&w=3840&q=100)
200 Marines moved into Los Angeles to protect federal property, personnel
After a week of tense protests over the federal immigration raids, about 200 Marines have moved into Los Angeles and will protect federal property and personnel, a military commander said Friday.
Maj Gen Scott Sherman, commander of Task Force 51 who is overseeing the 4,700 troops deployed, said Friday that the Marines have finished training on civil disturbance.
Sherman said the Marines would take over operations at noon local time at the federal building in downtown Los Angeles.
'I would like to emphasize that the soldiers will not participate in law enforcement activities. Rather, they'll be focused on protecting federal law enforcement personnel,' Sherman said.
The development comes a day after the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals temporarily blocked a federal judge's order that had directed President Donald Trump to return control of National Guard troops to California, shortly after a federal judge had ruled the Guard deployment was illegal and both violated the Tenth Amendment and exceeded Trump's statutory authority.
The Marines will join some 2,000 National Guard troops that have been on the streets of the city since last week when immigration raids set off protests.
Over the past three nights the demonstrations have been largely peaceful with only a handful of arrests mostly due to people failing to disperse.
California Gov Gavin Newsom has called the troop deployment a 'serious breach of state sovereignty' and a power grab by Trump, and he has gone to court to stop it.
The president has cited a legal provision that allows him to mobilise federal service members when there is 'a rebellion or danger of a rebellion against the authority of the Government of the United States'.
Under the Posse Comitatus Act, active-duty forces are prohibited by law from conducting law enforcement.
Sherman said the National Guard soldiers at that location will transition to provide protection to federal law enforcement agents but not participate in law enforcement activities.
Sherman said the US Marine Corps is responsible for guarding US embassies overseas so they are well-trained on how to defend a federal building.
Some National Guard troops have protected immigration agents making arrests but Sherman said 'we have had no soldier or Marine detain anyone'.
The National Guard troops that were protecting federal property will transition to providing protection to more federal law enforcement officials, Sherman said.
States face questions on deploying troops
With more demonstrations expected over the weekend, and the possibility that Trump could send troops to other states for immigration enforcement, governors are weighing what to do.
Texas Gov Greg Abbott, a Republican, has put 5,000 National Guard members on standby in cities where demonstrations are planned. In other Republican-controlled states, governors have not said when or how they may deploy troops.
A group of Democratic governors earlier signed a statement this week calling Trump's deployments 'an alarming abuse of power'.
Hundreds arrested in LA protests
There have been about 470 arrests since Saturday, the vast majority of which were for failing to leave the area at the request of law enforcement, according to the police department.
There have been a handful of more serious charges, including for assault against officers and for possession of a Molotov cocktail and a gun. Nine officers have been hurt, mostly with minor injuries.
Hashtags

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


New Indian Express
an hour ago
- New Indian Express
Cities brace for large crowds at anti-Trump 'No Kings' demonstrations across the US
PHILADELPHIA: Cities large and small were preparing for major demonstrations Saturday across the U.S. against President Donald Trump, as officials urge calm, National Guard troops mobilize and Trump attends a military parade in Washington to mark the Army's 250th anniversary. A flagship 'No Kings' march and rally are planned in Philadelphia, but no events are scheduled to take place in Washington, D.C., where the military parade will take place on Trump's birthday The demonstrations are gaining additional fuel from protests flaring up around the country over federal immigration enforcement raids and Trump ordering National Guard troops and Marines to Los Angeles where protesters blocked a freeway and set cars on fire. Police responded with tear gas, rubber bullets and flash-bang grenades while officials enforced curfews in Los Angeles and Democratic governors called Trump's Guard deployment 'an alarming abuse of power' that "shows the Trump administration does not trust local law enforcement.' Governors and city officials vowed to protect the right to protest and to show no tolerance for violence. Republican governors in Virginia, Texas, Nebraska and Missouri are mobilizing National Guard troops to help law enforcement manage demonstrations. There will be 'zero tolerance' for violence, destruction or disrupting traffic, and "if you violate the law, you're going to be arrested," Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin told reporters Friday. In Missouri, Gov. Mike Kehoe issued a similar message, vowing to take a proactive approach and not to 'wait for chaos to ensue." Nebraska's governor on Friday also signed an emergency proclamation for activating his state's National Guard, a step his office called 'a precautionary measure in reaction to recent instances of civil unrest across the country.' Organizers say that one march will go to the gates of Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, where Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis warned demonstrators that the 'line is very clear' and not to cross it. Governors also urged calm. On social media, Washington state Gov. Bob Ferguson, a Democrat, called for peaceful protests over the weekend, to ensure Trump doesn't send military to the state. 'Donald Trump wants to be able to say that we cannot handle our own public safety in Washington state,' Ferguson said. In a statement Friday, Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs, a Democrat, urged 'protestors to remain peaceful and calm as they exercise their First Amendment right to make their voices heard.' Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, a Democrat, said his administration and state police are working with police in Philadelphia ahead of what organizers estimate could be a crowd approaching 100,000 people. Philadelphia's top prosecutor, District Attorney Larry Krasner, warned that anyone coming to Philadelphia to break the law or immigration agents exceeding their authority will face arrest. He invoked civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. as a guide for demonstrators. 'If you are doing what Martin Luther King would have done, you're going to be fine," Krasner told a news conference. Some law enforcement agencies announced they were ramping up efforts for the weekend. In California, state troopers will be on 'tactical alert," which means all days off are cancelled for all officers.
