Newsom says Trump 'deranged' as more troops deployed to LA protests

Ana Faguy
BBC News
Watch: Police fire rubber bullets at Los Angeles protesters on Monday

President Donald Trump's administration has sent thousands more troops to Los Angeles on a fourth day of chaotic protests against immigration raids, as the unrest spread to other US cities.

Some 700 US Marines have been deployed to the Los Angeles area and the contingent of National Guard troops mobilised to help quell the disorder has been doubled to 4,000.

California Governor Gavin Newsom said the move was fulfilling "the deranged fantasy of a dictatorial president".

The state is suing the president for sending in troops without the governor's permission. It is highly unusual for the American military to have any domestic law enforcement role.

Watch: Cities across US hold immigration rallies as LA protests continue

It is the first time since 1965 that a president has sent National Guard troops to a US city without a governor's approval.

US Marines were previously deployed domestically for major disasters such as Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and the 11 September 2001 attacks.

But the Trump administration has so far not invoked the Insurrection Act, which would allow the troops to directly participate in civilian policing.

The 700 members of 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines, from Twentynine Palms, California, will help protect federal property and personnel, including immigration agents, said the US military.

On Monday evening, Los Angeles police officers fired stun grenades and gas canisters to disperse hundreds of demonstrators who gathered outside a federal detention centre in downtown LA where undocumented immigrants have been held.

National Guard forces formed a cordon to keep protesters out of the building in the heart of America's second largest city.

Watch: "They should be in jail", Trump says of LA protesters

LAPD said late on Monday afternoon some demonstrators had thrown objects at officers.

Protests also sprang up in at least nine other US cities, including New York, Philadelphia, Dallas, Austin and San Francisco.

Demonstrators took to the streets of LA on Friday after it emerged Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers were raiding Latino areas.

The protests unravelled into looting, self-driving cars being torched, rocks thrown at law enforcement and a major freeway blocked by demonstrators.

LAPD say they arrested 29 people Saturday night and made 21 more arrests on Sunday.

Suspects face charges ranging from attempted murder with a Molotov cocktail and assault on a police officer to looting.

The LAPD also says more than 600 rubber bullets and other less-than-lethal rounds were used over the weekend.

At the White House on Monday, Trump said his decision to send in the National Guard had stopped the city from "burning down".

Channel Nine's Lauren Tomasi hit by 'rubber bullet' while reporting from LA

"You watch same clips I did: cars burning, people rioting, we stopped it," the president said. "I feel we had no choice."

The Republican president said he supported a suggestion that California's governor should be arrested over possible obstruction of his administration's immigration enforcement measures.

Newsom, who has engaged in a war of words in recent days with Trump, responded on X that "this is an unmistakable step toward authoritarianism". He said the troop deployment was "about stroking a dangerous President's ego".

Trump meanwhile posted a warning to protesters in LA who confront police and federal forces.

He wrote on social media: "IF THEY SPIT, WE WILL HIT, and I promise you they will be hit harder than they have ever been hit before. Such disrespect will not be tolerated!"

His border tsar, Tom Homan, who has been conducting ICE raids, applauded Trump's show of force in LA.

"I was there for two nights," Homan said on Fox News on Monday. "It was out of control. The city was burning. Governor Newsom did nothing."

Watch: California attorney general announces lawsuit against Trump for National Guard order

But at a press conference on Monday evening, LA Mayor Karen Bass said the deployment of troops was a "deliberate attempt" by the Trump administration to "create disorder and chaos in our city".

The city leader also said she was aware of at least "five raids by ICE throughout the region" on Monday, including one near her grandson's school.

On Monday, Governor Newsom's administration sued the Trump administration for deploying the National Guard.

The lawsuit argued that the president was violating the US Constitution and state sovereignty.

Trump has argued that Democratic President Joe Biden's administration allowed millions of immigrants to enter the country illegally.

He has pledged to deport record numbers of undocumented migrants, setting a goal of at least 3,000 daily arrests.

Watch: Trump had "prerogative" to deploy National Guard to LA, Bannon tells BBC