Trump announces National Guard withdrawals in Chicago, L.A., Portland
by Mike Heuer · UPIDec. 31 (UPI) -- The National Guard will be leaving Chicago, Los Angeles and Portland, Ore., but they likely will return, President Donald Trump said on Wednesday.
Trump announced the withdrawals after the Supreme Court ruled against a National Guard deployment in Chicago and amid legal challenges in California and Oregon.
The Supreme Court last week ruled the federal government cannot take control of respective state National Guard units to protect federal agents as they enforce immigration law, CNN reported.
We are removing the National Guard from Chicago, Los Angeles and Portland, despite the fact that crime has been greatly reduced by having these great patriots in those cities, and only by that fact," Trump said in a Truth Social post on Wednesday.
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Portland, Los Angeles and Chicago were gone if it weren't for the federal government stepping in," the president said.
He predicted the National Guard will return to those cities, though.
"We will come back, perhaps in a much different and stronger form, when crime begins to soar again," Trump said, adding: "Only a question of time!"
Similar National Guard deployments in New Orleans and Memphis would not be affected because the respective governors in those states have okayed the deployments.
The National Guard has been deployed in Memphis to help reduce violent crime there, and National Guard units began arriving in New Orleans ahead of New Year's Eve, the annual Sugar Bowl and Mardi Gras.
Local, state and federal law enforcement and the Louisiana National Guard seek to prevent a repeat of last year's lone-wolf attack by an ISIS supporter, WWLTV reported.
Shamsud-Din Jabbar, 42, was a U.S. citizen from Texas who drove to New Orleans and shot and killed 14 during the early morning hours on Jan. 1.
An ISIS flag was found in his truck, along with weapons and a potential improvised explosive device, but local police shot and killed him before he could cause more harm.
He had placed two IEDs on Bourbon Street, where he also opened fire with a rifle and killed 14 before being shot and killed to end the attack.
Federal investigators found bomb-making materials in a rental home that Jabbar briefly occupied and tried to set on fire to conceal his crimes.