
Memphis residents immediately have clarity on how National Guard forces will assist with crime control, and it’s narrower than many headlines suggested. Governor Bill Lee confirmed that Guard units drawn from Tennessee will be deputized by the U.S. Marshals Service, integrated into a larger “Memphis Safe Task Force” comprising 13 federal agencies and state law enforcement.
These troops will not have arrest authority unless explicitly requested by local forces. They won’t carry weapons unless local law enforcement asks.
“The story of crime in Memphis is about to be a story of the past,” Lee declared at Friday’s announcement.
Uniformed Guardsmen and women will be easily identified in standard issue attire without masks. Lee also said no armored vehicles would be used in the operation.
Mayor Paul Young, who learned of the deployment via national TV, accepted its inevitability. “My goal is to make sure that as resources come into our community, we find ways to use them effectively,” he said. Memphis has seen crime declines, he noted, but “we have a lot of work to do.”
Over time, the effort will bring in agents from the FBI, ATF, and DEA in phases. Lee pledged $100 million in state funding and 300 additional state troopers — enough to station 100 on duty in Shelby County at once. The Memphis Police Department currently fields over 2,000 officers; the county sheriff’s office runs more than 600 deputies.
Above all, Lee insisted, this is not a short sprint: “It will operate as long as it takes.” Success, he added, comes when Memphis becomes known as one of the safest cities in America.
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