LA protests live: Cleanup underway as Newsom seeks to block Marine, Guard deployment
LOS ANGELES − A large clean-up effort is underway after four nights of protests, and a tense standoff between California leaders and the Trump administration is playing out in the courts and on social media after President Donald Trump's move to deploy Marines and the National Guard in California.
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass at a Tuesday news conference said a rally is planned but that it is not expected to be as large as the protests in recent days, which have been marred by violent clashes, vandalism and looting.
Since Friday, officers have had confrontations with protesters, leading to the use of pepper spray and flash bangs as officials announced more than 120 arrests amid flare ups of vandalism and violence. Bass on Tuesday said damage was limited to a small area downtown, but noted that the graffiti was "extensive" – requiring a large response as the city prepares to host the 2026 World Cup.
Gov. Gavin Newsom, meanwhile, filed an emergency motion seeking to limit the use of California National Guard and Marines, accusing Trump and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth of trying to use the assets to help ICE conduct raids.
"The federal government is turning the military against American citizens," Newsom said in a post on X. "This is unprecedented and threatens the very core of our democracy."
The move comes a day after Trump doubled the National Guard presence in Los Angeles to 4,000 and deployed 700 Marines, an escalation that is estimated to cost about $134 million, according to a Pentagon official. Trump remained all-in on his decisions, posting Tuesday Truth Social that "if we didn't send out the National Guard—Los Angeles would be burning right now!"
Mayor Karen Bass, asked why Los Angeles would be targeted, said she believes her city is 'an experiment.'
'If you can do this to the nation's second largest city, maybe the administration is hoping this will be a signal to everybody everywhere to fear them—that you federal government that historically has protected you can come in and take over,' she told reporters in a news conference Tuesday.
Bass said she would be reaching out to President Trump. Asked what she would tell him, she said, 'I want to tell him to stop the raids. I want to tell him that this is a city of immigrants. I want to tell him that if you want to devastate the economy of the City of Los Angeles, attack immigrants.'
− Phaedra Trethan
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass told reporters she is considering a curfew to restore calm to the city.
'We're looking at things like a curfew,' she said June 10, and she planned to meet with Police Chief Jim McDonnell later in the day to discuss it.
She said a curfew wouldn't need to be citywide, but likely focused on the downtown area.
− Bart Jansen
Authorities have dispatched painters, cleaners, and other workers to scrub away, cover up or fade out widespread spraypaint graffiti around downtown. While the vast majority of protesters have been peaceful, a small number have defaced buildings, sidewalks and streets with anti-Trump slogans, criticism of ICE and police, and exhortations to resist fascism.
Federal buildings are among the hardest hit, and there was no sign of the National Guard or Marines protecting those facilities Tuesday. On North Los Angeles Street, contractors were paying particular attention to the asphalt where five Waymo self-driving electric vehicles were burned by protesters, releasing rare Earth materials that can be hazardous.
Around the corner, painter's apprentice Tim Brevard, 53, covered up graffiti on a wall with grey paint shot from a sprayer. Under normal circumstances, Brevard's team removes gang graffiti from the same area daily. Now it is political graffiti. City policy calls for removing it within 72 hours of being reported, and the city spends about $14 million annually on graffiti removal, according to its annual budget.
'Down here it's tough because there's fresh graffiti every day,' Brevard said as he paused to wipe sweat from his face with a gloved hand. 'There's always gang graffiti. Every day we do this.'
Trump said he would consider invoking the Insurrection Act, which would give him more leeway to use the military for domestic purposes as he deploys troops to Los Angeles in response to violent protests.
"If there's an insurrection, I would certainly invoke it,' Trump said Tuesday during an event in the White House. 'We'll see. But I can tell you, last night was terrible. The night before that was terrible."
Trump deployed the California National Guard to Los Angeles over the objections of Newsom, sparking the lawsuit from the state. Marines also were sent to help the guard after protests erupted over federal immigration enforcement efforts.
The troops currently are limited to protecting federal property and law enforcement officers. The Insurrection Act would give Trump authority to use them more broadly. Trump said some areas of Los Angeles, during the protests, where "you could have called it an insurrection. It was terrible."
− Zac Anderson
U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, asked Tuesday whether Newsom should be arrested, said the governor should be 'tarred and feathered.'
'That's not my lane. I'm not gonna give you legal analysis on whether Gavin Newsom should be arrested. But he ought to be tarred and feathered,' Johnson, R-LA., said in a weekly press conference.
Johnson said Newsom is keeping the administration from implementing federal law.
Newsom quickly responded on social media. 'Good to know we're skipping the arrest and going straight for the 1700's style forms of punishment. A fitting threat given the (Republicans) want to bring our country back to the 18th Century.'
