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BALTIMORE, MD – Attorney General Anthony G. Brown today led a coalition of 23 attorneys general and 3 governors in filing an amicus brief in the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, urging the court to deny the Trump administration's appeal and uphold a lower court's ruling blocking the unlawful deployment of National Guard troops to Washington, D.C.
Attorney General Brown and the coalition argue that the deployment undermines the sovereignty of states and local jurisdictions and threatens the foundational principle of American democracy that the military must remain under civilian control.
“President Trump unlawfully deployed the National Guard to Washington, D.C. for political theater, not for public safety," said Attorney General Brown. “Our Office will continue defending the rule of law against unlawful efforts to use military power to police American communities."
Courts have repeatedly rejected the administration's deployments in American cities, and the U.S. Supreme Court rejected the Trump administration's attempt to deploy the National Guard in Illinois. Yet the President continues the deployment in Washington, D.C. and has stated his intent to send troops to more American cities “one by one." Continuing this deployment in defiance of those rulings poses an ongoing threat to civilian authority and democratic governance.
The brief documents serious harm in states that have already experienced these deployments, including disrupted law enforcement operations, economic damage to local communities, diverted National Guard resources, and increased civil unrest.
The coalition urges the D.C. Circuit to uphold the district court's ruling and affirm that the President does not have the authority to deploy the National Guard as a domestic police force.
Attorney General Brown is joined by the attorneys general of Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaiʻi, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin, as well as the offices of the Governors of Kansas, Kentucky, and Pennsylvania in filing the brief.
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