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
an hour ago
- Business Standard
US military parade mirrors global traditions across regimes, democracies
The military parade to mark the Army's 250th anniversary and its convergence with President Donald Trump 's 79th birthday are combining to create a peacetime outlier in US history. Yet it still reflects global traditions that serve a range of political and cultural purposes. Variations on the theme have surfaced among longtime Nato allies in Europe, one-party and authoritarian states and history's darkest regimes. France: Bastille Day and Trump's ide inspire The oldest democratic ally of the US holds a military parade each July 14 to commemorate one of the seminal moments of the French Revolution. It inspired or at least stoked Trump's idea for a Washington version. On July 14, 1789, French insurgents stormed the Bastille, which housed prisoners of Louis XVI's government. Revolutionaries commenced a Fte de la Fdration as a day of national unity and pride the following year, even with the First French Republic still more than two years from being established. The Bastille Day parade has rolled annually since 1880. Now, it proceeds down an iconic Parisian route, the Avenue des Champs-lyses. It passes the Arc de Triomphe a memorial with tributes to the French Revolution, Napoleonic Wars and World War I and eventually in front of the French president, government ministers and invited foreign guests. Trump attended in 2017, early in his first presidency, as US troops marched as guests. The spectacle left him openly envious. It was one of the greatest parades I've ever seen, Trump told French President Emanuel Macron. It was military might, and I think a tremendous thing for France and for the spirit of France. We're going to have to try and top it. The British set modern ceremonial standards In the United Kingdom, King Charles III serves as ceremonial (though not practical) head of UK armed forces. Unlike in France and the US, where elected presidents wear civilian dress even at military events, Charles dons elaborate dress uniforms medals, sash, sword, sometimes even a bearskin hat and chin strap. He does it most famously at Trooping the Colour, a parade and troop inspection to mark the British monarch's official birthday, regardless of their actual birthdate. (The US Army has said it has no specific plans to recognize Trump's birthday on Saturday.) In 2023, Charles' first full year as king, he rode on horseback to inspect 1,400 representatives of the most prestigious UK regiments. His mother, Queen Elizabeth II, used a carriage over the last three decades of her 70-year reign. The British trace Trooping the Colour back to King Charles II, who reigned from 1660-1685. It became an annual event under King George III, described in the American colonists' Declaration of Independence as a figure of absolute Despotism (and) Tyranny. Authoritarians flaunt military assets Grandiose military pomp is common under modern authoritarians, especially those who have seized power via coups. It sometimes serves as a show of force meant to ward off would-be challengers and to seek legitimacy and respect from other countries. Cuba's Fidel Castro, who wore military garb routinely, held parades to commemorate the revolution he led on Dec. 2, 1959. In 2017, then-President Ral Castro refashioned the event into a Fidel tribute shortly after his brother's death. Venezuela's Hugo Chvez, known as Comandante Chvez, presided over frequent parades until his 2013 death. His successor, Nicols Maduro, has worn military dress at similar events. North Korean dictator Kim Jung Un, who famously bonded with Trump in a 2018 summit, used a 2023 military parade to show off his daughter and potential successor, along with pieces of his isolated country's nuclear arsenal. The event in Pyongyang's Kim Il Sung Square named for Kim's grandfather marked the North Korean Army's 75th birthday. Kim watched from a viewing stand as missiles other weaponry moved by and goose-stepping soldiers marched past him chanting, Defend with your life, Paektu Bloodline referring to the Kim family's biological ancestry. In China, Beijing's one-party government stages its National Day Parade every 10 years to project civic unity and military might. The most recent events, held in 2009 and 2019, involved trucks carrying