logo
CNN analyst defends Kristi Noem, federal agents for removing Padilla

CNN analyst defends Kristi Noem, federal agents for removing Padilla

New York Post13-06-2025

CNN national security analyst Josh Campbell defended Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and the actions of federal agents who forcibly removed Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) from a press conference in Los Angeles on Thursday, saying their response followed standard security protocol.
Speaking during an appearance on CNN's 'The Arena' with Kasie Hunt, Campbell, a former FBI special agent, broke down the incident and said the agents were justified in their initial efforts to escort Padilla out of the room after he loudly interrupted Noem.
'From a law enforcement perspective, we're really looking at three separate incidents that happened within a short period of time,' Campbell said.
4 Josh Campbell (seen second from left) defended the actions of DHS Sec. Kristi Noem and federal agents who removed Sen. Alex Padilla from a briefing in Los Angeles on Thursday.
CNN
'First, you have the DHS secretary who was addressing the press. This was not a Q&A period, and she was interrupted. She was interrupted by someone who was speaking very loudly,' the CNN analyst told Hunt.
'And so her security detail confronts what we obviously now know to be the senator. And at that point, he is now going to be escorted out. You can't interrupt something like that that's already in progress without having those consequences.'
Campbell added that when Padilla resisted and turned back toward agents, the situation escalated.
'The second incident, in my view, happens the moment — as officers are trying to lead him out — he then turns and walks back towards kind of into those agents,' Campbell said.
'At that point, from a security detail perspective, we're taking this person out against their will… they realize this is not someone who is going to comply.'
However, Campbell did raise concerns about what happened next — when officers forced Padilla to the ground and handcuffed him outside the press room.
'There will be big questions raised about those kinds of tactics,' Campbell noted.
'Were there other options that were available to the federal agents… What they do is they actually order him to his knees and then quickly shove him down to the ground where he is then handcuffed. So again, you're in a federal building, people are screened for weapons — him having a gun or some type of device like that would not be a concern… So there will be a big question about the tactics that were used.'
4 Campbell added that when Padilla (far right) resisted and turned back toward agents, the situation escalated.
AP
4 Campbell said that the incident was 'neither the fault nor the responsibility of DHS Secretary Noem (pictured above).'
AFP via Getty Images
Still, Campbell defended Noem, who has come under fire for the incident.
'This was neither the fault nor the responsibility of DHS Secretary Noem,' he said. 'She's in the middle of a press conference… I don't think any of that was her responsibility.'
Padilla was removed after interrupting Noem's remarks on ongoing anti-ICE riots in Los Angeles.
As Noem accused California leaders of enabling lawlessness, Padilla stood up and shouted questions about her rhetoric.
4 Padilla is seen as he is wrestled to the ground and handcuffed.
via REUTERS
'Hands off!' he shouted as security moved in. Video shows him resisting, identifying himself as a senator, and continuing to argue before being pushed outside and subdued.
Padilla later criticized the aggressive response, saying, 'If this is how the DHS responds to a senator with a question, you can only imagine what they are doing to farmworkers… throughout the country.'
Noem countered on Fox News, saying Padilla 'burst into the room,' 'did not identify himself,' and was 'lunging toward the podium' before being detained.
The Post has sought comment from DHS and Padilla.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump Got the Fight He Wanted. Did It Turn Out the Way He Expected?
Trump Got the Fight He Wanted. Did It Turn Out the Way He Expected?

New York Times

time33 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Trump Got the Fight He Wanted. Did It Turn Out the Way He Expected?

