Up First from NPR - Military in LA, Immigration Raids and Business, Trump's Hush Money Appeal
Episode Date: June 11, 2025With Marines and National Guard in Los Angeles experts weigh-in on the limits of what they can do. As President Trump's immigration crackdown expands, some workers without legal authorization are bein...g driven underground. And, a federal court of appeals in Manhattan will hear arguments today as part of Trump's legal efforts to have his criminal conviction overturned. Want more comprehensive analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.Today's episode of Up First was edited by Gigi Douban, Rafael Nam, Emma Bowman, Lisa Thomson and Alice Woelfle. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Nia Dumas and Christopher Thomas. We get engineering support from David Greenburg and our technical director is Carleigh Strange. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The military is in Los Angeles in response to anti-ice protests.
If the crowds are trying to push through them or throwing rocks at their face,
they could protect themselves, but they can't enforce the law.
So what's the military allowed to do?
I'm Michelle Martin, that's A. Martinez, and this is Up First from NPR News.
As immigration enforcement efforts expand, raids are driving some workers into hiding.
It has had a chilling effect in terms of people showing up for work.
How are businesses that rely on workers without legal authorization thinking about the crackdown?
And a Manhattan federal court of appeals will hear an argument to overturn President Trump's
criminal conviction.
This argument is such a stretch in this particular case. What argument will Trump's lawyers make?
Stay with us. We've got all the news you need to start your day.
Public media is facing the most serious threat in its history.
Congress is considering a White House proposal that would eliminate federal funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting,
which helps fund local NPR stations. a White House proposal that would eliminate federal funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting,
which helps fund local NPR stations.
This move would immediately threaten many stations'
ability to serve their communities
and could force some to close.
Take a stand for public media today at GoACPR.org.
This is Ira Glass with This American Life.
Each week on our show, we choose a theme,
tell different stories on that theme. All right, I'm just gonna stop right there. You're
listening to an NPR podcast. Chances are you know our show. So instead I'm gonna
tell you we've just been on a run of really good shows lately. Some big epic
emotional stories, some weird funny stuff too. Download us, This American Life.
These days there is a lot of news.
It could be hard to keep up with what it means for you,
your family and your community.
Consider this from NPR as a podcast
that helps you make sense of the news.
Six days a week, we bring you a deep dive on a story
and provide the context, the backstory,
and analysis you need to understand
our rapidly changing world.
Listen to the Consider This podcast from NPR. Downtown Los Angeles was under curfew last night
for the first time since anti-ice protests began on Friday. City officials
said the protests have been largely peaceful but instances of vandalism and
looting led them to implement the curfew. Meanwhile the Trump administration has
moved ahead with the deployment of Marines and more National Guard over the
objections of state and city leaders. Joining us now to
talk about the military's role in Los Angeles is NPR's Martin Costi. So Martin,
the National Guard arrived over the weekend, Marines are now in the city,
though we don't yet know where they'll be. Is it clear what their mission is?
Well, the administration says they're there to protect federal facilities and
employees, and we've seen some of that, you know, the row of National Guard with shields standing
there as a human barrier in front of federal buildings.
There have also been reports though of the Guard protecting ICE agents out in the field
as they do their jobs and that could put some of those soldiers into more dynamic situations
that might start to look a little bit like they're part of enforcement.
Okay, would they be allowed to do that that to assist ICE directly with its enforcement work?
The experts say no because of a 19th century law known as Posse Comitatus,
which bars the military from acting as police inside the country.
I asked William Banks about this.
He's a professor at Syracuse University and he's been studying this very question
about what's legal for the military inside the country for years. For sure they can't arrest if the crowds are trying to push through
them or throwing rocks at their face or something like that. They could protect themselves, that's
federal protection, but they can't enforce the law. Okay, so he says the military isn't supposed to
do law enforcement, but they have been deployed inside the country over the years. I mean,
I remember back in 1992 right here in Los Angeles where I'm at during the Rodney King
rise. I mean, how is this military deployment different? Well, legally the difference is that
in 92, President George H.W. Bush invoked the Insurrection Act, which allows for the use of the
active military to quell civil disturbances. But maybe just as important here is the difference
that this time around, the state and local authorities don't want the military's help.
And they don't know what to expect from the military now that they're here.
And you can hear that frustration in the voice of LA Mayor Karen Bass.