nuclear missiles designed to evade US defences, as well as other weaponry. Legions of troops, along with those hard assets, streamed past President Xi Jinping and other leaders gathered in Tiananmen Square in 2019 as spectators waved Chinese flags and fighter jets flew above. Earlier this spring, Xi joined Russian President Vladimir Putin another strongman leader Trump has occasionally praised in Moscow's Red Square for the annual Victory Day parade. The May 9 event commemorates the Soviet Union's role in defeating Nazi Germany in World War II a global conflict in which China and the Soviet Union, despite not being democracies, joined the Allied Powers in fighting the Axis Powers led by Germany and Japan. A birthday parade for Hitler Large civic-military displays were, of course, a feature in Nazi Germany and fascist Italy before and during World War II. Chilling footage of such events lives on as a reminder of the dangers of authoritarian extremism. Among those frequent occasions: a parade capping Germany's multiday observance of Adolf Hitler's 50th birthday in 1939. (Some far-right extremists in Europe still mark the anniversary of Hitler's birth.) The four-hour march through Berlin on April 20, 1939, included more than 40,000 personnel across the Army, Navy, Luftwaffe (Air Force) and Schutzstaffel (commonly known as the SS.) Hundreds of thousands of spectators lined the streets. The Fhrer's invited guests numbered 20,000. On a street-level platform, Hitler was front and centre. Alone.


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
Highlights from Trump's business and income disclosure
Donald Trump reported more than $600 million in income from crypto, golf clubs, licensing and other ventures in a public financial disclosure report released on Friday. The annual financial disclosure form, which appeared to cover the 2024 calendar year, shows the billionaire president's push into crypto added substantially to his wealth. He also reported large fees from developments and revenue from his other businesses. A Reuters calculation shows the president reported assets worth at least $1.6 billion, overall. SOME HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE REPORT: by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like War Thunder - Register now for free and play against over 75 Million real Players War Thunder Play Now Undo INCOME FROM HOTELS AND GOLF: The income figures provided are essentially revenue, not net profit after subtracting costs. Total golf, restaurant and hotel-related income in the United States was $378 million plus another $22 million in management fees. Live Events Trump's three golf-focused resorts in Florida - Jupiter, Doral and West Palm Beach - and his private members' club at Mar-a-Lago generated at least $217.7 million in income. Trump National Doral, the expansive Miami-area golf hub known for its Blue Monster course, was the family's single largest income source at $110.4 million. Income from golf and hotels in Ireland and Scotland was 19 million euros plus 28.7 million pounds sterling ($38.9 million). CRYPTO: Trump listed $1.16 million in income from his NFTs - digital trading cards in his likeness - while First Lady Melania Trump earned around $216,700 from license fees on her own NFT collection. ROYALTIES: Royalty money from a variety of deals was at least $26 million. That included $1.3 million from the Greenwood Bible (its website describes it as "the only Bible officially endorsed by Lee Greenwood and President Trump"); $2.8 million from Trump Watches, and $2.5 million from Trump Sneakers and Fragrances. OVERSEAS LICENSE FEES: License fees from foreign firms for the use of the Trump name generated upwards of $36 million, including $5 million from a development in Vietnam, $10 million in development fees from a project in India and almost $16 million for a Dubai project. TRUMP'S INVESTMENTS: Trump's four investment accounts showed bulk of his investments are in fixed income, with amounts up to $5 million each in a range of corporate, municipal and U.S. government debt. Equity investments were smaller, with a maximum of $250,000 in individual company stocks. Larger investments included more than $50 million in the Schwab Government Money Fund and as much as $25 million each in an Invesco short-term Treasury fund and in alternative investment manager Blue Owl Capital.