment to continuing the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids, which Noem said had so far resulted in more than 1,200 arrests.
"Let me give you a few examples," she said, citing "a Vietnamese illegal alien who committed a mass shooting at a graduation party in 1994" before her voice was lost under the sound of a scuffle, and someone shouting "I have questions for the secretary," and then "Hands off!"
"What just happened?!" asked the Times reporter as the live feed cut out and then came back.
"Just a moment ago, a remarkable moment, kind of stunning," came an anchor over the feed. "We heard a voice off-camera that appeared to be trying to interrupt this secretary. We panned the camera to see where the disruption came from. It came from United States Senator Alex Padilla….He was taken—he was by force—he was taken outside the room. I've never seen anything like it," continued the anchor. "But that gives you a sense as to the incendiary nature of what we're seeing on the streets."
Maybe. Maybe, as Sen. Lindsay Graham (R–S.C.) later suggested, Padilla "got what he wanted—he's on TV." Or maybe it was as simple as Padilla himself suggested: He had a question, a question he didn't get to ask as FBI personnel and Secret Service agents pushed him into the hall, onto the ground, and handcuffed him.
Whether Padilla's interruption was intentional or not, it derailed the press conference. As ICE Acting Director Todd Lyons was insisting that his department was "focused on gang members, human traffickers, violent drug dealers, and rapists," and Akil Davis, assistant director in charge of FBI Los Angeles, announced they had identified Elpidio Reyna, who had allegedly thrown rocks at federal law enforcement, every journalist in attendance was checking social media or messaging with their editors: Had Padilla really lunged at Noem? Was he under arrest? The possibility that the freshman senator would emerge and make a statement became the day's animating factor. Before the press conference was over, the number of camera crews and reporters had tripled.
Noem herself, after declaring for the second time that federal law enforcement intended to "liberate" the city of Los Angeles, seemed unruffled by the incident.
"I don't even know the senator," Noem said after a reporter asked whether she was going to press charges against Padilla. "He did not request a meeting with me or to speak with me. So when I leave here, I'll have a conversation with him and visit and find out really what his concerns were."
Padilla and Noem apparently did meet, and Noem later said they had a "great" conversation. She appeared upbeat as she left the federal building.
Padilla did not look upbeat as he emerged half an hour later; as he pressed through the scrum of reporters, he looked and sounded beaten down and had a hitch in his voice as he explained what had happened. He had been in the building on a different matter when he learned Noem was there.
"Over the course of recent weeks, I—several of my colleagues—have been asking the Department of Homeland Security for more information and more answers on their increasingly extreme immigration enforcement actions," said Padilla. "And we've gotten little to no information in response to our inquiries."
Padilla said that while listening to Noem, he had a question and started to ask it. "I was almost immediately forcibly removed from the room. I was forced to the ground and I was handcuffed," he said. "If this is how this administration responds to a senator with a question, if this is how the Department of Homeland Security responds to a senator with a question, you can only imagine what they're doing to farm workers, to cooks, to day laborers out in the Los Angeles community and throughout California and throughout the country."
The reactions to this red meat broke along predictable lines. "Trump and his shock troops are out of control," California's Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, posted on X. Meanwhile, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R–Ga.) said Padilla "should be prosecuted."
Some marginally broke rank. Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R–Alaska) said the video of Padilla being removed was "shocking at every level." She went on to say, "It's not the America I know."
There was one camp that did not express outrage as much as umbrage: the journalists covering the event. After Padilla was escorted to the parking lot, several reporters jawed that it was not the senator's place to storm a press conference, that some of us weren't even able to get inside, and that we don't get to, say, vote on the Senate floor just because we happen to be in the building.
The KNX reporter held out his press pass. "You have one of these?" he asked. "No? Then you're a second-class citizen, Senator. Resign your job and get a press pass, and then you'll be able to ask the questions."
The post Sen. Padilla Forcibly Removed From Kristi Noem's L.A. Press Conference appeared first on Reason.com.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Axios
37 minutes ago
- Axios
Padilla says FBI agent, Guard member escorted him to Noem's briefing before removal
Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) said Sunday that a member of the National Guard and an FBI agent escorted him into Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's press conference last week before he was forcefully removed. The big picture: Administration officials and allies claim Padilla interrupted the briefing to manufacture a scene. Democrats, whose fears of arrest and the hands of the administration have soared, say the senior senator from California was doing his job by questioning the secretary. Tensions were already high, as protests in Los Angeles over the administration's aggressive immigration crackdown set the stage for a showdown between President Trump and state Democratic officials. When Padilla interrupted Noem to try to ask a question, Axios' Noah Bressner reported, she had just said her agents were staying in LA to "liberate this city from the socialist and the burdensome leadership that this governor and this mayor have placed on this country." Driving the news: Padilla said on CNN's "State of the Union" Sunday that he arrived at a federal building for a scheduled briefing with representatives from U.S. Northern Command when he learned Noem was having a press conference "a couple doors down." He said he requested to listen in and was escorted into the room by a member of the National Guard and an FBI agent. "They opened the door for me, and they stood next to me while I was listening for the entire time," he told CNN's Dana Bash. "And then, of course, once I was forcibly removed and handcuffed." Friction point: DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said Thursday that Padilla "interrupted a live press conference without identifying himself" and that Secret Service believed he was "an attacker." In footage of the incident shared by McLaughlin on social media, Padilla can be heard saying, "I am Senator Alex Padilla. I have questions for the secretary" as he is pushed away. "What does it say about the secretary to not know who the senator from California is, the ranking member of the judiciary subcommittee on immigration?" Padilla questioned Sunday. DHS did not immediately respond to Axios' request for comment. Zoom out: On Saturday, Padilla led the entirety of the Senate Democratic caucus in demanding that Trump remove all military forces from LA and stop threatening to further deploy troops, Axios' Stephen Neukam scooped.