This is her last night when someone asked her, what are the Marines doing?
Who knows? I mean, the bottom line is that we're not told.
Basically, we have to operate on rumors. So rumor has it that there's 700 Marines that are going to come here. I have no idea what they would
do when they would get here. And you know this is really unusual. Normally you'd
have the military plugged into the local emergency management system coordinating
with the police. Instead what we have here is the state suing the feds to pull
the military out and that's not really a great climate for smooth coordination. So
what happens then if say the National Guard and or the Marines get into a situation that
requires force?
I mean, how prepared is the military to use force against American civilians?
The National Guard get crowd control training and they have some of the gear such as those
shields.
As to the Marines, well, I talked to Mick Wagner, he's a retired Marine Corps Lieutenant
Colonel who focused on military law and he said there are some Marines who get specialized training
for missions such as evacuating US embassies that are threatened by crowds. But he said
that's just not the same as police work. And he recalled an infamous case during the
92 riots in LA when the police asked some Marines to cover them as they approached a
house. And the Marines then lay down suppressing fire. The police were completely aghast.
What are you doing? And you said, you said to cover you. I said, yeah, tell us if somebody
sticks their head out or if you see a gun or something. But Jesus, you just lit up that
house.
Wagner says that case shows just how differently the police and military approach things and
even understand basic words like cover me.
And he says he really hopes that these Marines in LA now will be kept in the rear behind
the National Guard because at least some of them may be police officers in their day jobs
and may have more training for crowds.
All right.
That's NPR's Martin Costi.
Thanks a lot, Martin. You're welcome.
["The Daily Show"]
President Trump's immigration crackdown
is driving some people out of the country.
It's also driving others underground,
and that poses a challenge for businesses
that have traditionally relied on workers
who are in the country without legal authorization
And here Scott Horsey is with us now with the economic impact of the president's immigration actions. Good morning, Scott
Good morning, Michelle. So who's being targeted in these latest efforts?
The dragnet is getting wider during the campaign the president promised mass deportation
But during his first few months in the White House Trump and his team struggled to reach that kind of mass
There are very few people coming across the southern border now
so the administration has stepped up its arrest in the middle of the country and
Speaking to reporters outside the White House recently borders are Tom Homan promised an increased focus on workplace raids
So you'll see more teams on the streets you've never seen before.
You're going to see more work site enforcement than you've ever seen in the history of this nation.
We're going to flood the zone.
High-profile raids on farms and construction sites and restaurants
have certainly captured attention and driven some workers into hiding.
According to the Labor Department's tally, more than a million foreign-born workers
dropped out of the labor force over the last two months. Now, we don't know how many of those were in the country
illegally, but it's likely some people have quit going to work because they're fearful
of being arrested and possibly deported.
And how is that affecting the economy?
If you look at the broad national numbers, it's not having a huge impact yet. Both construction
companies and restaurants, for example, continued to add jobs last month. Those are two industries that typically employ a lot of workers who
are in the country illegally. But there are plenty of anecdotal reports of economic fallout
from these enforcement actions. Robert Dietz is chief economist at the National Association
of Home Builders. He says every time there's a raid on a big box store or a restaurant,
word gets around at nearby construction sites.
It has had a chilling effect in terms of people showing up for work, but it tends to be kind
of localized.
You know, the impact is for a week or two, and then people have got to show up and work
and earn money for their families.
Still, Dietz is concerned about what stepped-up enforcement might mean for the homebuilding
industry, where a third of the workforce is foreign-born.
It's not likely to ease what is already a severe housing shortage in the country. So how critical
are workers without legal status to the overall job market? A couple of years ago
economist at Goldman Sachs estimated something over 4% of all workers in the
US are living here illegally. In addition to targeting those workers, the
president's also been closing off various legal avenues of immigration, and he's been stripping hundreds of thousands of immigrants who
did have some kind of temporary permission to be in the country of their right to work.
Muzaffar Chishti, who's a senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute,
says the combined effects of all those immigration policies could be far-reaching. Our economy, especially certain sectors of economy, are heavily driven by immigrant labor.
We may want to not tolerate unauthorized immigration, but we still need real labor market needs to be met.
Keep in mind, the native-born population of the U.S. is getting older.
