
Old robbery footage misrepresented amid LA anti-deportation protests
Image
Screenshot from X taken June 10, 2025
The post comes from Brandon Straka, one of more than 1,500 people who was convicted in relation to the January 6, 2021 attack on the US Capitol and later pardoned by President Donald Trump.
Similar posts spread across X amid s of protests that Los Angeles officials said were initially peaceful but punctuated by scattered violence, with demonstrators torching cars and security forces firing tear gas.
The tensions in Los Angeles, home to a large Latino population, were triggered by raids and dozens of arrests of what authorities say are migrants and gang members. They continued to escalate over several days, with Trump clashing with California leaders as he went over their heads to deploy the state's National Guard and active-duty US Marines to the city.
The upheaval has seen some stores ransacked, according to local media reports and the Los Angeles Police Department, which urged downtown businesses and residents in a June 9 post on X to report any vandalism, damage or looting they observed (archived here and here).
But the video shared by Straka and others online is several months old and unrelated to the anti-deportation protests.
A surfaced the same video in local news articles and posts dated to October 2024 (archived here, here and here).
Those reports, and others covering the incident, described a street takeover during the early morning hours of October 6 in which a mob of people violently pushed their way inside a 7-Eleven in Anaheim and pillaged it, assaulting the clerk who tried to keep them out in the process (archived here).
Image
Screenshot from abc7.com taken June 10, 2025
The video was credited to an Instagram user, "@carlos_kickback_3" (archived here). AFP reached out to the account for a comment, but no response was forthcoming.
According to reports, the incident took place at a 7-Eleven on Knott Avenue in Anaheim (archived here). Geolocation of the footage confirms the location (archived here).
Image
Screenshot from X taken June 10, 2025, with elements outlined by AFP
Image
Screenshot from Google Maps taken June 10, 2025, with elements outlined by AFP
The location is several miles away from the complex of federal and municipal buildings near the Metropolitan Detention Center in downtown Los Angeles, where the protests have centered -- and also from other protest sites in Paramount and Compton.
AFP has debunked other misinformation about the tumult in Los Angeles here.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Euronews
11 minutes ago
- Euronews
Why Alaska? Trump and Putin to meet in US site once part of Russia
When US President Donald Trump meets Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday to discuss ending Moscow's war in Ukraine, the pair will meet for their first face-to-face encounter since Russia's full-scale invasion began on US turf with close geographic and cultural links to Russia. The choice of Alaska is no accident. The westernmost US state occupies a strategic and symbolic position in US–Russian relations that stretches back centuries. It is not the first time the state has hosted world leaders: Ronald Reagan met Pope John Paul II there in 1984, and Richard Nixon welcomed Japanese emperor Hirohito in 1971. But holding talks with Russia's president there carries more significance. Speaking on Monday in the White House, Trump said he is 'going to Russia on Friday'. However, while Alaska was once part of the Russian Empire, in 1867 the US bought it from the Tsarist regime for $7.2 million, around $156m (€134m) in today's dollars. Links between Alaska and Russia run deeper still. In 1799, Tsar Paul I established the Russian–American Company, forging commercial and cultural connections that still echo today. Russian footprints Now fully part of the United States, Alaska retains visible traces of its Russian past. Historic buildings remain, and according to the state's official website, Russian Orthodox churches are active in some 80 communities. Many of these still use the old-style Julian calendar, celebrating Christmas on 7 January, for example. Indigenous peoples such as the Yupik and Chukchi have lived on both sides of the Bering Strait for centuries and have maintained family, cultural, and trade ties despite the formalisation of the US–Russia border. Not always your friendly neighbour Alaska's geography has long made it strategically vital. Nicknamed the 'Guardian of the North', it is the closest US state to Russia: only 88 kilometres separate their mainlands, and in the Bering Strait some islands lie just 3.8 km apart. During the Cold War, the Soviet government of Mikhail Gorbachev referred to the region as the 'Ice Curtain". Alaska was home to major US Air Force and Army installations, which operated as command centres, logistical hubs and bases for fighter interceptors on