Suspects flee on electric scooter after shooting injures man in Lincoln Heights
A man sitting in a car was shot and injured early Saturday morning in Lincoln Heights after he was approached by two men who fled on an electric scooter, police said.
The victim, identified as a 48-year-old Latino man, was taken by ambulance to a nearby hospital where he was reported to be stable, Los Angeles Police Department spokeswoman Norma Eisenman said . The shooting was reported about 1:15 a.m.
According to investigators, two men described as Latino approached the victim while he was sitting in his car near Humbolt Street and Avenue 23 in Lincoln Heights, adjacent to Interstate 5.
Read more: A 'well-orchestrated execution': Mystery surrounds school official's killing at L.A. Live
The men got into an argument, Eisenman said. "Then suspect two produced a firearm and handed it to suspect one, who fired multiple shots."
After the shooting, the gunman and his companion fled on an electric scooter in an unknown direction, Eisenman said. Investigators did not report whether the victim was driving the car or parked at the time of the shooting.
Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Omaha mayor doesn't ‘know why' city was targeted in ICE raid
OMAHA, Neb. (NewsNation) — Omaha's newly inaugurated mayor says he 'doesn't know' why the city was targeted by federal immigration officials which resulted in the arrests of more than 100 people. Mayor John Ewing Jr., a Democrat who was sworn into office on Monday, said his team is still working to get more details on the status of those arrested in Nebraska's largest workplace operation under President Trump. Omaha Police Chief Todd Schmaderer told reporters Wednesday that his department did not assist federal agents in the raid. He said Omaha Police officers seen at the site of the raid were there to provide traffic control. He expressed concern that undocumented residents would not report crime if they're concerned that local police are acting as immigration enforcement. 'We weren't part of the aiding function of this. As far as planning of the raid, as far as knowledge of the operation, anything of that nature … the Omaha Police Department did not have a role in that,' said Schmaderer. 'I can assure the public that the Omaha Police Department will not be involved in checking immigration status in our community. I need (crime) victims to come forward. They will not come forward if they're fearful of the Omaha Police Department being immigration officers.' Ewing called on Congress to develop a 'comprehensive immigration policy.' 'Right now, what is happening across the country is a lot of fear is being created,' he said. 'We don't have an understandable approach to immigration, especially when it comes to our Latino members of this country.' Out of the 107 people who were targeted in the raid, 70 were detained after ICE determined their status. The raid happened around 9 a.m. at Glenn Valley Foods in south Omaha, an area where nearly a quarter of residents are foreign-born according to the 2020 census. A small group of people came out to protest the raid, and some of them even jumped on the front bumper of a vehicle to try to stop officers in one location while others threw rocks at officials' vehicles as a white bus carrying workers pulled away from a plant. Many workers attempted to avoid arrest by hiding in building rafters and walk-in freezers with subzero temperatures, prompting EMTs to respond and check individuals for health and safety concerns, according to federal agents on scene. The operation comes amid nationwide protests over immigration enforcement, particularly in Los Angeles, where similar workplace raids last week triggered demonstrations that prompted Trump to deploy National Guard troops. Glenn Valley Foods owner Gary Rohwer said he used the federal E-Verify system to check workers' eligibility but was deceived by employees using stolen identities of U.S. citizens, which allowed them to pass background checks. The operation is part of the Trump administration's renewed focus on workplace enforcement as part of broader immigration crackdowns. Such operations have become flashpoints for protests, with critics arguing they separate families and damage communities while supporters say they're necessary to enforce immigration law and protect American workers. NewsNation's Ali Bradley contributed to this report. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
Two men charged with possessing Molotov cocktails at LA protests