− Sarah D. Wire
Most of the unrest is taking place across a few square miles in a mostly commercial area downtown. The city is sprawled across hundreds of square miles and the county covers thousands of square miles. The vast majority of the metropolitan area has been quiet, with people able to continue their daily routines.
Trump has insisted that he had no choice but to increase the level of force in response to growing unrest over his immigration crackdown.
700 Marines heading to LA for riot assistance; Newsom calls move 'deranged fantasy' of Trump
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told a House committee Tuesday the United States was entering a new phase in which the National Guard would "become a critical component of how we secure that homeland."
"The National Guard is a huge component of how we see the future," he told the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense.
Bryn MacDonnell, a special assistant to the secretary of defense, said the Pentagon is spending $134 million of deploying 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 Marines. Funding is coming from operations and maintenance accounts, he said.
− Mayes-Osterman, Cybele
Newsom criticized Trump on X Tuesday after Stephen Miller, Trump's deputy chief of staff for policy, blasted the governor on the same social media site hours earlier. Miller wrote that "when the rioters swarmed, you handed over your streets, willingly. You still refuse to arrest and prosecute the arsonists, seditionists and insurrectionists."
Newsom made reference to Trump's decision to pardon or commute the sentences of hundreds of people in connection with the assault on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
"The only people defending insurrectionists are you and @realDonaldTrump," Newsom wrote. "Or, are we pretending like you didn't pardon 1500 of them?"
Several national civil rights groups described the Trump administration's National Guard deployment as an overreach of power that was 'deeply disturbing" and 'reckless."
"It is not lost on us that no such show of force was deployed in advance of the January 6 insurrection at our nation's capital despite the clear threat to democracy. The contrast is alarming," leaders wrote in a statement released Monday night. 'Peaceful protesters in Los Angeles are met with military presence, while violent actors in Washington, D.C. were allowed to breach the heart of our government with little resistance. This inconsistency amplifies questions about how power is used and against whom."
The right to protest the Trump administration's "unjust policies targeting Black and Brown communities must be protected," they wrote.
The groups include the NAACP, the National Urban League, the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation, the National Action Network, the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, the Leadership Conference, the National Council of Negro Women and the Legal Defense Fund.
Separately, Judith LeBlanc, executive director of Native Organizers Alliance Action Fund, called the administration's decision to call in the National Guard and the Marines 'an act of violence meant to silence organizers who are taking a righteous stand against the illegal and brutal ICE raids happening everyday.'
− Deborah Barfield Berry
Multiple members of the media have reported being caught in the crossfire or targeted by authorities using tear gas or rubber bullets.
The incidents included Australian journalist Lauren Tomasi, who was hit in the leg by a rubber bullet on camera in a video that shows an officer appearing to aim at her. A New York Post photographer, Toby Canham, also said he was shot in the forehead with a nonlethal round. British freelance photographer Nick Stern told the BBC he underwent emergency surgery after he was hit in the leg by a plastic bullet.
The Committee to Protect Journalists has sounded the alarm over the incidents, warning against the intimidation of journalists.
'Any attempt to discourage or silence media coverage by intimidating or injuring journalists should not be tolerated,' Katherine Jacobsen, program coordinator for the Committee to Protect Journalists in the U.S., Canada and the Caribbean, said in a statement. 'It is incumbent upon authorities to respect the media's role of documenting issues of public interest.'
National Press Club President Mike Balsamo warned that law enforcement "cannot pick and choose when the First Amendment applies. Journalists in Los Angeles were not caught in the crossfire — they were targeted. "
-Jeanine Santucci
Multiple journalists injured by police nonlethal rounds while covering LA protests
Police briefly detained CNN correspondent Jason Carroll while on air Monday night during the network's coverage of the protests. CNN was covering the protests live when in-studio anchors briefly lost contact with Carroll, who could be seen being led away from the protests by LAPD officers with his hands behind his back. Carroll returned to the mic, informing the anchors: "I am being detained."
An officer then can be heard telling Carroll: "We're letting you go. You can't come back. If you come back, you will be arrested."
CNN issued a statement saying "we are pleased the situation resolved quickly once the reporting team presented law enforcement with their CNN credentials. CNN will continue to report out the news unfolding in Los Angeles." Read more here.
− Taijuan Moorman
On Monday, California sued the Trump administration, alleging that the president's deployment of Guard troops was unnecessary and unlawful. Newsom later indicated that he will take similar action to prevent the Marines from being deployed, describing the order as a "blatant abuse of power."
