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Trump plans ride-along with troops in Washington, D.C., crackdown
President Trump said he's planning to ride along Thursday night with troops patrolling Washington, D.C., as part of his federal crackdown. 'I'm going to be going out tonight, I think, with the police and with the military,' Trump told conservative commentator Todd Starnes. 'So we're going to do a job. The National Guard is great. They've done a fantastic job.' Trump gave no additional details of which law enforcement or military units he might join or when and where. Trump's move to personally join the controversial crackdown, which has lasted for two weeks, would amount to a new escalation in the show of force from the White House. Hundreds of federal agents and National Guard soldiers have surged into the streets of the nation's capital this month, leaving some residents on edge and creating tense confrontations in the streets. Although the city has historically struggled with high crime, crime rates were sharply declining before Trump declared a putative emergency that required urgent federal intervention. Troops and agents from an alphabet soup of different agencies have set up checkpoints on busy city arteries, injecting their authority into daily life. Immigration enforcement has been a core part of the crackdown, rattling immigrants and Latino American citizens in many of the city's diverse neighborhoods. Since Aug. 7, when Trump began surging federal agents into the city, there have been 630 arrests, including 251 people who are in the country illegally, according to the White House. Trump has been ratcheting up the pressure since then, claiming control of the D.C. police department on Aug. 11 and deploying more National Guard troops from Republican-led states. Soldiers have been largely stationed in downtown areas, such as monuments on the National Mall and transit stations. But federal agents have started to operate more widely through the city, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser acknowledged Thursday. 'The surge of federal officers is allowing for different types of deployments, more frequent types of deployments, like checkpoints,' Bowser said. Democrats have denounced the federal crackdown as a political stunt. The law that permits the feds to exercise wide authority over law enforcement in Washington, D.C., says the crackdown can only last for 30 days unless Congress approves an extension. Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., has said Democrats will block any effort to extend Trump's emergency. _____
Yahoo
6 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Lil Nas X hospitalized for possible OD after roaming LA streets in underwear
Lil Nas X has been hospitalized for a possible overdose after strutting in underwear and cowboy boots down Ventura Boulevard in Los Angeles early Thursday morning. At around 4 a.m., the 'Old Town Road' rapper, 26, told a bystander, 'Hey, don't be late to the party tonight,' according to cellphone footage obtained by TMZ. 'Go ahead, babe,' the Grammy winner, real name Montero Lamar Hill, told the other man, before continuing to sing and walk along the famed thoroughfare. In subsequent clips, he strikes several poses and tells the other man, 'It's gonna be a beautiful sunrise. Gimme that phone, so I can throw it. I wanna throw it far away, so you never see it again. I don't like phones.' 'Don't miss the party tonight, why are you still here?' he continues. 'You need to be telling everyone about the f–ing party. What's your problem?' Multiple witnesses reported the erratic behavior to Los Angeles Police, according to TMZ. When officers eventually caught up with the 'Star Walkin'' artist, he allegedly 'charged' at them, only to be subdued and handcuffed, sources told the outlet. He was transported to a hospital for a potential overdose, where law enforcement sources say he's still being treated. Though Nas could be charged for the ordeal, it's unclear whether he will be. Representatives for the rapper did not immediately respond to the Daily News' request for comment. Nas was also hospitalized back in April for partial facial paralysis, revealing in a since-deleted post that he'd 'lost control of the right side of [his] face' and couldn't 'even laugh right.' Though the cause has not yet been confirmed, it's been speculated that Nas may have been suffering from Bell's palsy, which causes sudden weakness in the muscles in one side of the face and can make it appear to droop. The condition, whose particular cause is not known, is usually temporary and affects an estimated 40,000 people — across age and sex brackets — in the U.S. each year.

Yahoo
6 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Colorado funeral home investigated after decomposing bodies found behind hidden door
DENVER (AP) — Colorado authorities said Thursday they are investigating a funeral home operated by a county coroner where inspectors found several decomposing bodies. The bodies were found this week in a room behind a door that was hidden by a cardboard display during an inspection of Davis Mortuary in Pueblo on Wednesday after Brian Cotter, an owner and the county coroner, asked them not to go inside the room, according to a document from state regulators. The inspectors found a 'strong odor of decomposition," it said. Cotter told inspectors that some of the bodies had been awaiting cremation for about 15 years and that he may have given fake cremated remains to family members, according to the document, which explained why the mortuary's license was suspended. Colorado for years had some of the weakest rules for funeral homes in the nation with no routine inspections or qualification requirements for funeral home operators. That allowed numerous abuses, including a pending case involving nearly 200 decomposing bodies that were found being stored at room temperature in a building in Penrose, Colorado, about 30 miles from Pueblo. A sentencing of one of the funeral homes owners in that case on charges of corpse abuse is set for Friday. Cotter and his brother bought Davis Mortuary in 1989, according to the business's website. It said the brothers brought with them an 'old school' way of operating that they learned from their father, who owned and operated funeral homes in Colorado, Kansas and Nebraska. A woman who answered the phone at the mortuary said it had no comment and declined to make Cotter available for an interview. Cotter did not immediately respond to a message left with the Coroner's office. Officials from the Colorado Bureau of Investigation, Pueblo police, the Pueblo County Sheriff's Office and the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies plan to hold a press conference about the criminal investigation Thursday afternoon. ____ Brown reported from Billings, Montana. Matthew Brown And Colleen Slevin, The Associated Press Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data