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SRCThe Guardian - World News
LANGEN
LEANCenter-Left
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ENT10
THU · 2026-05-28 · 19:47 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0528-80027
News/Trump’s Memphis crime taskforce accused of using ‘immense fo…
NSR-2026-0528-80027News Report·EN·Social Justice

Trump’s Memphis crime taskforce accused of using ‘immense force’ in intimidation campaign

An anti-crime taskforce in Memphis, established by former President Trump and Tennessee Governor Bill Lee, is facing accusations from the ACLU of Tennessee of intimidating community observers. The ACLU alleges that taskforce agents have engaged in tactics such as tailing cars, surveilling homes, and making false arrests against individuals attempting to monitor the taskforce's activities.

George Chidi in MemphisThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-05-28 · 19:47 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 5 min
Trump’s Memphis crime taskforce accused of using ‘immense force’ in intimidation campaign
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
5min
Word count
1 004words
Sources cited
3cited
Entities identified
10entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

An anti-crime taskforce in Memphis, established by former President Trump and Tennessee Governor Bill Lee, is facing accusations from the ACLU of Tennessee of intimidating community observers. The ACLU alleges that taskforce agents have engaged in tactics such as tailing cars, surveilling homes, and making false arrests against individuals attempting to monitor the taskforce's activities. A lawsuit has been filed by the ACLU and six community observers detailing these alleged "cowboy tactics," including a near-miss incident with an unmarked vehicle and the revocation of a Global Entry status for one observer. One observer also described being tackled and arrested with "immense force" while filming officers, with charges later dropped. The ACLU contends these actions constitute unconstitutional retaliation and weaponization of state laws.

Confidence 0.90Sources 3Claims 5Entities 10
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Social Justice
Legal & Judicial
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
3
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

The ACLU alleges that federal taskforce agents have tailed cars, surveilled homes, and falsely arrested community observers.

factualACLU of Tennessee
Confidence
0.90
02

An anti-crime taskforce ordered by Donald Trump in Memphis has been accused of targeting community observers with widespread intimidation including ‘immense force’.

factualACLU of Tennessee
Confidence
0.90
03

US Customs and Border Protection revoked a retired anesthesiologist's Global Entry status after he photographed taskforce activities, citing potential law enforcement investigation or terrorism concerns.

factualJames West
Confidence
0.80
04

Six community observers detailed ‘cowboy tactics’ including bumper-riding, pretextual traffic stops, and arbitrary arrests.

factualCommunity observers
Confidence
0.80
05

A masked agent in an unmarked black Ford Expedition allegedly sped up and swerved toward a community observer, missing him by two inches.

