Judge Blocks National Guard Deployment to Portland

Judge Blocks National Guard Deployment to Portland

U.S. District Court Judge Karin Immergut on Sunday temporarily extended an order blocking the Trump administration from deploying National Guard troops to Portland, Oregon, saying the government failed to justify the move.

In an order issued Sunday evening, Immergut "preliminarily enjoins Defendant Secretary of Defense Hegseth from implementing" memorandums that authorized the federalization and deployment of National Guard members from Oregon, Texas and California into Portland.

The injunction will remain in effect "until this Court issues its final opinion on the merits by Friday, Nov. 7, 2025, no later than 5 p.m."

Immergut said that the court witnessed "three days of testimony and argument in a trial that ended 48 hours ago," reviewing more than 750 exhibits, many of them voluminous. She wrote that "the interest of justice requires that this Court complete a thorough review of the exhibits and trial transcripts before issuing a final decision on the merits."

Ultimately, she assessed the Trump administration’s actions and found the government’s justification lacking.

"Based on the trial testimony, this Court finds no credible evidence that during the approximately two months before the President’s federalization order, protests grew out of control or involved more than isolated and sporadic instances of violent conduct that resulted in no serious injuries to federal personnel," she wrote.

The judge further concluded that the president "likely did not have a colorable basis" to invoke either Section 12406(3) or Section 12406(2) to federalize and deploy the National Guard to Portland's ICE facility.

Immergut pointed to testimony from local law enforcement – officials who had firsthand knowledge of demonstrations – as key to her conclusion that the protests did not amount to a rebellion.

"Based on trial testimony that this Court found credible, particularly the testimony of Portland Police Bureau command staff, who work in Portland and have first-hand knowledge of the crowds at the ICE building from June to the present, the protests in Portland at the time of the National Guard call outs are likely not a ‘rebellion,’ and likely do not pose a danger of rebellion," she wrote.

Immergut also concluded that the administration's actions likely violate statutory limits and constitutional protections.

The judge wrote that "Defendants’ federalization and deployment of the National Guard in response to protests outside a single federal building in Portland, Oregon, extended beyond delegated statutory authority under 10 U.S.C. § 12406 and violated the Tenth Amendment."

She added that sending in troops from one state into another infringes on state sovereignty, describing it as "an injury to Oregon’s sovereignty under the Constitution, and Oregon’s equal sovereignty among the States."

The judge said she expects to issue her final opinion on the merits by Friday, Nov. 7, 2025, by 5 p.m. PT. Until then, "the Oregon National Guard may remain federalized, but not deployed."

Test new 3

Welcome to The Frank

Clintons Agree to Testify in Epstein Probe

India Drops Russian Oil; Trump Slashes Tariffs

Dem Flips Deep-Red Texas Senate Seat

CBS News Weighs Firing Attia Over Epstein Emails

Emails: Epstein Had a Secret Child

Emails: Melania Praised Epstein Article to Maxwell

Billie Eilish Blasted for "Fuck ICE" Speech

TODAY Anchor Savannah Guthrie’s Mom Likely Abducted

Judge Refuses to Halt ICE Operation in MN

Senate Passes $1.2T Govt Funding Deal

US, Israel Deny Role in Deadly Iran Blasts

Ghislaine: 29 Epstein Friends Cut Secret Deals

Epstein Photo: Andrew on All Fours Over Woman

Judge Blocks Trump’s Citizenship Voting Rules

Moltbook: The Social Network Where Humans Can’t Post

Detransitioner Wins $2M in Historic Malpractice Verdict

Feds Arrest Don Lemon Over MN Church Protest

DOJ Releases 3M Epstein File Pages