US judge blocks Trump’s use of troops in California

A federal judge prevented US President Donald Trump from using the army to combat the crime in California because he threatened to send troops to US cities, including Republican President Chicago.
San Francisco -based US Regional Judge Charles Breyer found that the Trump administration has violated a law known as Posse Comitatus law by placing it in Los Angeles, a June 4000 national guard and 700 active US Maritime. The law sharply limits the use of federal troops for internal practice.
The decision says that Trump is a setback to the army’s force to expand its role in the US land, the expansion of a dangerous executive authority that can lead to tensions between troops and ordinary citizens.
Breyer took the decision to wait until September 12th. The Trump administration is likely to object.
White House spokesman Anna Kelly described Breyer as a “bandit judge” and said that military deployment saved Los Angeles from “mass chaos”.
Kelly, “President is determined to protect the citizens who follow the law and will not be the last word in this regard.” He said.
The precautionary measure applies not to national, not only for the army in California.
However, the judge, Trump’ın Chicago and other cities to support the desire to send troops to support the decision, the president’s August 27 cabinet meeting, “He said he had the right to do everything I want to do … If I think that our country is in danger,” he said.
Trump, after triggering large -scale migration raids protests, said troops were needed in Los Angeles to protect the federal agents that sanctified immigration.