factualHunter Demster
Confidence
0.70
§ 04

Full report

5 min read · 1 004 words
An anti-crime taskforce ordered by Donald Trump on to the streets of Memphis has been accused of targeting community observers with widespread intimidation including “immense force”.Agents have been “retaliating against, intimidating, and harassing” observers attempting to monitor the federal taskforce’s activity, according to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Tennessee, which alleges that officials have tailed cars, surveilled homes and even “falsely arrested” a community observer.The ACLU filed a lawsuit this month against Tennessee state and federal officials administering the anti-crime initiative.Additional declarations filed on Thursday by six community observers detail “cowboy tactics” they say have been used in recent months, from bumper-riding their cars in unmarked vehicles and pretextual traffic stops to an arbitrary arrest.The taskforce was launched last September by Tennessee’s Republican governor, Bill Lee, following an executive order by Trump, who cited the persistently high rate of violent crime in Memphis. Lee promptly activated the national guard and flooded his state’s second-largest city with more than 2,000 state and federal police officers.The US Marshals Service declined to comment on the ACLU’s allegations that agents and officers have targeted activists attempting to monitor the taskforce. Gadyaces S Serralta, director of the service, chairs the taskforce.‘Taken away my peace’Hunter Demster, lead litigant in the case, alleged that police officers surveilled his home, and the homes of other activists who had been trying to observe the taskforce’s activities.He described an alleged incident in which a masked agent driving an unmarked black Ford Expedition sped up and swerved toward him while he was standing near a grassy median. The vehicle turned sharply as it approached, missing him by two inches, he said in his declaration.In another alleged incident, an agent Demster had not previously met addressed him by name from the loudspeaker of a truck.“When I am home alone and I hear a branch snap, my heart drops,” Demster said in his declaration. “The presence of these unmarked vehicles outside my home gives me a scary, uneasy feeling that has taken away my peace inside my own home.”The six plaintiffs in the lawsuit offered meticulous documentation to support their allegations of retaliation by the taskforce.US Customs and Border Protection revoked the decade-long Global Entry expedited border screening program status of James West, a retired anesthesiologist, less than a month after he began photographing the activities of the taskforce, according to his declaration. The official email notification stated he no longer met requirements because he may be “subject to a law enforcement investigation” or was suspected of “conduct related to terrorism”.‘I was shocked and scared’Jessica Chodor described her arrest – recorded on an officer’s body camera – after she began filming taskforce officers last October. She alleged that she had already had several other incidents where police interfered with her observations.“I exclaimed to him: ‘you’re on Live’ which means being recorded and broadcast to social media in real time,” Chodor said in her declaration. “When I told him that, Trooper Suzore tackled me to the ground with immense force. Once I was on the ground, he and another person pinned me to the ground facedown. I was shocked and scared. I did not know what was happening or understand that they were arresting me, because I hadn’t broken any laws and they did not tell me I was under arrest.”Chodor spent 27 hours in an overcrowded jail cell with a broken toilet, she said, before being released. The state dropped its charge of resisting official detention in December.The ACLU alleges that the taskforce’s methods amount to unconstitutional retaliation.Tennessee lawmakers passed the Halo law in 2025, which made intentionally approaching a police officer within 25ft an arrestable offense – a class B misdemeanor – for failing to withdraw after the instruction of an officer.The ACLU lawsuit contends that taskforce officers have weaponized this law, pushing witnesses far beyond a 25ft perimeter by walking toward them to back them away from a scene, refusing to define where the 25ft buffer begins, telling them they must stay 25ft away from the furthest agent – or from an empty, parked cruiser – or saying “it is where I say it is” and “25ft isn’t a thing – you have to get back to where I want you”.In a filing earlier this month, the ACLU claimed that taskforce agents “are issuing verbal threats, including threats of arrest” in response to “constitutionally protected” information gathering: “They are taunting Plaintiffs by name when they arrive at scenes of Task Force activity, tailing Plaintiffs in their vehicles, and sitting outside Plaintiffs’ homes – often after photographing Plaintiffs’ faces and license plate numbers and presumably placing their personal information into databases for the purpose of enabling further surveillance and retaliation. And they have used excessive force against and falsely arrested, to date, one of the Plaintiffs.”‘They’re looking at this’Trump, Lee and law enforcement officials have repeatedly touted their claims of the taskforce’s success.“Overall crime in Memphis is down more than 43% compared to the same period last year – a dramatic drop from the bloodshed ushered in by the failed policies of the past,” the White House said in a release before Trump’s visit to Memphis in March. “Last year, the city recorded fewer than 200 murders for the first time since 2019, with shootings dropping nearly 40% from the previous year.”By mid-March, the taskforce had made more than 7,000 arrests, seized more than 1,000 illegal guns and reunited more than 150 missing children with their parents, according to the Trump administration.“For years, our leaders allowed entire cities in America to be destroyed by crime, drugs and gang violence,” Trump said at a roundtable discussion that month.“Tolerating this violence was always a choice … They’re looking at this all over the country, what you’re doing,” he said to the Tennessee house speaker, Cameron Sexton. “They’re studying it.”But violent crime had been falling sharply in Memphis before the taskforce started making arrests. Crime has been falling in cities large and small across the US since 2022, due largely to youth population and post-pandemic secular trends.
§ 05

Entities

10 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

10 terms
intimidation campaign
1.00
anti-crime taskforce
0.90
immense force
0.80
community observers
0.70
aclu
0.70
surveillance
0.60
violent crime
0.60
false arrest
0.50
donald trump
0.40
memphis
0.40
§ 07

Topic connections

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