New York Post
44 minutes ago
- New York Post
The Big Beautiful Bill can help us deport criminals, keep the peace and Make America Safe Again
The Los Angeles riots have made it crystal clear: Congress' Big Beautiful Bill is crucial to President Donald Trump's law-and-order agenda of deporting illegal aliens, securing the border and backing up law enforcement. Last week, violent agitators began attacking federal and local law-enforcement officers in Los Angeles. Failed Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris falsely claimed the riots were 'overwhelmingly peaceful.' Gov. Gavin Newsom blamed the Trump administration because it dared to deport criminals. Advertisement The legacy media provided aid and comfort to the rioters, as usual. President Trump, by contrast, took action — sending the National Guard and Marines to maintain civility. Rioters were arrested. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents continued to detain the worst of the worst illegal aliens, despite the danger to officer safety. Advertisement Yet the riots showed that as we confront the challenge of removing millions of illegal aliens, we also need to stop criminals who resort to violence to disrupt our efforts. To do that, DHS needs more resources and manpower — specifically, more federal law-enforcement officers, more detention beds and more transportation for removals. The One Big Beautiful Bill gets us all three. Advertisement First, the BBB will allow ICE to hire 10,000 new officers. It'll also provide Customs and Border Protection funding for 5,000 more customs officers and 3,000 new Border Patrol agents. ICE currently has 20,000 law-enforcement and support personnel in more than 400 offices. A larger force will provide ICE agents with the necessary protection so they can continue to carry out removals. Why are more agents better? Simple: There's safety in numbers. These rioters are cowards who'll keep challenging us as long as they think they can get away with it. DHS needs to boost its manpower and resources to both remove illegal aliens and keep things peaceful in the process. Advertisement Additionally, we need more space for apprehended illegal aliens as they await deportation. The One Big Beautiful Bill funds detention capacity sufficient to maintain an average daily population of at least 100,000, double the current daily average. This will allow the US government to safely detain more violent criminals until we can send them home. Of course, our mission is to remove illegal aliens, not just detain them. The BBB helps with that by providing $14.4 billion for removal transportation. As demonstrated in Los Angeles, we must also limit ICE agents' risk exposure. Across the country, ICE agents are facing a 413% increase in assaults. That's why DHS uses an all-of-the-above approach. One method, for example, is the CBP Home app, which incentivizes illegal aliens to self-deport by offering them $1,000 and a one-way flight out of the country. No ICE agents are needed for those removals — which means no threat to their safety. It also saves taxpayers 70% per deportation. The One Big Beautiful Bill will cut down on the number of forced deportations by funding this program and encouraging voluntary deportation via the app. Advertisement The BBB will fully fund ICE's 287(g) program, which empowers state and local law enforcement to assist federal immigration officers. That'll let ICE shift from defense to offense: We can pour resources into the fight against human-trafficking, smuggling, gangs, cartels and foreign terrorist organizations. Meanwhile, successful mass deportations mean nothing if we don't control the border and keep future illegal aliens out. That's why the BBB legislation also funds hundreds of miles of new border wall and water-based barriers in the Rio Grande, which will permanently secure the border for decades. Advertisement I served in Congress for almost a decade. I worked in leadership, and I passed a lot of funding bills. This one is the most important I've ever seen for the future of law and order. Without it, DHS officers' jobs will be that much harder: More rioters will be emboldened, fewer dangerous illegal aliens will be removed, our border will be more difficult to secure and our streets will be less safe. The Trump administration will stop at nothing to secure America's borders and Make America Safe Again. The One Big Beautiful Bill gives us the means to do that. Kristi Noem is secretary of Homeland Security.


CBS News
an hour ago
- CBS News
Matteson man charged with impersonating police officer during ICE protest in Chicago
Man in custody for impersonating officer while carrying weapon during Chicago ICE protest Man in custody for impersonating officer while carrying weapon during Chicago ICE protest Man in custody for impersonating officer while carrying weapon during Chicago ICE protest A man was charged with impersonating a police officer during Thursday's ICE protest in downtown Chicago. Willie Mathews Jr., 21, of Matteson, Illinois, is facing felony charges including false personation of a police officer with a weapon, aggravated unlawful possession of a weapon, and forgery. Chicago police said officers were on patrol Thursday around 5 p.m. in the 200 block of South Michigan Avenue when they received a radio call about a suspicious man wearing "police identifiers." Police sources said the 21-year-old man [Mathews] was wearing a black polo shirt with the word "police" on the back and a black bag with a police patch on it. However, he wasn't an officer and could not provide valid police credentials. Police sources also said he was openly carrying a loaded semi-automatic pistol. The man has a FOID card, but told police he did not have a concealed carry license. He also had badges and documents saying he was part of a "special police team" at the time of his arrest. He is expected to appear at a detention hearing on Sunday. The video above is from a previous report.