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Source tells CNN what may have caused Mexican naval ship's crash into Brooklyn Bridge

Source tells CNN what may have caused Mexican naval ship's crash into Brooklyn Bridge

CNN20-05-2025

Multiple videos obtained by CNN shows a Mexican navy ship hitting the Brooklyn Bridge. CNN's Kyung Lah explains how the ship's propeller was in reverse, pushing it in the wrong direction, according to a source with knowledge of the investigation.

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‘We are human': Los Angeles residents explain the drive behind days of mass protests
‘We are human': Los Angeles residents explain the drive behind days of mass protests

San Francisco Chronicle​

time3 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

‘We are human': Los Angeles residents explain the drive behind days of mass protests

LOS ANGELES — As protesters hit the streets here Tuesday for a fifth consecutive day to denounce arrests of immigrants by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers, President Trump intensified his rhetoric, calling Angelenos 'animals' and 'a foreign enemy' and vowing to 'liberate' the city. The Chronicle spoke to protesters in Los Angeles to hear about what drove them to take action. One wore a flag bearing the statement: 'We are human.' Others spoke of their concern over racial profiling, treatment of immigrants and family members. Excerpts from those interviews are below. Trump has ordered 2,000 California National Guard troops and 700 U.S. Marines into Los Angeles — moves Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday criticized as illegal and dangerous. 'This brazen abuse of power by a sitting President inflamed a combustible situation… putting our people, our officers, and the National Guard at risk,' Newsom said in a speech Tuesday night. The demonstrations in Los Angeles have spurred a dramatic protest movement across the U.S., with large crowds gathering in San Francisco, Chicago, New York, Atlanta, Seattle and St. Louis. Newsom said more than 370 people have been arrested in Los Angeles on vandalism and violence since the protests began Friday, following ICE's arrests at a clothing factory. On Tuesday, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass imposed an 8 p.m. to 6 a.m curfew in a square-mile area of downtown Los Angeles after 23 businesses were looted. Meanwhile, ICE arrests continued in Los Angeles and other parts of the U.S. Steven Steven, 24, who declined to provide his surname, said he is upset that people are being detained by ICE when they attend immigration court appointments. The Los Angeles resident stood with hundreds of others at Gloria Molina Grand Park for a vigil against deportations, wrapped in a flag reading 'We are human.' 'I don't think it's right,' Steven said. 'They are taking away people who are just trying to have a better life. I'm not even talking about deporting criminals.' Steven said he was also concerned that many people without criminal records are being targeted — pointing to cases of a high school girl and her mother who were arrested at immigration court. Frida Aguilar Frida Aguilar, 22, of Los Angeles, came out to protest downtown 'for my family,' she said, including many who are 'Dreamers' under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. Aguilar stood wrapped in a Mexican flag at the corner of Los Angeles and Temple Streets, accompanied by her friend Yaire Linares, who was wrapped in a Guatemalan flag. 'It's getting insane out here,' Aguilar said. Aguilar said she was upset with how immigration officials seem to ignore due process in detaining and deporting people and with how they use racial profiling to stop people. She cited a case, reported by NBC News, in which ICE detained a U.S. marshal in Arizona because he 'fit the general description of a subject being sought by ICE.' Aguilar criticized Trump's characterization of the violence in Los Angeles, saying that 'the violence is occurring because they are provoking… us.' 'We are trying to speak for people who don't have a voice,' Aguilar said. Nico Chavez Nico Chavez said he attended the demonstration in support of 'my people.' 'It's why my parents came here!' Chavez said. Chavez was protesting with hundreds of others outside a federal building in Los Angeles when police started firing rubber bullets. Chavez was near a pedestrian bridge when he heard the bullets. 'That was scary!' Chavez said. 'I was just throwing up a peace sign; I wasn't doing anything.' Bianca Stopani Bianca Stopani, 36, of Los Angeles, said she decided to protest because she doesn't think ICE 'telling us we can't be here' is fair. Stopani said she is the daughter of Guatemalan immigrants. 'My parents fought for a better life,' Stopani said. 'It's my turn to fight for them.' Stopani said she has protested before, including against the Iraq War when she was 14. She said Trump is 'such a hypocrite.' 'He wants to talk about Latino people being criminals, but he's the one who has all these RICO [Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act] charges,' Stopani said. Aleah and Kimberly Aleah, 19, of Pomona, was protesting — for a third day — for her parents, who came into the United States without authorization when they were children. 'I am protesting for my parents and for the right to not to be taken away,' Aleah said. Aleah, a U.S. citizen, was protesting in Los Angeles, alongside her friends, including Kimberly, a 19-year-old from East Los Angeles. Aleah said Trump's criticism of immigrants and protesters appalled her. 'I don't think a criminal should be talking against hard-working people who take all of the dirty labor jobs no one else wants,' Aleah said. 'He [Trump] should be looking for real criminals.' Kimberly said she thinks Trump is targeting 'Hispanics and Latino people and a lot of people are letting him get away with it and it needs to stop.' 'Trump is getting away with a lot, and I think people are finally realizing it,' Kimberly said. Chronicle Staff Writer Molly Burke contributing to this report.

Free attendance: ABQ legal clinic for worker exploitation on Friday
Free attendance: ABQ legal clinic for worker exploitation on Friday

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Free attendance: ABQ legal clinic for worker exploitation on Friday

Jun. 10—State and federal labor officials as well as human rights advocates will come together Friday to offer a wage theft legal clinic. The Albuquerque event is free and open to all workers, and will offer informational presentations, resources and complaint assistance for worker exploitation. Employees can also file complaints on-site at the event. Spanish language resources will be available. Wage theft is the largest form of theft in the U.S. Workers across the nation lose billions of dollars annually in unpaid wages, according to the National Employment Law Project. That's why Organized Power in Numbers is hosting the Friday clinic, said Janyce Cardenas, campaign manager for the labor organization serving the South and Southwest. Wage theft can happen unintentionally, like working through lunch or not getting paid for equipment runs, Cardenas said. But that's not always the case, she added. She said Organized Power in Numbers has worked with clients whose bosses threaten deportation as retaliation to an employee speaking up about exploitation. Immigrant communities are especially vulnerable as the Trump administration carries out mass deportations, Cardenas said, pointing to the recent L.A. protests over immigration enforcement and, more locally, immigrant arrests in New Mexico as examples. "So now we have a group of immigrant workers who are afraid to go to work, and ... they're more vulnerable to labor violations because their bosses know that they're less likely to speak up," she said. "This is why events like this are important — so that all workers know, and especially immigrant workers know, that they have rights as workers, regardless of immigration status," she added. Officials with the U.S. Department of Labor, New Mexico Department of Workforce Solutions, city of Albuquerque Office of Equity and Inclusion, New Mexico Center for Law and Poverty, the Mexican Consulate, New Mexico Caregivers Coalition, Border Human Rights Network and Casa Fortaleza will be at the event. Organizers encourage workers attending the event who want to file a labor complaint on-site to bring any receipts or documents related to the case.

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