logo
Protesters or agitators: Who is driving chaos at L.A. immigration protests?

Protesters or agitators: Who is driving chaos at L.A. immigration protests?

The crowd near Los Angeles City Hall had by Sunday evening reached an uneasy detente with a line of grim-faced police officers.
The LAPD officers gripped 'less lethal' riot guns, which fire foam rounds that leave red welts and ugly bruises on anyone they hit. Demonstrators massed in downtown Los Angeles for the third straight day. Some were there to protest federal immigration sweeps across the county — others appeared set on wreaking havoc.
Several young men crept through the crowd, hunched over and hiding something in their hands. They reached the front line and hurled eggs at the officers, who fired into the fleeing crowd with riot guns.
Jonas March, who was filming the protests as an independent journalist, dropped to the floor and tried to army-crawl away.
'As soon as I stood up, they shot me in the a—,' the 21-year-old said.
Violence and widespread property damage at protests in downtown L.A. have diverted public attention away from the focus of the demonstrations — large-scale immigration sweeps in such predominantly Latino cities as Paramount, Huntington Park and Whittier.
Instead, the unrest has trained attention on a narrow slice of the region — the civic core of Los Angeles — where protests have devolved into clashes with police and made-for-TV scenes of chaos: Waymo taxis on fire. Vandals defacing city buildings with anti-police graffiti. Masked men lobbing chunks of concrete at California Highway Patrol officers keeping protesters off the 101 Freeway.
The escalating unrest led LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell on Sunday night to break with Mayor Karen Bass, who has condemned President Trump's decision to deploy the National Guard to the city.
'Do we need them? Well, looking at tonight, this thing has gotten out of control,' McDonnell said at a news conference. The chief said he wanted to know more about how the National Guard could help his officers before he decided whether their presence was necessary.
McDonnell drew a distinction between protesters and masked 'anarchists' who he said were bent on exploiting the state of unrest to vandalize property and attack police.
'When I look at the people who are out there doing the violence, that's not the people that we see here in the day who are out there legitimately exercising their 1st Amendment rights,' McDonnell said. 'These are people who are all hooded up — they've got a hoodie on, they've got face masks on.'
'They're people that do this all the time,' he said. 'They get away with whatever they can. Go out there from one civil unrest situation to another, using the same or similar tactics frequently. And they are connected.'
McDonnell said some agitators broke up cinder blocks with hammers to create projectiles to hurl at police, and others lobbed 'commercial-grade fireworks' at officers.
'That can kill you,' he said.
The LAPD arrested 50 people over the weekend. Capt. Raul Jovel, who oversaw the department's response to the protests, said those arrested included a man accused of ramming a motorcycle into a line of officers and another suspect who allegedly threw a Molotov cocktail.
McDonnell said investigators will scour video from police body cameras and footage posted on social media to identify more suspects.
'The number of arrests we made will pale in comparison to the number of arrests that will be made,' McDonnell said.
Representatives of the Los Angeles city attorney and Los Angeles County district attorney's office could not immediately say whether any cases were being reviewed for prosecution. Dist. Atty. Nathan Hochman said those who 'hurl cinder blocks, light vehicles on fire, destroy property and assault law enforcement officers' will be charged.
On Sunday, the LAPD responded to a chaotic scene that began when protesters squared off with National Guard troops and Department of Homeland Security officers outside the Metropolitan Detention Center.
Around 1 p.m., a phalanx of National Guard troops charged into the crowd, yelling 'push' as they rammed people with riot shields. The troops and federal officers used pepper balls, tear gas canisters, flash-bangs and smoke grenades to break up the crowd.
No one in the crowd had been violent toward the federal deployment up to that point. The purpose of the surge appeared to be to clear space for a convoy of approaching federal vehicles.
Department of Homeland Security police officers had asked protesters to keep vehicle paths clear earlier in the morning, but their commands over a loudspeaker were often drowned out by protesters' chants. They offered no warning before charging the crowd.
Some in the crowd lobbed bottles and fireworks at the LAPD. Two people rode motorcycles to the front of the crowd, revving their engines and drawing cheers from bystanders. Police accused them of ramming the skirmish line, and the motorcycles could be seen fallen over on their sides afterward. The drivers were led away by police, their feet dragging across asphalt lined with shattered glass and spent rubber bullets.
On the other side of the 101, vandals set fire to a row of Waymos. Acrid smoke billowed from the autonomous taxis as people smashed their windows with skateboards. Others posed for photographs standing on the roofs of the burning white SUVs.
After California Highway Patrol officers pushed protesters off the 101 Freeway, people wearing masks flung chunks of concrete — and even a few electric scooters — at the officers, who sheltered under an overpass. A piece of concrete struck a CHP car, drawing cheers from the crowd.
Closer to City Hall, the LAPD pushed demonstrators toward Gloria Molina Grand Park, where some in the crowd wrenched pink park benches from their concrete mounts and piled them into a makeshift barricade in the middle of Spring Street.
The crowd, which included a Catholic priest wearing his robes and a woman with a feathered Aztec headdress, milled behind the barricades until LAPD officers on horseback pushed them back, swinging long wooden batons at several people who refused to retreat. Video footage circulating online showed one woman being trampled.
The crowd moved south into the Broadway corridor, where the LAPD said businesses reported being looted around 11 p.m. Footage filmed by an ABC-7 helicopter showed people wearing masks and hooded sweatshirts breaking into a shoe store.
McDonnell said the scenes of lawlessness disgusted him and 'every good person in this city.'
Before any chaos erupted on Sunday, Julie Solis walked along Alameda Street holding a California flag, warning protesters not to engage in the kind of behavior that followed later in the day.
Solis, 50, said she believed the National Guard was deployed solely to provoke a response that would justify further aggression from federal law enforcement.
'They want arrests. They want to see us fail,' she said. 'We need to be peaceful. We need to be eloquent.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Democrats forge strange bedfellows as party flounders in Trump's 2nd term
Democrats forge strange bedfellows as party flounders in Trump's 2nd term

