AG tries to halt Trump tariffs, says they 'brought chaos'
Donald Trump opens his palms in the White House.

US President Donald Trump was photographed sitting in the Oval Office of the White House during his meeting with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on March 13, 2025, in Washington. The image was captured by Yuri Gripas/Abaca/Sipa USA (Sipa via AP Images).

Five major cities in different states are taking legal action against the Trump administration for halting federal funds that are designated to assist in defending metropolitan areas from potential terrorist and nuclear threats. They argue that the government’s freezing of funds is illegal and infringes upon Congress’s powers, violating the constitutional principle of separation of powers by withholding millions of dollars from them.

The cities filed an amended complaint in Illinois on Monday, alleging that the Department of Homeland Security’s decision to freeze funding is already affecting their ability to ensure public safety. This legal battle was initiated by the city of Chicago’s lawyers last month, following the announcement of the funding pause by the Department of Homeland Security on May 14.

Attorneys for San Francisco, Denver, Boston and Seattle joined forces with the Windy City this week — claiming their cities are also suffering from similar public safety issues and concerns related to the freeze, at a time when they say it’s needed most.

“On information and belief, DHS’s inaction is part of a programmatic freeze of Securing the Cities funding,” the complaint charges. “Plaintiffs have told vendors to stop work on vital equipment and have canceled training designed to protect against terrorist attacks.”

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The cities allege that Trump has cut off “Securing the Cities” program funds that have been used to buy “equipment designed to detect nuclear and other radiological materials that could be used to commit terrorist attacks” and train employees how to use it.

They employ “equipment and personnel” funded by the program to conduct security sweeps at athletic events, concerts, parades, political rallies, and other major events, according to the complaint, including rallies held by Donald Trump when he was a presidential candidate, the upcoming 2026 Super Bowl in San Francisco, and FIFA World Cup 26 matches in Boston, San Francisco, and Seattle.

“All that changed in recent months,” the new complaint says. “Since February 21, 2025, plaintiffs have submitted 11 requests to reimburse plaintiffs for expenditures that DHS had already approved,” it alleges. “DHS has effectively ignored plaintiffs’ requests while holding open the possibility that DHS may someday reimburse plaintiffs.”

The cities say federal employees have offered up responses and explanations for why the funding inquiries are being ignored. One government worker allegedly told San Francisco there was a “pause” on disbursements and said, “I have no information on when you can expect the payment,” according to the complaint.

The amended filing notes how between 2012 and 2017, the Domestic Nuclear Detection Office added the cities of Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, and Washington, D.C., regions to Securing the Cities because the office had deemed them to be “high-risk” areas. Boston, Denver, San Francisco and Seattle were later added.

In 2018, Congress passed the Countering Weapons of Mass Destruction Act, which required DHS to “establish” Securing the Cities funding for those cities and several others “to enhance the ability” of the United States to detect and prevent terrorist attacks and other “high-consequence events.”

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