Protests in LA.
Posse Comitatus is Long Over.
Donald Trump overrode Governor Gavin Newsom to federalize the California National Guard to police the streets of Los Angeles. Protests over ICE’s deportation tactics are growing, prompting the Trump administration to leverage extreme authority over the protests, with Pentagon head Pete Hegseth warning that he will call in the Marines if necessary. All of this calls into question the limits of presidential authority in domestic civil disturbances and whether Posse Comitatus is still the law of the land. While it’s still on the books, it has been effectively gutted over the past 30 years by multiple administrations through procedural changes to the U.S. Code that have gone largely unnoticed.

Show Notes
Resources
- Public Intelligence: DoD Directive 3025.12 Military Assistance for Civil Disturbances (MACDIS)
- Department of Defense: DoDI 3025.21, February 27, 2013, Incorporating Change 1 on February 8, 2019
- Gov Info: Federal Register, Volume 78 Issue 71 (Friday, April 12, 2013)
- Department of Defense: DoD Directive 3025.12
- AP News: What to know about the protests over Trump's immigration crackdown in LA and other cities
- POLITICO: Newsom blasts deployment of National Guard to LA as ‘purposefully inflammatory’
- TIME: Trump Sparks Backlash Ordering National Guard to LA Protests
- U.S. Code: Positive Law Codification
- Legal Information Institute: 19 U.S. Code § 1677 - Definitions; special rules
- U.S. Code: uscode.house.gov
- The New York Times: Newsom Criticizes Hegseth for Saying Marines Could be Mobilized in California
- Legal Information Institute: 18 U.S. Code § 1385 - Use of Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and Space Force as posse comitatus
- Bonnie Baker: The Origins of the Posse Comitatus
- NPR: Trump expands military use at the southern border. Are there legal limits?
UNFTR Resources
Image Source
- U.S. Northern Command, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons. Changes were made.
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