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Democrats forge strange bedfellows as party flounders in Trump's 2nd term

The Democratic Party has been without a leader since losing the White House in November, and as Democrats navigate President Donald Trump's second administration, they've developed some unlikely alliances. From violent protests erupting in Los Angeles to the defense of controversial deportees and accused extremists, the party's fractured response to Trump's agenda has drawn scrutiny not just from the right, but from within its own ranks. Amid the chaos unfolding in Los Angeles, Trump said those protesting and rioting against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) are "not protesters, they are troublemakers and insurrectionists." Images emerged this weekend of rioters setting cars on fire and large swaths of protesters shutting down highways as Trump federalized the National Guard for the first time since 1965. He ordered National Guardsmen and Marines to Los Angeles to protect federal immigration agents during the ongoing arrests. Led by California Gov. Gavin Newsom, long considered a potential 2028 presidential candidate, Democrats have railed against Trump and rallied behind the anti-ICE protesters. Democrat Accuses Trump Of Unleashing 'Campaign Of Terror' On Illegals As La Riots Rage Read On The Fox News App "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. Ice Ramps Up Arrests Of Convicted Criminals As Riots Rage In Blue City: 'You Will Not Stop Us' And Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., said on NBC, "A lot of these peaceful protests are being generated because the president of the United States is sowing chaos." "The vast majority of protesters and demonstrators are peaceful," Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif., said on MSNBC. "They're passionate." Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran national deported from Maryland earlier this year, is set to face federal charges for human smuggling and conspiracy, Attorney General Pam Bondi announced Friday. For months, Democrats have ridiculed the Trump administration for deporting Abrego Garcia to a high-security prison in his home country, El Salvador. Returning Abrego Garcia to the U.S. became a major cause for the Democratic Party. Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., was the first of several lawmakers to travel to El Salvador to visit Abrego Garcia this year, sparking social media backlash after being photographed with purported margaritas at a restaurant. "As I have repeatedly said, this is not about the man, it's about his constitutional rights and the rights of all. The administration will now have to make its case in the court of law, as it should have all along," Van Hollen said Friday. Abrego Garcia is accused of being a member of the violent Salvadoran gang MS-13. According to court records filed by his wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura, he also allegedly physically abused her on multiple occasions. Kilmar Abrego Garcia Indicted On Human Trafficking Charges, Ordered To Appear Before Judge In Nashville Earlier Friday, another Maryland Democrat, Rep. Glenn Ivey, who also made a trip to El Salvador to advocate for Abrego Garcia, used his X account to promote an event to continue the "critical conversation on the fight to return those who are wrongfully imprisoned in El Salvador." And Maryland Gov. Wes Moore celebrated the news of Abrego Garcia's return, telling Fox News Digital, "I want to thank our federal delegation for their efforts to ensure our government adheres to the rule of law." Moore said it was "never about one person, but about the due process that governs all people in our country." Earlier this year, few Democrats were willing to denounce vandalism on Tesla showrooms, charging stations and vehicles, even as Attorney General Pam Bondi labeled the attacks "domestic terrorism," an issue Democrats have railed against for years. What began as protests against Elon Musk and his leadership at the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) escalated into violent incidents, including shots fired at a building, destroyed dealership windows and charging stations set on fire. In an interview with Fox News' Bret Baier on "Special Report" in March, Musk blamed Democrat leaders' anti-DOGE rhetoric for the surge in violence against his company. Sen. John Fetterman, a Pennsylvania Democrat who has earned a reputation for bucking his party on key issues like immigration and