"It makes me feel like our city is actually a test case," Bass said at a news conference. "A test case for what happens when the federal government moves in and takes the authority away from the state or away from local government."
'I hate it': LA residents who surveyed vandalism fear more violence in future protests
Some day laborers and other community members in Los Angeles County are warily watching federal troops, bracing for more raids and trying to look to the future while looking out for each other. Some are still searching for detained family members. Some say they've seen worse.
Jose Luis Valencia, 54, is an undocumented immigrant who was born in the Tepito neighborhood of Mexico City. This week he was looking for work outside a Home Depot in Los Angeles County.
"We're a little nervous, but we're here looking for work to survive," Valencia told USA TODAY. "We need money to put food on the table and support our family." Read more here.
− Pamela Avila and Trevor Hughes
The California governor, in a post to social media blasting Trump's decision to send the military members to California, said Marines are 'not political pawns." Newsom said Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was 'illegally' deploying the Marines and argued it was a stunt so Trump could have a 'talking point' at a planned parade in Washington on Saturday to celebrate the 250th birthday of the Army, also the day of Trump's 79th birthday.
"The Courts and Congress must act. Checks and balances are crumbling," Newsom added.
-Jeanine Santucci
Officials at the Los Angeles Police Department said Monday that despite violent demonstrations, local police can handle whatever protesters throw at them and that federal help is unnecessary and could become a hindrance.
'The possible arrival of federal military forces in Los Angeles - absent clear coordination - presents a significant logistical and operational challenge for those of us charged with safeguarding this city,' Police Chief Jim McDonnell said in a statement. 'The Los Angeles Police Department, alongside our mutual aid partners, have decades of experience managing large-scale public demonstrations, and we remain confident in our ability to do so professionally and effectively.'
LAPD said officers have fired over 600 non-lethal bullets and used tear gas on the "hostile crowd." Among those hit was an Australian journalist covering the protests.
At least five officers received minor injuries, according to police. Five police horses also 'were targeted and sustained minor injuries," police said. Read more here.
− Michael Loria
The protests began Friday after U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement sweeps near Los Angeles resulted in more than 40 arrests. The protests had largely been peaceful but flared up when heavily armed, masked agents raided Los Angeles businesses.
Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security, defended the raids and said those arrested by ICE included a Vietnamese man convicted of second-degree murder, an Ecuadoran man convicted of possession of five kilograms of cocaine, and a Filipino man convicted of sexual offenses.
On Monday, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said local immigrant rights groups had confirmed at least five ICE raids in the Los Angeles region. The mayor said officials were still working to compile more information on the raids but noted that in some cases, ICE targeted day laborers and detained people who appeared for scheduled immigration appointments.
"As you know, ICE does not tell anybody where they're going to go or when they're going to be there," Bass said at the Monday news conference.
Protests also sprang up in at least nine other cities across the U.S. on Monday, including New York, Philadelphia, and San Francisco, according to Reuters.
Protests in Los Angeles were relatively peaceful when they began on Friday, but escalated into scenes of chaos, with electric vehicles lit aflame, large clouds of tear gas and clashes between law enforcement and demonstrators. Trump has backed his move to send in troops, calling the protests 'violent, insurrectionist mobs' and 'lawless riots.' But Newsom said it was Trump who 'instigated violence.'
Experts say while there are legal definitions for a riot, the term has become increasingly politicized and encapsulates a wide variety of incidents. In most states including California, the key determinator lies in whether multiple people are involved and whether they are committing acts of violence, Brian Higgins, a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, said.
"One person is not a riot and neither is a group that is nonviolent," he said. "They can even be breaking the law, like refusing to disperse. It's when you add in the factor of violence that it becomes a riot."
There are some gray areas, he said. Experts also said while violence is a defining factor in a riot, such violence could be incited by law enforcement. .
Waymo has temporarily suspended its ride hailing service in downtown Los Angeles after several of the company's self-driving cars were set on fire in the weekend's protests.
A Waymo spokesperson told USA TODAY on Monday the company has removed its vehicles from downtown Los Angeles and is currently not serving the area "out of an abundance of caution."
The spokesperson said the company is still operating in Los Angeles and is working in coordination with the Los Angeles Police Department.
Footage shared on social media captured several Waymo driverless taxis engulfed in flames in the June 8 protests. Others were vandalized with messages against Trump and Immigration and Customs Enforcement, videos show.
Waymo cars are self-driving taxis operated by computers instead of humans. The company uses electric Jaguar I-PACE cars.
-Melina Khan
Contributing: Jeanine Santucci, Michael Loria, Christopher Cann and Phaedra Trethan, USA TODAY; Reuters
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: LA protests live updates: Cleanup as Newsom files emergency motion

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