D.C. mayor wants Trump's out-of-state troops gone from U.S. capital

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[June 05, 2020]  By David Lawder and Jonathan Landay

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Thousands of National Guard troops and federal officers in riot gear and masks ringed the White House and monuments in the U.S. capital this week, evoking comparisons to an occupying force.

Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser on Thursday said she wants most of them out of her district of 700,000 residents. But her powers are limited.

Like cities countrywide, the U.S. capital has been rocked by a week of protests against police brutality and racism following the death of George Floyd, a black Minneapolis man who died after a white police officer knelt on his neck.

Shops and offices in D.C. and nearby areas were hit by nighttime vandalism and looting after peaceful demonstrations last weekend, prompting Bowser to impose a 7 p.m. curfew on Monday and Tuesday.

The Democratic mayor told reporters she is fine with D.C. National Guard helping to keep order. But she is examining all legal options to reverse the Trump administration's deployment of forces from elsewhere.

"We want troops from out-of-state, out of Washington, D.C.," Bowser said during a press conference on Thursday.



Several hundred active-duty troops from the 82nd Airborne Division who were sent to the D.C. area are expected to start returning to their home base in North Carolina, a U.S. official said on Thursday.

Some 3,300 national guardsmen are in D.C. or en route from Florida, Indiana, Maryland, Missouri, Mississippi, New Jersey, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee and Utah, according to the National Guard.

The prospect of active-duty soldiers on the streets of the capital has alarmed former military officers.

"Every active-duty troop that participates in this thing should resign, should leave the military," said Harry Wiggins, a retired Army major, who on Thursday was carrying a staff with an American flag flying upside down, an international sign of distress, several blocks from the White House.

Bowser also questioned the command of hundreds of armed officers from nearly a dozen federal agencies, including Customs and Border Protection, the Bureau of Prisons and the Transportation Security Administration, who have been posted outside government buildings and on D.C. streets this week.

Some of the officers wore uniforms with no discernable insignias, raising questions about their identity and mission.

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Washington, DC Mayor Muriel Bowser bows her head in prayer during a vigil as protests continue on the streets near the White House over the death in police custody of George Floyd, in Washington, U.S., June 3, 2020. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo

"We are concerned about the increased militarization and lack of clarity that may increase chaos," the top Democrat in Congress, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, wrote on Thursday in a letterto Trump.

TAXATION, REPRESENTATION

The security situation is complicated in Washington because the federal district does not have full autonomy, unlike most states where governors carry sole responsibility for security.

D.C. residents pay federal taxes but do not have representation in Congress, and the federal government can override some local authorities in emergencies. The D.C. National Guard, for instance, reports to President Donald Trump, whereas National Guard units elsewhere report to their local state governor.

"Until we fix that, we are subject to the whims of the federal government," Bowser said, referring to a long-running movement to make the district a state. "Sometimes they're benevolent and sometimes they're bad," Bowser said.

Lines have been blurred in recent days between areas normally patrolled by federal law enforcement agencies, such as the White House complex and the National Mall, and those under D.C.'s Metropolitan Police Department control.

U.S. Park Police on Monday fired  smoke grenades and chemical irritant "pepper balls" at protesters on H Street NW - normally D.C. police territory - to clear the way for Trump to walk from the White House to a nearby church for a controversial  photo opportunity.

On Monday night, low flying military helicopters hovered over demonstrators and residential neighborhoods, which Bowser called a "very dangerous scare tactic."

A D.C. National Guard statement  said the incident involved a "medical evacuation helicopter" and was being investigated.

(Additional reporting by Idrees Ali; Editing by Heather Timmons and Daniel Wallis)

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