supporting Israel, dissed Democrats for suddenly backing Musk amid the billionaire's social media spat with Trump. Dems Who Have Spoken Passionately Against Domestic Terrorism Go Silent As Tesla Torchers Are Charged "The Dems, we've been dumping all over Musk and vandalizing Teslas or whatever, and now, suddenly, we might be more back into him," Fetterman said, calling out Democrats' inconsistency. Trump told Fox News' Laura Ingraham that Democrats lost big in November because they're backing "90% negative issues," including support for Mahmoud Khalil, the Columbia University activist who was arrested and faced deportation for his alleged support of the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas. "Backing Khalil is not a great issue, but backing Khalil is better than backing these other hundreds of people that are really serious criminals. It's probably a step better than that," Trump told Ingraham. Secretary of State Marco Rubio accused Khalil of participating in "antisemitic protests and disruptive activities, which foster a hostile environment for Jewish students in the United States." "Condoning antisemitic conduct and disruptive protests in the United States would severely undermine that significant foreign policy objective," Rubio said, defending his move to revoke Khalil's green card over his alleged affiliation with the terrorist group, Hamas. But more than 100 Democrats sent a letter accusing the Trump administration of a "brazen attempt to use the power of the United States government to silence and punish people who do not agree with the sitting President" by arresting Khalil. The Democrats requested documentation of the "reasonable grounds" for his arrest and affirmed his "constitutional right in our democracy to express his political views." Ivy League Anti-israel Ringleader Mahmoud Khalil Withheld Details Of Foreign Ties From Visa Application: Feds The procedural request followed a fiery letter sent by 14 House Democrats, including "Squad" members Reps. Rashida Tlaib, Illhan Omar and Ayanna Pressley, demanding Khalil's release and labeling his detention an "illegal abduction" and violation of the First Amendment. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez called the arrest "inhumane" and "unconstitutional." Tlaib, who is the only Palestinian American in Congress and was censured last year for her criticism of U.S. policy on the war in Gaza, said the Trump administration's "illegal actions set a dangerous precedent" and called to "free Mahmoud Khalil." Earlier this year, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer faced backlash from his own party after voting for the Republican-proposed continuing resolution to avert a government shutdown. Soon after, a Siena College poll found Schumer's favorability was down at 39% among New York state voters questioned in the poll, which was conducted April 14-16. Meanwhile, Ocasio-Cortez's favorability soared to 47% as rumors swirled about her ambitions for higher office. Texas Democrat Rep. Jasmine Crockett said the Schumer criticism among donors was "reminiscent" of when former President Joe Biden was "taken down" before the 2024 presidential election. Embattled Dnc Vice Chair Decides Not To Run After Diversity Re-vote Called And former DNC Vice Chair David Hogg sparked intraparty conflict this year when he vowed $20 million through his outside political action group, Leaders We Deserve, to primary challenge older House Democrats in safe blue districts he said are "asleep at the wheel." After months of growing tension between DNC officials, Hogg announced he would not compete in the new vice chair election after a majority of members voted for a new contest in the wake of a procedural error in the Feb. 1 elections. But the DNC has a different take on their response to Trump's second term. "The American people think Donald Trump is off the rails — they oppose his deployment of troops to LA, they don't support his budget bill to give handouts to the rich, and they don't trust him to run the economy," DNC spokesperson Aida Ross told Fox News Digital. "That's why Trump has the lowest approval ratings of any modern president at this point in his term. Democrats on the other hand are on a record-breaking streak, winning and overperforming in elections across the map this year, including in red states." Fox News Digital's Andrew Mark Miller, Peter Pinedo and Jasmine Baehr contributed to this report. Original article source: Democrats forge strange bedfellows as party flounders in Trump's 2nd term

