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LOS ANGELES – The Pentagon ordered the U.S. Marines to leave Los Angeles on Monday, more than a month after President Donald Trump deployed them to the city against the objections of local leaders.
California Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas and Senate Pro Tem Mike McGuire filed an amicus brief over the National Guard's deployment to Los Angeles.
The Pentagon said that the hundreds of Marines from 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment will start packing up and leaving L.A.
The rare deployment of active-duty troops to a U.S. city will soon end, according to the Pentagon, which said 700 Marines ...
The Marines were deployed to Los Angeles to help defend federal property and personnel amid violent clashes between Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and protesters.
After some 2,000 federalized National Guard troops were released from their immigration-related deployments to Los Angeles ...
The move comes less than a week after Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth released 2,000 California National Guard members from ...
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth directed 700 Marines sent to Los Angeles more than five weeks ago to help quell immigration ...
The departure of the Marines follows the removal of hundreds of other National Guard soldiers who were part of President ...
President Donald Trump had ordered about 4,000 California National Guard troops and 700 active-duty Marines to Los Angeles in ...
Mayor Karen Bass called the news “a victory” while continuing to press for the full withdrawal of troops from L.A.