rapid alert. Today, Alaska is home to stations of the North Warning System, a joint US and Canadian radar system for the atmospheric air defence of the region. It provides surveillance of airspace from potential incursions or attacks from across North America's polar region. A contested highway to the Artic Today, Alaska sits at the gateway to a changing Arctic. The Bering Strait is the only direct maritime passage between the Pacific and Arctic Oceans, and as sea ice retreats because of climate change, the route's value to global shipping is growing. The Northern Sea Route, which traces Russia's Arctic coastline, is becoming more navigable, offering a shorter path between Asia and Europe, which echoes recent discussions on Greenland's strategic value. Traffic through the strait includes container ships, oil tankers, bulk carriers transporting minerals and ores, and vessels servicing oil, gas and mining operations in Alaska and Siberia. Land rich in resources Alaska's wealth in natural resources adds to its strategic weight. The state holds an estimated 3.4 billion barrels of crude oil reserves and 125 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. It ranks among the top oil-producing states in the nation, with major output from the North Slope and Prudhoe Bay fields. These resources are critical to US energy security as developing Alaska's oil, gas and critical minerals reduces dependence and strengthens both economic and national security. The state's mineral output includes significant quantities of zinc, lead and coal, along with other materials deemed essential for modern industry. Its vast boreal forests also provide timber, with Native corporations responsible for more than half of Alaska's total production.


France 24
an hour ago
- France 24
Bukele critics face long exile from El Salvador homeland
At 44 years old, the self-styled world's "coolest dictator" has been in power for six years, and has just scrapped constitutional term limits, raising the prospect he could rule for many more. For good measure, he and his allies also passed a "foreign agents" law, similar to those used to crush dissent in Russia, Venezuela and Nicaragua. Against this backdrop, about 80 human rights activists, journalists, lawyers and environmentalists have left El Salvador in the last four months, according to an AFP tally, fleeing what they call "escalating repression" and the risk of imprisonment. AFP spoke to several of those in exile. Here are the stories of four. Bukele's government did not respond to requests for comment. But the president -- popular with Salvadorans for his "war" on gangs that once ravaged the country -- accuses his critics of "distorting" and "manipulating" the truth. The human rights activist Ingrid Escobar's left arm is bandaged. Shortly after fleeing her homeland with her nine- and 11-year-old children, she underwent surgery for a tumor, leaving a wound that has yet to heal. "I prioritized my health, my freedom, and my children," says the director of Socorro Juridico (Legal Aid), which assists prisoners' families. Now in Mexico, the 43-year-old recalls how police patrolled near her home "twice a week." She lived in that shadow until a friend from the prosecutor's office warned her that she was on a list of 11 people about to be arrested. "I had no choice" but to leave she said. "Because of the intimidation and fear of dying in prison without medical treatment." "I grabbed some clothes and left when I could," she said. The prospect of being jailed in El Salvador is not far-fetched. Escobar has been a staunch critic of Bukele's state of emergency, which was imposed in 2022 and has led to about 88,000 people being detained. The government accuses them all of being gang members. But with scant evidence or due process, no one knows for sure. Escobar insists that among the prisoners are "thousands of innocents." An estimated 433 have died in prison, although the true figure may never be known. Her organization continues to operate in El Salvador, but they are at "high risk," Escobar laments. "Consolidating the dictatorship involves imprisoning human rights defenders to silence them," she claimed. "There is no such thing as a 'cool dictatorship.'" The Lawyer Ruth Lopez was already in pyjamas when police arrived to arrest her on the night of May 18. The lawyer, who led the anti-corruption unit of the humanitarian NGO Cristosal, was herself was accused of illicit enrichment by a Bukele-aligned prosecutor. Her high-profile arrest marked a turning point. A month later, her colleague Rene Valiente, head of investigations, went into exile along with 20 other Cristosal activists. "There were attacks on social networks, stigmatization of our work, surveillance by security forces," recounts the 39-year-old lawyer from Cristosal's office in Guatemala. A constitutional lawyer and an environmental lawyer were also arrested in May and June, and