Letters to the Editor: We cannot allow a U.S. senator to be handcuffed for asking questions
Letters to the Editor: We cannot allow a U.S. senator to be handcuffed for asking questions

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Letters to the Editor: We cannot allow a U.S. senator to be handcuffed for asking questions

To the editor: When is enough enough? I am in tears as a senator from my state is manhandled to the ground for asking questions ('California Sen. Alex Padilla forcibly removed, handcuffed during Kristi Noem press conference,' June 12). How could Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's "security" assault our senator for exercising his constitutional rights? Whether Sen. Alex Padilla was a government representative or not, this is all a part of our rights as citizens, as granted by the 1st Amendment. On top of all the affronts by President Trump's disregard of our laws, this is over the edge to dictatorship. All senators and representatives must stand up to this outrageous disregard of our laws. The Posse Comitatus Act is not a suggestion, nor is the Constitution. It is well past time for Republicans to stand up for our country. Do they really care to go down in history as seditious cowards? I am a 78-year-old Los Angeles native and have never been so angry at the behavior of government officials in my life. I've seen President Nixon lie and the Iran-Contra mess under President Reagan, in addition to many other incidents where officials broke the law. This is much worse. Our rights are on the line. If my mobility were not impaired, I would be protesting with my fellow Angelenos. Stand up for us! Leslie Forester Tillmann, Palm Desert .. To the editor: Noem can shoot defenseless animals, but is unable to answer questions from a United States senator. Is she really capable of ensuring our nation's domestic security? It doesn't look like it. Mary Griswold Gordon, Rancho Palos Verdes This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

‘Defending my people': Immigrant advocates protest in Salt Lake City as national debate heats up
‘Defending my people': Immigrant advocates protest in Salt Lake City as national debate heats up

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

‘Defending my people': Immigrant advocates protest in Salt Lake City as national debate heats up

