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Frantic moment CNN reporter is hauled away by cops live on air at LA protests as anchor screams ‘what's going on?!'

Frantic moment CNN reporter is hauled away by cops live on air at LA protests as anchor screams ‘what's going on?!'

The Suna day ago

COPS have detained a CNN reporter live on-air as he covered the tense Los Angeles protests.
Anchor Laura Coates yelled out, "What's going on?" after watching national correspondent Jason Carroll being led away with his hands behind his back.
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Carroll had been covering the fourth day of protests over Donald Trump's crackdown on illegal immigration when he suddenly lost touch with Coates on Thursday evening.
"Jason? What's going on? I hear you. What happened Jason?" Coates said live on air.
"I am being detained," said Carroll in the distance as his cameraman filmed several feet behind him.
Carroll then chatted with the cops, who confirmed that he wasn't being arrested.
"We're letting you go, but you can't come back," said the officer before threatening to arrest Carroll if he returned to the scene.
The two appeared to have a friendly interaction before Carroll was put behind a wall of cops and lost touch with Coates.
Later, Carroll explained that the officers didn't put him in zip ties but did grab both of his hands and told him, "you are being detained."
The reporter was stunned by the sudden change as he had been roaming the streets of Los Angeles covering the protests since that morning.
"It is something that I wasn't expecting simply because we have been out here all day," he said.
"Normally, the officers [...] realize the press is there doing a job."
Trump sends another 2k National Guard to riot-ravaged LA as chaos spreads with arrests in NYC & Texas
Carroll was led away around the same time that officials told demonstrators that they had to leave or else they would be arrested.
They cuffed a number of protesters and charged them with failure to disperse to finally break up Thursday's demonstration.
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PROTESTS RAGE ON
The protests, which started over the weekend, heated up after Trump sent around 2,000 National Guard troops to help keep the peace, despite California Governor Gavin Newsom warning him to back off.
Newsom claims that the peaceful protests criticizing Trump's immigration crackdown turned into a protest once the troops arrived.
Meanwhile, Trump has insisted that Los Angeles would have "burned to the ground" if he hadn't sent the soldiers, as he plans to send 700 Marines to the city.
"If I didn't 'SEND IN THE TROOPS' to Los Angeles the last three nights, that once beautiful and great City would be burning to the ground right now," Trump wrote on Truth Social Tuesday morning.
California has filed a lawsuit against Trump, accusing him of breaking the 10th Amendment when he sent in the guard.
The protests have spawned more protests across the country, and hundreds of participants have been arrested.
Trump has vowed to maintain law and order despite Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass begging him to pause the ICE raids.
"There is a real fear in Los Angeles right now. Parents, workers, grandparents, young people scared to go about their daily lives," she said.
"We are a city of immigrants. Washington is attacking our people, our neighborhoods and our economy."
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