Immigration raids and mass detentions. Federal forces deployed to an American city. Supported by On June 7, Cruz was walking to buy tamales with her sister in San Bernardino, Calif., when she saw a truck full of landscapers being detained by what appeared to be law-enforcement officers in unmarked uniforms. Cruz, a 28-year-old nurse's assistant, is a first-generation Mexican American who was born in California, but her husband is an undocumented immigrant who worked on a similar landscaping crew. (She asked to be identified by only her last name for her family's safety.) When the Trump administration's raids targeting undocumented immigrants reached the city, word of the arrests spread quickly, but Cruz had not taken the news too seriously until she saw one for herself. The next week, on the morning of June 13, her husband called to say he'd been working on Waterman Avenue when a truck full of federal agents pulled up. They appeared to be from Homeland Security Investigations, one of the many federal agencies now scouring Southern California for undocumented immigrants. When an officer asked him if he had a visa, he told the truth. Minutes later, he was in the back of a government vehicle, bound for the Metropolitan Detention Center, a federal facility, in Los Angeles. For nearly a week, such raids had spurred small protests in several cities in the region. Federal agents fired less-lethal munitions at protesters; shortly after, President Trump, casting images of the clashes as evidence of citywide anarchy wrought by undocumented immigrants and their defenders, announced that he was federalizing control of the California National Guard and deploying it to address 'lawlessness.' After protests gave way to rioting on the blocks around the detention center on the night of Sunday, June 8, he announced he was deploying U.S. Marines. By the morning after the arrest of Cruz's husband, a small number of Marines — deployed to an American state over the public opposition of its elected government — stood around the loading dock of the detention center with M27 rifles and riot shields. They stood alongside soldiers from the California National Guard and officers whose vest patches said 'POLICE — DHS,' denoting their affiliation with the Department of Homeland Security. Since the George Floyd demonstrations of 2020, Trump had vocally supported deploying the military to quell violent protests on American streets — a move he had flinched at doing at the time but now was at last making. It was a natural conclusion of the story Trump told on the campaign trail last year about what had happened to America — what his enemies had done to America — and what he would do, if elected again, to restore it. 'Order will be restored,' Trump wrote, 'the Illegals will be expelled, and Los Angeles will be set free.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Video: Proposed illegal immigrant detention center unveiled as ‘Alligator Alcatraz'
Video: Proposed illegal immigrant detention center unveiled as ‘Alligator Alcatraz'

American Military News

time37 minutes ago

  • American Military News

Video: Proposed illegal immigrant detention center unveiled as ‘Alligator Alcatraz'

Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier, a Republican, recently proposed that the state create a new detention center for illegal immigrants at an old airport surrounded by the Everglades. Uthmeier suggested that the detention center could be called 'Alligator Alcatraz.' In a Thursday video shared on X, formerly Twitter, Uthmeier told Florida's Voice that the Miami-Dade Collier Training Facility, which he described as an 'old, virtually abandoned airport facility right in the middle of the Everglades,' could be transformed into an illegal immigrant detention center. 'Florida's been leading on immigration enforcement, supporting the Trump administration and ICE efforts to detain and deport criminal aliens,' Uthmeier stated. 'The governor tasked state leaders to identify places for new temporary detention facilities. I think this is the best one, as I call it, 'Alligator Alcatraz.'' 'This 30-square-mile area is completely surrounded by the Everglades,' Uthemeier added. '[It] presents an efficient, low-cost opportunity to build a temporary detention facility because you don't need to invest that much in the perimeter. People get out. There's not much waiting for them other than alligators and pythons. Nowhere to go, nowhere to hide.' READ MORE: Trump tells ICE to focus deportations on 'core' of 'Democrat Power Center' Uthmeier explained that if the Miami-Dade Collier Training Facility was approved as a new detention facility for illegal immigrants, the facility could be 'up and running' within a period of 30 to 60 days. The Florida attorney general explained in the video that 'Alligator Alcatraz' could hold up to 1,000 'criminal aliens' if it is approved as an immigration detention facility. Uthmeier added that the facility could be ready to go in 30 to 60 days. Fox Business reported that the Miami-Dade Collier Training Facility would be Florida's largest detention facility for illegal immigrants if it is approved. 'This presents a great opportunity for the state of Florida to work with Miami-Dade and Collier counties,' Uthmeier concluded in the video. 'Alligator Alcatraz – we're ready to go.' Alligator Alcatraz: the one-stop shop to carry out President Trump's mass deportation agenda. — Attorney General James Uthmeier (@AGJamesUthmeier) June 19, 2025

