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Former ICE Chief Of Staff Blasts Trump's 'Unprecedented' Move Amid LA Protests

Former ICE Chief Of Staff Blasts Trump's 'Unprecedented' Move Amid LA Protests

Yahoo20 hours ago

A former chief of staff of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement ripped President Donald Trump's administration for taking the 'unprecedented' action of deploying Marines and National Guard troops to protests in Los Angeles.
Jason Houser, who served under former President Joe Biden and once was a top official in the Department of Homeland Security, told MSNBC's Ana Cabrera that troops from those forces have never accompanied his old agency on operations.
'The National Guard has been focused on the rioters and protesters but when they finally jump that line and you begin to see National Guard, Marines carrying out domestic immigration enforcement, that's a very scary line,' he said, 'both for law enforcement and also those migrants that were here legally, who had status and are now being targeted for arrest.'
Houser emphasized that the Marines' training reflects a 'lethal tool' and, in terms of national security, the U.S. needs them to keep Americans safe from 'global threats.'
'But to have Marines and National Guard to begin doing knocks and bangs on doors, going to get families, children, vulnerable populations — it's not within their mission set or their training,' Houser said.
As demonstrations continue against the president's aggressive immigration policies, photos shared by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement this week showed National Guard troops protecting federal immigration agents as they made arrests in Los Angeles.
The president suggested using the National Guard to carry out his mass deportation campaign last year. Officials told the Associated Press that the troops weren't participating in enforcement activities but were providing security for agents in the L.A. area instead.
Houser stressed that as the administration seeks to fulfill arrest quotas of non-criminal 'vetted and screened' migrants, it's 'turning our national security apparatus away' to enforce domestic immigration matters instead.
In April, Houser struck a similar tone in a New York Times op-ed and later knocked the administration on MSNBC for engaging in 'dangerous political theater' through the misuse of federal law enforcement to 'drive a narrative' that migrants seeking protection under the law are here to harm Americans.
'It's risky, it's risky for our Constitution, it is inhumane, it is against our American values and, quite frankly, it's getting in the way of federal law enforcement carrying out the public safety protections that we need,' he told MSNBC at the time.
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How Israel's campaign to wipe out Iran's nuclear program unfolded
How Israel's campaign to wipe out Iran's nuclear program unfolded

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How Israel's campaign to wipe out Iran's nuclear program unfolded

