California Army National Guard members in a crowd-control training class in 2013. National Guard photo
California Army National Guard members in a crowd-control training class in 2013. National Guard photo

The White House on Friday said there was no plan to use the National Guard to round up undocumented immigrants, after a news report asserted that the proposal had been under consideration by the Trump administration.

White House spokesman Sean Spicer sharply criticized the report. “There is no effort at all to … utilize the National Guard to round up illegal immigrants,” he said. “This is 100 percent not true.”

The Associated Press reported the proposal to mobilize up to 100,000 National Guard troops was part of a draft memo being circulated at the Department of Homeland Security.

David Lapan, a spokesman for DHS, said the department was “not considering mobilizing the National Guard for immigration enforcement.”

The AP said the draft memo, dated Jan. 25, had been circulating among DHS staff for about two weeks and was addressed to the then-acting heads of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

It reported the 11-page document called for an unprecedented militarization of immigration enforcement on the states bordering Mexico — California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas — and also encompassed seven states contiguous to those four — Oregon, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana.

The AP said the memo was meant to serve as guidance to implement the wide-ranging executive order on immigration and border security that President Donald Trump signed on Jan. 25.

A DHS official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the memorandum obtained by the Associated Press was an “early, early version” of a document being prepared by staff for Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly. Discussion of the National Guard was dropped before the memo ever made it to Kelly’s desk, the official said.

The memo being prepared for Kelly has not yet been finalized but is expected to be finished soon, the official said.

— Reuters

Chris Jennewein is founder and senior editor of Times of San Diego.