10,000 baby boomers are retiring
every single day. And in recent years, it has really been the growth of the foreign-born
workforce that has allowed the U.S. economy to keep growing. Now, the president and his
team have a different strategy. It's one that depends on pulling more native-born people,
especially men, off the sidelines and getting them into the workforce. Nothing in recent history suggests that's likely,
but that is what would be needed to replace the immigrant workers we're now losing.
That is NPR's Scott Horsley. Scott, thank you.
You're welcome.
An appeal hearing for President Trump's criminal conviction in sentencing is set to take place
in a federal court of appeals in Manhattan today.
It is the latest in a case involving hush money payments to the adult film star Stormy
Daniels ahead of the 2016 election in which Trump was convicted on all 34 counts last
year.
NPR's Kat Lonsdorf is in New York for the hearing.
Kat, before we get into the hearing, remind us how we got here.
So Trump was convicted in May of last year before the election on 34 counts of falsifying
business records, which he did to conceal a payment to Stormy Daniels.
The payment was in exchange for her silence ahead of the 2016 election about an alleged
sexual encounter. And just a reminder, there were several cases,
both civil and criminal, against Trump
ahead of last year's election.
But this was the only criminal case to go to trial.
The conviction made Trump the first president
to also be a convicted felon.
And as far as sentencing goes, the judge ruled that,
basically because Trump's president,
he won't face prison time or other penalties,
but the conviction will remain on his record.
Okay, the hearing today, what argument for appeal
are Trump's lawyers making?
Okay, so it's a little wonky, but basically,
Trump was tried, convicted, and sentenced
in the New York state court system.
His lawyers have tried and failed twice before
to get the case moved to federal court,
essentially hoping it would get dismissed that way.
And they keep citing a specific law that allows federal officials to make such a move if the case
involves conduct well in office. But it is yet to work. Remember, the hush money payment at the
heart of this case occurred before the 2016 election when Trump was still a candidate.
But now Trump's lawyers are making the argument again, saying that prosecutors during the trial
relied on evidence related to Trump's first term, and therefore this law applies.
All right.
What are the chances that's going to work?
Well legal experts I talked to say it's a long shot, basically.
Here's Jed Sugarman.
He's a professor at Boston University School of Law.
And he told me he thinks this is an example of Trump's lawyers exhausting every possible
argument in the hopes of getting this conviction overturned.
This argument is such a stretch in this particular case.
It's a clearly losing argument that any federal judge on the Second Circuit, Republican or Democratic appointee, would and should reject.
But, you know, Trump has also filed an appeal through the state court system.
And Sugarman says that is actually where he thinks the strongest possible arguments are.
Those hearings just haven't happened yet.
All right. So what do you think we're going to find out about today?
So today's hearing is in front of a three judge panel and they'll have to confer.
So there won't be a decision today.
But what we'll really be listening for is what questions the judges ask,
if they're skeptical or not, what they're skeptical about. This hearing and the decision
will have implications beyond just Trump's case. If the judges rule in Trump's favor,
it could ultimately make it easier to work around the state courts in our judicial system. All right, that's NPR's Kat Lonsdorf in New York.
Kat, thanks.
Thank you.
And that's up first for Wednesday, June 11th.
I'm your host, Amy Martinez.
And I'm Michelle Martin.
Your next listen is Consider This from NPR.
We hear it up first, give you the three big stories of the day.
Our Consider This colleagues take a different approach.
They dive into a single new story and what it means to you in less than 15 minutes. Listen now
on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Today's episode of Up First was edited by Gigi DuBan, Rafael Nam, Emma Bowman, Lisa
Thompson and Alice Wolfley. It was produced by Ziad Bach, Nia Dumas and Christopher Thomas.
We get engineering support from David Greenberg. Our technical director is Carly Strange.
Join us again tomorrow.
Congress is considering a rescissions package
from the White House that would claw back
more than $1 billion of public media funding.
Federal funding for all of public media amounts to about $1.60 per person per year.
That helps bring you the news and podcasts you rely on from NPR.
Please take a stand for public media today at GoACPR.org.
Decades ago, Brazilian women made a discovery.
They could have an abortion without a doctor,
thanks to a tiny pill. That pill spawned a global movement, helping millions of women
have safe abortions, regardless of the law. Hear that story on the network from NPR's
Embedded and Futuro Media, wherever you get your podcasts.