Some Democrats are finally standing up to Trump – even if it gets them arrested
Some Democrats are finally standing up to Trump – even if it gets them arrested

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Some Democrats are finally standing up to Trump – even if it gets them arrested

Not all Democrats are afraid to push back against Donald Trump's immigration policy. Some are willing to be detained. In safely blue areas of the country, constituents are asking themselves who has the audacity to stand up to President Donald Trump's extreme immigration agenda. Earlier this week, New York City constituents got their answer. On June 17, New York City comptroller and mayoral candidate Brad Lander was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents while escorting a man out of immigration court in Manhattan. Lander, who repeatedly asked to see a judicial warrant for the man ICE was attempting to detain, was held in custody for four hours. The federal government is still trying to decide whether it will charge him with a crime. 'We're not just showing up for just a few families, or for the strength of our democracy,' Lander told the supporters waiting for him outside the federal courthouse. 'We are showing up for the future of New York City.' While it's unclear that Lander's arrest will make any difference in his chances to be New York City's next mayor, one thing is now certain: He is the kind of person the city and Democrats need in the Trump era. Democrats should be fighting Trump's systematic hate Lander is now a member of an exclusive group of Democratic politicians who have gotten into legal trouble for combating the Trump administration's extreme deportation agenda. These politicians are not doing anything wrong – they are simply trying to stand up for the immigrants who make this country great. Opinion: Trump lied about the LA protests so you wouldn't see what he's really doing The first to face legal repercussions was Milwaukee County Judge Hannah Dugan, who was arrested in April and later indicted for allegedly assisting an undocumented immigrant in escaping arrest. Then in May, Newark Mayor Ras Baraka was arrested at an ICE detention center when three members of New Jersey's congressional delegation arrived for an unannounced inspection. Rep. LaMonica McIver, D-New Jersey, who was also arrested that day, was indicted on June 10 for allegedly interfering with immigration officers. Less than a week before Lander's arrest, Sen. Alex Padilla, D-California, was handcuffed and thrown out of a Department of Homeland Security news conference. This defiance is encouraging to see. People who have the privilege of a public platform are putting their careers on the line to stand up for those who are being terrorized by the federal government. These actions, so long as they are peaceful, are how Democrats should be reacting to the Trump administration. We need a mayoral candidate who suits New York Until this moment, Lander had flown under the radar for the duration of the city's mayoral race. Despite his position as the city's top financial officer and an endorsement from a panel of experts with The New York Times, Lander has been polling behind front-runner Andrew Cuomo, a former New York governor, and Zohran Mamdani, a member of the New York State Assembly. Who is Zohran Mamdani? A Democratic socialist is running for NYC mayor. I hope he can rally voters. | Opinion It's not that Lander is a bad candidate – he's experienced and policy-driven, and he has a progressive view of what the city can be. He and Mamdani have cross-endorsed each other in the hopes of besting Cuomo in the ranked-choice voting system. Lander just doesn't have Cuomo's name recognition or Mamdani's charisma. By getting arrested, Lander has shown New Yorkers that someone is willing to stand up for their values of protecting immigrants. We don't have to elect Cuomo, who had to resign in disgrace in 2021 after more than a dozen women accused him of sexual harassment. Nor do we have to elect incumbent Eric Adams, who has welcomed ICE into our city against the wishes of the voters. Lander is showing us that we could have someone who is willing to fight the Trump administration while leading the nation's most populous city. And he's one of several showing Democrats the way forward. Follow USA TODAY columnist Sara Pequeño on X, formerly Twitter: @sara__pequeno

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store