Federal prosecutors announced charges Wednesday against two men accused of possessing Molotov cocktails during recent protests in Los Angeles in response to immigration raids. According to an affidavit filed with a complaint by prosecutors, Emiliano Galvez, 23, threw a Molotov cocktail over a wall where sheriff's deputies were attempting to control a crowd. The other man charged, 27-year-old Wrackkie Quiogue, was allegedly holding the incendiary when Los Angeles Police Department officers approached him. Quiogue then apparently threw it away. Prosecutors also announced charges against two others for throwing water bottles, beer cans and other objects at federal officers. Quiogue appeared in court on Tuesday, and the other three defendants are expected to appear in court in the coming days. 'When protesting crosses the line into violence, the penalties will be severe,' said United States Attorney Bill Essayli in a press release announcing the charges. 'We will not relent in dispensing swift justice to criminals who take advantage of our country's freedoms to engage in lawlessness.' The complaint against Galvez also alleges that he was in the United States illegally, claiming he had overstayed a tourist visa issued in 2014. It said Galvez was arrested for being unlawfully present in the United States on June 9, and then identified as the individual seen in photographs throwing the device at a protest two days earlier, based on his tattoos. The protests in Los Angeles were triggered after Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids at several local businesses, before spreading to the areas around federal buildings where people arrested in the raids were believed to be detained. In response, President Trump has deployed National Guard troops and mobilized Marines to assist in quelling the protests, against the wishes of California officials including Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass (D) and Gov. Gavin Newsom (D). Newsom and Bass have blamed Trump's move as inflaming the protests. Democratic senators grilled Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth over the legality of the deployments at a Wednesday hearing. Bass for the first time declared a curfew on Tuesday for the portion of downtown where the protests had been most concentrated. Hundreds of people were arrested overnight, mostly over failure to disperse. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
New York's Ritchie Torres donates to Andry Hernández Romero fund demanding freedom for gay asylum-seeker
Gay Afro-Latino U.S. Rep. Ritchie Torres isn't ambiguous about his support for an innocent gay man sent to a modern-day gulag in El Salvador. Keep up with the latest in + news and politics. In a stark video released Wednesday, the New York Democrat condemned the Trump administration for deporting Andry José Hernández Romero — a 31-year-old gay asylum-seeker from Venezuela — to El Salvador's notorious CECOT mega-prison. 'These aren't gang signs,' Torres said, referring to the tattooed crowns on Hernández Romero's arms that immigration authorities used to justify the deportation. 'These are symbols of love, faith, and family.' Related: Hundreds rallying at Supreme Court demand Trump return disappeared gay asylum-seeker Andry Hernández Romero Torres explained that Hernández Romero comes from Capacho Nuevo, a Venezuelan village where Día de los Reyes, or Three Kings Day, is a treasured tradition. As a child, Hernández Romero designed costumes and performed in pageants, discovering a calling in creative work. 'Those crowns are a tribute to that festival and his parents,' Torres said. 'They're marked with the words 'Mom' and 'Dad.'' He said ICE's interpretation of the tattoos was both 'false and bigoted,' a projection of criminality onto cultural expression. Related: Gay Venezuelan asylum-seeker 'disappeared' to Salvadoran mega-prison under Trump order, Maddow reveals Hernández Romero's story is not merely a tale of bureaucratic overreach. It is, according to Torres and a growing coalition in Congress, the embodiment of a deeper erosion: of due process, of humane immigration policy, and of the basic protections once presumed to be guaranteed under the Constitution. 'What happened to Andry could happen to anyone,' Torres said in an interview with The Advocate. 'an attack on the due process rights of anyone is an attack on the rights of all of us.' Torres added, 'Without due process, what is to stop the Trump administration from labeling anyone a gang member and abducting them in the dead of night?' Related: Coalition of 52 Democrats push for proof of life for deported gay asylum-seeker Andry Hernández Romero He continued: 'Of all the abuses of the Trump presidency, none has been more egregious than his assaults on due process — on habeas corpus, which predates the American Republic itself.' The administration has offered no evidence that Hernández Romero was ever involved in criminal activity. He entered the United States legally through the CBP One app, passed a credible fear interview, and was awaiting his asylum hearing when Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers detained and removed him in March. His attorney was never notified. No judge issued a deportation order. He was last seen in chains, his head forcibly and roughly shaved, sobbing and shouting, 'I'm gay! I'm a stylist!' Since then, there has been no proof of life. Related: Kristi Noem won't say if gay asylum-seeker deported to El Salvador's 'hellhole' prison is still alive On Monday, Torres joined Rep. Robert Garcia, a fellow gay congressman from California, and 50 other Democratic lawmakers in a letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio demanding a welfare check, legal access, and Hernández Romero's immediate release. 