Trump administration agrees to keep DC police chief in place, but with immigration enforcement order
The Trump administration on Friday reversed course and agreed to leave the Washington, D.C., police chief in control of the department, while Attorney General Pam Bondi, in a new memo, directed the Districtâs police to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement regardless of any city law.
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The order from Bondi came after officials in the nationâs capital sued Friday to block President Donald Trumpâs .
The night before, his administration had escalated its intervention into the cityâs law enforcement by naming a federal official as , essentially placing the police force under the full control of the federal government.
The attorney generalâs new order represents a partial retreat for the Trump administration in the face of intense skepticism from a judge over the legality of Bondi's earlier directive.
But Bondi also signaled the administration would continue to pressure D.C. leaders to help federal authorities aggressively pursue immigrants in the country illegally, despite city laws on the books that limit cooperation between police and immigration authorities.
In a social media post Friday evening, Bondi criticized D.C. Attorney General Brian Schwalb, saying he âcontinues to oppose our efforts to improve public safety.â But she added, âWe remain committed to working closely with Mayor Bowser.â
Mayor Muriel Bowserâs office said late Friday that it was still evaluating how it can comply with the new Bondi order on immigration enforcement operations. The police department already eased some restrictions on cooperating with federal officials facilitating Trumpâs mass-deportation campaign but reaffirmed that it would follow the districtâs sanctuary city laws.
In a letter sent Friday night to D.C. citizens, Bowser wrote: âIt has been an unsettling and unprecedented week in our city. Over the course of a week, the surge in federal law enforcement across D.C. has created waves of anxiety.â
She added that âour limited self-government has never faced the type of test we are facing right now,â but added that if Washingtonians stick together, âwe will show the entire nation what it looks like to fight for American democracy â even when we donât have full access to it.â
The legal battle was the latest evidence of the escalating tensions in a mostly Democratic city that now has its police department largely under the control of the Republican president's administration. Trumpâs takeover is historic, yet it had played out with a slow ramp-up in federal law enforcement officials and National Guard troops to start the week.
As the weekend approached, though, signs across the city â from the streets to the legal system â suggested a deepening crisis over who controls the cityâs immigration and policing policies, the districtâs right to govern itself and daily life for the millions of people who live and work in the metro area.
A push for compromise
The two sides sparred in court for hours Friday before U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes, who is overseeing the district's lawsuit. She indicated the law likely doesnât grant the Trump administration power to fully take over city police, but it probably does give the president more power than the city might like.
âThe way I read the statute, the president can ask, the mayor must provide, but the president canât control,â said Reyes, who was nominated to the bench by Democratic President Joe Biden. The judge pushed the two sides to make a compromise.
An attorney for the Trump administration, Yaakov Roth, said the move to sideline Metropolitan Police Department Chief Pamela Smith came after an immigration order that still held back some aid to federal authorities. He argued that the president has broad authority to determine what kind of help police in Washington must provide.
The police takeover is the latest move by Trump to test the limits of his legal authorities to carry out his agenda, relying on obscure statutes and a supposed state of emergency to bolster his tough-on-crime message and his plans to speed up the mass deportation of people in the United States illegally.
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It also marks one of the most sweeping assertions of federal authority over a local government in modern times. While Washington has grappled with spikes in violence and visible homelessness, the cityâs homicide rate ranks below those of several other major U.S. cities, and the capital is not in the throes of the public safety collapse the Trump administration has portrayed.
The president has more power over the nationâs capital than other cities, but D.C. has elected its own mayor and city council since the Home Rule Act was signed in 1973.
Trump is the first president to exert control over the cityâs police force since it was passed. The law limits that control to 30 days without congressional approval, though Trump has suggested heâd seek to extend it.
Chief had agreed to share immigration information
Bondiâs Thursday night directive to place the head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, Terry Cole, in charge of the police department came even after Smith had told MPD officers hours earlier to share information with immigration agencies regarding people not in custody, such as someone involved in a traffic stop or checkpoint.
The Justice Department said Bondi disagreed with the police chiefâs instructions because they allowed for continued practice of âsanctuary policies,â which generally limit cooperation by local law enforcement with federal immigration officers.
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Meanwhile, advocates in Washington were trying to advise immigrants on how to respond. Anusce Sanai, associate legal director for the Washington-based immigrant nonprofit Ayuda, said they're still parsing the legal aspects of the policies.
âEven with the most anti-immigrant administration, we would always tell our clients that they must call the police, that they should call the police," Sanai said. âBut now we find ourselves that we have to be very careful on what we advise.â
Amy Fischer, an organizer with Migrant Solidarity Mutual Aid, said that before the federal takeover, most of what they had seen in the nationâs capital was Immigration and Customs Enforcement targeting specific individuals. But since last Friday night theyâve seen a âreally significant change,â she said, with ICE and federal officers doing roving patrols around the city.
She said a hotline set up by immigration advocates to report ICE activity âis receiving calls almost off the hook.â
ICE said in a post on X that their teams had arrested âseveralâ people in Washington Friday. A video posted on X showed two uniformed personnel putting handcuffs on someone while standing outside a white transport van.
Residents are seeing a significant show of force
A population already tense from days of ramp-up has begun seeing more significant shows of force across the city. National Guard troops watched over some of the worldâs most renowned landmarks, and Humvees took position in front of the busy main train station. Volunteers helped homeless people leave long-standing encampments â to where was often unclear.
Friday night along the district's U Street, a popular nightlife corridor, an Associated Press photographer saw officers from the FBI, the DEA, the Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Park Police, U.S. Marshals and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
As the District challenged the Trump administration in court Friday, more than 100 protesters gathered less than a block away in front of police headquarters, chanting "Protect home rule!â and waving signs saying âResist!"
Associated Press writers Alanna Durkin Richer, Matt Brown, Ashraf Khalil, Michael Kunzelman, Rebecca Santana and Will Weissert in Washington and Adriana Gomez Licon in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, contributed.