Israel launched a wave of unprecedented strikes on Iran shortly before sunrise Friday morning, hitting key sites in the nation's nuclear program as well as residential areas in upscale neighborhoods of Tehran and killing some of the country's highest-ranking military leaders. A CNN analysis of satellite imagery and dozens of videos shared on social media offers insight into how the wide-ranging operation unfolded across the country. The attacks landed hundreds of miles from Tel Aviv, with strikes continuing through the afternoon as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned the bombardment could go on for days. Israel's military said it used 200 fighter jets in the operation, called 'Rising Lion.' Based on a review of strike targets, the attack had several prongs: Heavy strikes against at least one of Iran's uranium enrichment sites as well as its stockpiles of ballistic missiles, and more targeted strikes in Tehran to decapitate the regime's military leadership. It aimed to halt what Israel said was Tehran's rapid progress in developing nuclear weapons. Videos geolocated and verified by CNN reveal multiple residential neighborhoods were hit across Tehran, including in the north, west and east. Aftermath footage showed crowds and emergency workers surrounding collapsed buildings in densely populated areas. The Israeli operation came after years of threats and days of heightened speculation. Earlier in the week, the US had made efforts to withdraw non-essential personnel from locations around the Middle East, with one official citing 'developing tension' in the region. On Thursday, US President Donald Trump told reporters in the White House that he did not want Israel to target Iran while talks to reach a new agreement to limit Iranian nuclear enrichment were ongoing. In retaliation, Iran launched over 100 drones toward Israeli territory, Israel's military said, and then a barrage of ballistic missiles. Here's what we know about how Israel's attack unfolded, minute by minute. All times are local to Iran. The first reports of explosions in Tehran came at around 3:30 a.m. local time Friday. Video geolocated by CNN showed a fire burning across several floors of an apartment block in northern Tehran, as emergency services arrived at the scene. Seven miles west of those buildings – still in the north of the city – another video showed damage from a strike on the upscale Chamran Town neighborhood. An entire wall had been stripped off one of the buildings, with people seen climbing through the rubble inside. One strike hit centrally near Laleh Park, the site of protests over the 2022 death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman who died after Iran's morality police detained her for allegedly not wearing her headscarf properly. Beyond the capital, a video showed a strike on the Piranshahr military base in western Iran, some 350 miles (about 560 kilometers) away from Tehran. The video showed the dark night sky being lit up by a series of rapid explosions, with smoke rising in the distance. Trevor Ball, a munitions researcher and former US Army senior explosive ordnance technician, told CNN the video indicated 'rocket motor burning,' which would be consistent with a strike on a ballistic missile storage facility. Strikes also hit the Natanz nuclear facility, about 150 miles (240 kilometers) south of Tehran. Social media footage showed a huge fireball rising from the site. CNN obtained radar imagery from a space imaging company, Umbra, which captured damage to several areas of the facility. Other satellite imagery reviewed by CNN showed the same damage in more clarity; black plumes of smoke rising from multiple locations across the site. The Natanz nuclear facility includes two large underground halls believed to hold centrifuges for enriching uranium, according to a 2003 report from the Institute for Science and International Security, which includes satellite imagery of the site under construction in 2002. Based on that imagery, the latest attacks do not appear to have hit the underground buildings, but the full extent of the damage is not yet known. Iran's atomic energy agency said its primary nuclear enrichment facility 'did not encounter serious damage' and there were 'no radiation leaks that would cause concern to the people' after Israel attacked it. The spokesperson of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, Behrouz Kamalvandi, said on Iranian state media that the damage was on the ground level away from the underground facility at the plant. Rafael Grossi, the head of the United Nations' nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, said in a statement that 'radiation levels outside the Natanz facility remained unchanged' but added that there was 'radioactive contamination present inside the facility,' which 'can be managed with appropriate protective measures.' Soon after the first explosions rocked Tehran, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) announced it had launched preemptive strikes against Iran's nuclear program. It said it used jets to strike 'dozens of military targets, including nuclear targets in different areas of Iran.' The statement came at 3:44 a.m. in Israel, which is 30 minutes behind Iran's time zone. Within minutes, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio stressed that the US was 'not involved' in Israel's strikes and that Israel's actions were 'unilateral.' 