the "foreign agents law" stipulated strict new laws for NGOs, including a 30 percent tax on their income. Amid all this, the US administration of President Donald Trump has been notably muted in its condemnation. Valiente and Lopez continue to advise the families of the 252 Venezuelans deported from the United States and who spent four months in the mega-prison Bukele built for gang members. "He exercises repression because he has the validation of the United States and has undermined democratic checks and balances" said Valiente. "We will continue working from here for a country that doesn't have to choose between security, or rights," he said. The Environmentalist When the Bukele-controlled Congress lifted the ban on metal mining last December, many Salvadorans took to the streets to protest. An environmental leader with a decade's standing, Amalia Lopez could not be absent. But after helping file a legal challenge against the new rules the 45-year-old was forced to retreat from the fight and leave her country in April. "I felt watched. I thought about protecting myself, letting the pressure subside, and returning, but I am no longer safe there," she told AFP from Costa Rica. In May, an environmental defender and a community leader protesting with farmers near Bukele's residence were detained. "With such overwhelming military and political power, we can't do much," said Lopez, who also defends communities' rights to water and land threatened by "powerful economic groups." All her work and affections "were left there" she said. "With indefinite re-election, an early return is impossible. Now it's an increasingly distant reality." The Journalist Jorge Beltran still has his suitcases packed because he's seeking asylum in another country. The 55-year-old left El Salvador for Guatemala on June 14 "totally devastated," without his wife and children. "I am emotionally unwell. But in El Salvador, practicing free and critical journalism is no longer safe," he said from his small rented room. A journalist for 23 years, Beltran is one of 47 reporters who have gone into exile in recent months, according to the professional association APES. Working for El Diario de Hoy, he denounced what he called "corrupt Bukele officials and human rights violations." It was no easy task, Beltran said, as the government "closed access to public documents." He decided to leave when people close to power warned him he was being targeted by the police. "It's a very bitter pill," he said. Now the prospect of Bukele's indefinite re-election "erases the hope of returning in just a few years." Although he is currently unemployed, Beltran plans to create a website to report from abroad on what is happening in El Salvador.

LeMonde
3 hours ago
- LeMonde
Historian Françoise Thom: 'Faced with Putin, Europeans are in a position of strength without realizing it'
Recently, the "fog of war" has morphed into the "fog of diplomacy." There is no point trying to untangle the confused impulses of the Trump administration. We must stand on the only solid ground available: Russia's objectives – especially since it is always on that side that the American president ends up. Here, the situation is clear. The Russian economy has been plunging at an accelerated pace. Militarily, Russia is making progress, but not quickly enough to win the race against economic collapse. The Kremlin's men have a long memory. They remember that most of the Russian Empire's territorial expansions were achieved with the complicity and help of one or more foreign powers: in the wake of Prussia and Austria for the partition of Poland in 1772; by coming to an agreement with Turkey to reconquer the Caucasian states in 1920-1921; by relying on Germany for the reconquest of the Baltic States and the annexation of Galicia (the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact, signed in 1939). So why not turn to Donald Trump to bring Ukraine to heel? Military force is always a last resort in the eyes of those in the Kremlin. They prefer manipulation and subversion. And this is where they excel, thanks to Western ignorance of Russian methods of projecting power, which remain unchanged. In addition to co-opting a foreign accomplice, the second hallmark of Russian expansion is the salami tactic. Russia slices up its victim (as we saw with Ukraine: First Crimea, then the Donbas). Once the first slice is taken, it moves on to the second, then the third. The Russian proposals made to Steve Witkoff [special envoy of the US president, who visited Russia on August 6] illustrate this approach. Vladimir Putin demanded that the United States, as a prerequisite for hypothetical negotiations toward a ceasefire, force the Ukrainians to evacuate the parts of the Donetsk region they still control, which are the strongest fortified lines on the Ukrainian front, in exchange for a symbolic piece of territory in the Sumy region.