'The United States government, alone, is responsible for Mr. Hernández Romero's imprisonment,' the letter stated. 'It's been over 80 days since we've had any confirmation that he's alive,' Garcia told The Advocate. 'His story has particularly galvanized the LGBTQ+ community.' The administration deported Hernández Romero under a 2025 executive order invoking the Alien Enemies Act, a centuries-old law last used to imprison Japanese Americans during World War II. Human rights groups say the CECOT prison he was sent to is functionally a black site — cut off from outside contact and designed to break prisoners. On Friday, about 300 people rallied on the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court, demanding Hernández Romero's return and condemning the policy that led to his disappearance. 'He would have loved to be here at WorldPride with all of us,' Lindsay Toczylowski, executive director of the Immigrant Defenders Law Center, which represents Hernández Romero', told the crowd. 'Instead, he is suffering in a prison that officials have bragged people only leave in a coffin.' Related: Gay asylum-seeker's lawyer worries for the makeup artist's safety in Salvadoran 'hellhole' prison At the rally, gay Crooked Media cofounder Jon Lovett told supporters, 'They can bring Andry back any time they fucking want.' Human Rights Campaign senior vice president Jonathan Lovitz declared, 'Our Constitution does not say due process only for citizens. It says that all people — all people — deserve justice.' Writer and podcaster at The Bulwark Tim Miller, who is gay, added, 'We did this to Andry — not some crooked cop or some foreign government. We did it.' Gay California U.S. Rep. Mark Takano invoked his own family's internment during World War II to denounce the deportation. 'Let's be crystal clear,' he said. 'We must repeal the Alien Enemies Act. None of us gets to sit this out.' Later that evening, at a live show taping and fundraiser hosted by Crooked Media and The Bulwark at the Lincoln Theatre, Garcia described the stakes in personal terms. 'Regardless of your opinion on immigration, this is about due process. This is about the Constitution of the United States,' he said. He recounted a face-to-face exchange with U.S. Ambassador to El Salvador William Duncan, who told him that Hernández Romero's case was 'the first I've heard of this,' despite weeks of public advocacy. 'That day, he promised to do an inquiry,' Garcia said. 'We never got a wellness check.' Longwell, a former Republican strategist, pressed the moral argument of another wrongly deported person, Maryland father Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who the administration returned to the U.S. to face what some call dubious criminal charges. 'I don't care if [Kilmar] Abrego Garcia is a bad guy. He still deserves due process,' she said. 'How do Republican college kids justify disappearing people to foreign countries without a trial?' Related: Jon Lovett and Tim Miller team up to 'raise hell' over gay asylum-seeker vanished to El Salvador by Trump Garcia responded sharply. 'They can't,' he said. 'The Constitution means nothing to them anymore. Most of them were born into this incredible honor and privilege of being in the United States — and they forget where their parents or grandparents came from.' The California congressman said immigrants like Hernández Romero — and like himself — often have a deeper connection to American values. 'I fought for the thing most folks were born with,' Garcia said. 'I believe in the Constitution. And it affords all persons the right to due process, not just citizens.' Torres, who could not attend the event in person, donated $1,000 in campaign funds to support legal efforts to free Hernández Romero, a spokesperson confirmed. 'It's now Pride Month when we celebrate the right to live freely and love openly,' Torres said in the video. 'The very reason Andry came to America. Instead of celebrating Pride like the rest of us, Andry is suffering as we speak in a torture chamber. We cannot remain silent.' Torres was also among the 75 House Democrats who joined Republicans on Monday in passing a resolution that expressed 'gratitude' to Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The vote came amid widespread protests in Los Angeles after ICE raids swept up more than 50 people, including some legally present in the United States. As tensions escalated, President Donald Trump deployed the National Guard, and on Tuesday, the U.S. Marine Corps over the objections of California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, and local officials, who warned of 'an unprecedented power grab.' The resolution also condemned antisemitism in the wake of a recent attack by an Egyptian man who threw fire bombs at members of the Jewish community in Colorado. Editor's note: This article was updated to include additional reporting.