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Checkpoints add to tension in D.C.
Los Angeles Times
|August 22, 2025
Federal authorities have used checkpoints around the nation’s capital to screen vehicles, sometimes asking people for their immigration status after stopping them, as President Trump’s crackdown reaches the two-week mark in Washington.
NATIONAL Guard troops walk on the National Mall. Federal agents have arrested 630 people since Aug. 7.
The use of checkpoints, which can be legally controversial, is the latest indication that the White House’s mass deportation agenda is central to its assertion of federal power in Washington. Federal agents and hundreds of National Guard troops have surged into Washington this month, putting some residents on edge and creating tense confrontations in the streets.
The city’s immigrant population, in particular, is rattled. A day care was partially closed Thursday when staff became afraid to go to work because they heard about federal agents nearby. An administrator asked parents to keep their children at home if possible.
Other day cares have stopped taking kids on daily walks because of fears about encountering law enforcement.
District of Columbia Mayor Muriel Bowser acknowledged Thursday that the proliferation of traffic checkpoints is an inevitable aspect of the federal law enforcement operations.
“The surge of federal officers is allowing for different types of deployments, more frequent types of deployments, like checkpoints,” Bowser said.
Since Aug. 7, when Trump began surging federal agents into the city, there have been 630 arrests, including 251 people who are in the country illegally, according to the White House. Trump has been ratcheting up the pressure since then, seizing control of the district Police Department on Aug. il and deploying more National Guard troops, mostly from Republican-led states.
Soldiers have been largely stationed in downtown areas, such as monuments on the National Mall and transit stations.
However, federal agents are operating more widely through the city — and some may soon get a visit from the president himself.
This story is from the August 22, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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