'Let me be clear: Iran should not target US interests or personnel,' Rubio said in a statement on X, anticipating a potential Iranian response. Just one mile west of the strikes on Chamran Town, daylight video showed the aftermath of a strike on Tehran's Chizar neighborhood. A huge hole had been blown in the top two floors of a building, with twisted iron bars hanging from the concrete structure. Residents of Tehran later told CNN how they had been woken up by their homes 'shaking' from Israel's attack. A 17-year-old Iranian, who asked to remain anonymous, said people were 'screaming' in the streets. 'I didn't know what was happening. It was really scary,' the teenager said. As evidence of Israel's strikes began to pour in, Netanyahu gave a televised address, saying that Israel had acted to 'roll back the Iranian threat to Israel's very survival.' He said the operation would continue for as long as it takes 'to remove these threats.' Netanyahu claimed Iran had produced enough highly enriched uranium for nine nuclear weapons. In a report sent to member states May 31, the IAEA also judged that Iran had enough uranium enriched to 60% purity, near weapons-grade, potentially to make nine nuclear weapons. 'Iran could produce a nuclear weapon in a very short time. It could be a year. It could be within a few months,' Netanyahu said. 'This is a clear and present danger to Israel's survival.' The prime minister claimed Israel had struck Iran's main enrichment facility in Natanz, which was corroborated by video of the site. As the sun rose, the full scope of Israel's attack became clearer. Videos published after 6 a.m. showed the aftermath of a strike on a military base and a cargo terminal in the western Kermanshah region, which borders Iraq, over 250 miles from Tehran and 167 miles from Baghdad. After Netanyahu claimed Israel had targeted the nuclear facility at Natanz, the UN nuclear watchdog confirmed that Natanz had been hit. 'The IAEA is closely monitoring the deeply concerning situation in Iran,' it said. The agency said it was in contact with Iranian authorities regarding radiation levels in the area. In a later statement, it said it had not observed an increase in radiation. The Israeli military said it had killed three of the most senior men in Iran's military and its nuclear program. Maj. Gen. Hossein Salami, head of the secretive Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), was the highest-profile of those killed. In its initial statement, Israel also said it killed Maj. Gen. Mohammad Bagheri, chief of staff of Iran's armed forces, and Gen. Gholam Ali Rashid, leader of Iran's emergency command. Later, the IDF said it had killed Ali Shamkhani, a close aide to Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and Amir Ali Hajizadeh, commander of the IRGC's air force. Many of the strikes on Tehran appear to have been targeting these senior officials. Last year, Israel demonstrated its ability to assassinate its adversaries in highly targeted attacks on Iranian soil. In July 2024, it killed Ismail Haniyeh, the political leader of Hamas – the Iran-backed militia in Gaza – by remotely detonating a bomb that had been hidden in his room in Tehran. While Friday's strikes appeared extremely targeted, there have been reports of civilian casualties. The IDF said that Iran had launched more than 100 drones towards Israeli territory, and that Israel's air defenses were preparing to intercept them. 'We're expecting difficult hours,' it said. Following previous Israeli attacks against Iran and its proxies in the region, Tehran fired back with huge salvos of ballistic missiles. The Institute for the Study of War, a think tank in Washington, DC, said it was 'possible that Israel somehow disrupted Iran's response by targeting Iran's ballistic missile launch sites and stockpiles.' Early afternoon, Iranian media reported that Israel had launched a fresh strike on the northwestern city of Tabriz. Tamsin news agency said the Tabriz Airport had come under 'heavy Israeli attack.' After learning the extent of Israel's attack, Trump urged Iran's leaders to agree to a new nuclear deal 'before there is nothing left' of their country. Trump said he had given Iran 'chance after chance' to make a deal. 'JUST DO IT, BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE,' he wrote on Truth Social, his social media platform. Under a 2015 nuclear deal struck by President Barack Obama, Iran agreed to drastically limit its number of centrifuges and cap uranium enrichment at levels far below those required to make weapons, in exchange for sanctions relief. But during his first term as president in 2018, Trump withdrew from the deal, saying the 'rotten structure' of the agreement was not enough to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear bomb. He ramped up sanctions on Iran and threatened to sanction any country that helped the regime obtain nuclear weapons. In his second term, Trump has revived efforts to strike a new nuclear deal with Iran. Just hours before Israel's attack, the president on Thursday cautioned Israel against launching a strike while talks are ongoing. US officials have held several rounds of high-stakes nuclear talks with Iran in recent weeks, demanding that Tehran stop all uranium enrichment activity. Iran has long claimed that its nuclear program is peaceful. It has said it wants to keep enriching uranium for civilian purposes, like building a nuclear reactor, and not for weapons. 'Zero nuclear weapons = we DO have a deal. Zero enrichment = we do NOT have a deal,' Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in an X post last month, setting out Tehran's red lines in the talks.