SALT LAKE CITY — Several hundred demonstrators waving U.S. and Mexican flags, holding signs blasting U.S. immigration authorities and chanting slogans of support for immigrants gathered in downtown Salt Lake City as the immigration debate across the country heats up. The Utah protestors, who gathered Thursday at Washington Square Park, referenced the Trump administration's crackdown on illegal immigration in Los Angeles, which has prompted demonstrating there by immigrant advocates. 'We have to take notes from Los Angeles and unite as one,' said Jazz Dumas, of Utah March, one of the groups that organized the protest. Another demonstrator in attendance, pushing a child in a stroller, a Mexican flag draped around her shoulder, also alluded to the Los Angeles demonstrations. President Donald Trump attempted to deploy National Guard troops to quell the protest activity, prompting backlash from California Gov. Gavin Newsom and others, but a U.S. judge barred the action on Thursday, according to Reuters. 'I'm so proud of them for sticking up,' said the woman, who identified herself as Adriana. 'I'm proud of the the LA citizens for going out there and defending my people.' The protestors packed the northwest corner of Washington Square Park, where the Salt Lake City-County Building is located, and they were loud and boisterous. Organizers dubbed the protest 'From LA to SLC: ICE Out!' In a press briefing afterward, Salt Lake City police spokesman Brent Weisberg labeled the event 'unplanned' and said the crowd size reached an estimated 600. The demonstrators, who later marched through downtown Salt Lake City, were 'mostly peaceful,' he said. He reported a few 'agitators' in the group and said there were 'a few small skirmishes' in Washington Square Park. A Tesla received unspecified damage while the demonstrators marched through Salt Lake City, according to Weisberg, and that incident remains under investigation. In one of the skirmishes at Washington Square, a man wearing a shirt reading 'Trump is GOAT of presidents' blasted one of the speakers for talking in Spanish and shouted down the protesters. Several crowded around him, shouting back, and he eventually left. The tone of Thursday's protest was defiant, with speakers variously urging solidarity with immigrants and blasting immigration agents, police and the wealthy people perceived to be the ruling class. 'The real criminals are the billionaires who run this country and (exploit) the rest of us for their own profits. The real criminals are the racist police and the ICE forces who arrest us and deport us to keep us from demanding equal rights,' said Liz Maryon, with the Salt Lake Community Bail Fund. Among the many in the crowd was Seka Groves, of Salt Lake City, there with a group of other Native Americans. 'We're Northern Ute and Hopi, and we feel like it's important to stand up for our brothers and sisters, our cousins,' he said. He hopes a takeaway from the event is that even in a conservative state like Utah, 'there are still people that support immigrants and brown people.' Jodi Archer, of Lehi, there with two of her daughters, Eli and Gwen, said the Trump administration's moves to deploy the National Guard and Marines in support of the immigrant crackdown went too far. 'It's just out of control,' she said. The presence of immigrants in the country isn't 'something that's really ever bothered me. If they're not causing a problem, and they're contributing, they're working, I don't see any problem with people coming here.' Gwen Archer said everyone deserves dignity. 'Everyone is a human, and I think being from a country were we pledge justice for all, that's what I hope for, that's what I vote for, that's what I want in this country, in a country that's made of immigrants,' she said. The demonstrations in California and planned anti-Trump protests on Saturday across the country, including several set for Utah, have prompted hand-wringing among some Utah officials. They support the right of free speech and the right to protest, they say, but won't stand for violence. 'We ask everyone exercising these rights to use good judgment and remain peaceful,' the Utah Department of Public Safety said in a statement Thursday. 'Acts of violence, vandalism or any other criminal behavior will not be tolerated and will be addressed immediately. We remain committed to safeguarding both the right to protest and the rule of law.' In light of the situation, nonessential employees at the Scott M. Matheson Courthouse in Salt Lake City and the 4th District Courthouse in Provo were asked to stay home on Friday. Chris Palmer, director of security for Utah State Courts, said similar moves were implemented in 2020 in response to protesting that year. The anti-Trump demonstrations on Saturday, dubbed No Kings protests, are spearheaded by Indivisible, a group formed in opposition to Trump. They are scheduled to take place all across the country. Protests in Utah are scheduled for Logan, Ogden, Park City, Heber City, Provo, Moab, Boulder, Price, Ephraim, Bluff, Cedar City, St. George and Kanab, according to the No Kings website. Two protests are set for Salt Lake City, at Pioneer Park and on the University of Utah campus. Contributed: Daniel Woodruff

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store