West Palm police warn of traffic delays, extreme heat ahead of 'No Kings' march to Mar-a-Lago
West Palm police warn of traffic delays, extreme heat ahead of 'No Kings' march to Mar-a-Lago

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time30 minutes ago

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West Palm police warn of traffic delays, extreme heat ahead of 'No Kings' march to Mar-a-Lago

WEST PALM BEACH — Police are urging the public to prepare for traffic delays and extreme heat on June 14, as large-scale demonstrations are expected to draw crowds to downtown West Palm Beach. The demonstrations are part of a nationwide movement dubbed 'No Kings National Day of Defiance.' Meant to protest President Donald Trump's administration, these rallies coincide with both his 79th birthday and the U.S. Army's 250th anniversary military parade in Washington, D.C. Locally, the protest will include a caravan and march to Mar-a-Lago, and a rally at Meyer Amphitheater in West Palm Beach. More than 1,000 are expected to participate across Palm Beach County, including in Palm Beach Gardens, Lake Worth Beach, Boynton Beach and Boca Raton. 'No Kings': Everything you need to know about the anti-Trump protests on Saturday, June 14 in Palm Beach County Lev Parnas, a former associate of Rudy Giuliani and a onetime Trump insider-turned-critic, will deliver the keynote address at the Meyer Amphitheatre. The event will feature a lineup of speakers on topics ranging from gun control and women's rights to LGBTQ+ protections and veterans' issues. The West Palm Beach Police Department issued an advisory June 13 urging drivers to steer clear of downtown, warning of heavier-than-normal traffic throughout the area. 'Drivers are encouraged to plan ahead,' the department said. 'Several roadways may be impacted as the events unfold.' Forecasters also predict temperatures will climb into the mid-to-high 90s, raising the risk of heat exhaustion for those outside. The police department's spokesperson, Rachel Leitão, encouraged demonstrators and attendees to drink water, wear light-colored, breathable clothing, limit strenuous activity, apply sunscreen and seek shade regularly. The police department said it supports the right to peaceful assembly and will be present to ensure public safety. 'We are committed to the safety of all participants and members of the public,' Leitão said. 'Please stay aware of your surroundings and take care in the heat.' Hannah Phillips is a journalist covering public safety and criminal justice at The Palm Beach Post. You can reach her at hphillips@ This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Police issue heat advisory ahead of 'No King's protest in West Palm Beach

Behind Florida's Sheriff's 'We Will Kill You' to Anti-Trump Protesters
Behind Florida's Sheriff's 'We Will Kill You' to Anti-Trump Protesters

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time30 minutes ago

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Behind Florida's Sheriff's 'We Will Kill You' to Anti-Trump Protesters

As Americans prepare for a full weekend of protests against President Donald Trump, one Florida sheriff's spooky warning is sounding off alarms on social media. Now, Brevard County Sheriff Wayne Ivey is facing backlash after essentially threatening Florida residents organizing for 'No Kings Day' protests against Trump's birthday, military parade. In a news conference, Ivey said 'If you spit on us [law enforcement officers], you're going to the hospital and in jail.' He continued, 'If you hit one of us, you're going to the hospital and jail and most likely getting bitten by one of our big, beautiful dogs we have here.' His darkest threat came next as he confidently warned 'If you throw a brick, a fire bomb or point a gun at one of our deputies, we will be notifying your family where to collect your remains at, because we will kill you. Graveyard, dead.' He added, 'We're not going to play, this has got to stop.' With Ivey and Fla. Gov. Ron DeSantis basically giving the green light for violence against Americans using their First Amendment right, Black folks on X took it all in. 'Dear Black People, this is why we say, 'stay home,'' @ZetaGirlTech said. 'Don't allow anyone to gaslight or shame you for choosing self-preservation. Stay home!' Another user, @AirHarp, wrote 'This is what they've been waiting for,' adding, 'ThisIsWhyWeDontStand.' Other folks weren't moved by the sheriff's threats. 'Lol… continue protesting these people have no right to tell you what you should or shouldn't do,' @biggaboy0 wrote. 'Please remember that the first amendment still applies and no one can outlaw Peaceful Protest,' attorney Gerald A. Griggs said. Upwards 1,800 protests across the nation are expected to go down over the weekend. In cities like Los Angeles, New York City and Chicago, demonstrators are already showing up to counteract Trump. But in other states, like Florida, planned protests being threatened with violent force has folks thinking the state is the real problem. 'Florida seems to be the place that all of the crazy racists… are now coming out of the woodworks,' @adivunsolicited said on TikTok. Back on X, @Bigdumbdog2 said he wishes 'I could saw-off Florida like the Roadrunner does to the Coyote.' S.C. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick criticized the sheriff for his language. 'As public servants, our words matter — and threatening to kill citizens with such reckless and inflammatory language goes far beyond maintaining public safety,' she said. 'This is not acceptable, nor will it ever be.' Many folks online said Sheriff Ivey is clearly standing on one side of the fight… and it's not with the people. 'The MAGA in him is extremely strong. He has waited his whole career for this moment,' @imJohnWess said. 'What a press conference by the Klan sounds like,' @RodnyeTheoc tweeted. Despite Ivey's threats, No Kings Day protests are shaping up to be the largest mass-scale protests since the 2020 Black Lives Matter demonstrations. Meanwhile, Trump is recruiting 6,000 soldiers, military tanks, weapons, planes, and more for his celebratory parade honoring the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army and his 79th birthday. The event will go down in Washington, D.C. despite bipartisan backlash.

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