
Riverside firefighter injured after car crashes into fire engine on 60 Freeway
It happened a little before 6 p.m. on eastbound lanes of the freeway near Day Street, according to a post on Facebook from the Riverside Fire Department.
Six engine crews were in the area after they were called for reports of a fire burning in medium vegetation next to the freeway off-ramp. The engines were partially blocked from traffic by California Highway Patrol vehicles as they were parked along lanes.
"During the fire suppression operations, a passenger vehicle impacted an engine company and struck the engine operator at the pump panel," the department said.
The firefighter was treated at the scene by paramedics and taken to a nearby hospital for treatment on moderate injuries. They are said to be recovering as of Tuesday.
The driver of the vehicle that crashed into the engine was not injured. They were questioned at the scene by CHP officers but no arrests were made.
It's unclear what caused the collision.
Firefighters say that the fire was contained less than an hour after they arrived at the scene. The cause of the blaze is also under investigation.
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CNN
14 minutes ago
- CNN
Man yells for help as apparent ICE agents carry him from LA courthouse into unmarked car, video shows
A man yelled for help as a group of men – one of whom said he was with Immigration and Customs Enforcement – picked him up and pushed him into a car outside a Los Angeles courthouse Wednesday, video shows. The detention has been condemned by the county's top judge and the man's lawyers, who said such operations will deter people from showing up to court. Video obtained by the Los Angeles Times shows the man being carried away with his hands bound behind his back. Those detaining him are in plainclothes, and some are wearing masks. The detained man repeatedly screams, 'Can you help me, please?' as his body flails. The man is then pushed into the back seat of an unmarked car. It's not clear where he was taken. Neither ICE nor the Department of Homeland Security responded to CNN's questions about whether ICE was involved in the detention or why the man was detained. But the incident happened as ICE increasingly make arrests at courthouses under recent guidance from the Trump administration. Los Angeles County Superior Court's presiding judge issued a critical statement in response to questions about Wednesday's incident, saying such operations will have a negative effect on the judicial system. 'While the court is rarely notified of federal immigration enforcement activity occurring outside our courthouse, I am deeply disturbed by such actions,' the presiding judge, Sergio C. Tapia II, said in a release. 'These intimidating and unnecessary displays undermine public trust in the justice system, deter people from seeking justice, and send a dangerous message to immigrant communities that they are not safe to fully and freely participate in the legal process.' In Wednesday's video, an onlooker asks for the name of the man being detained, and he replies, 'Steven Reyes.' Court records show a man named Steven Reyes, who is represented by the Los Angeles County Alternate Public Defender's Office, had an appearance at the county's criminal justice center Wednesday on a state felony charge of having or buying illegal drugs with the intent to sell them. Records show he had pleaded not guilty to the charge on July 31 and was free on his own recognizance. The man detained in the video is represented by the Los Angeles County Alternate Public Defender's Office, spokesperson Jenny Cheng said. She did not confirm if the man detained is the same Steven Reyes with the drug charge. 'These alleged ICE agents, without a warrant or any explanation, clearly deprived our client of his liberty without due process,' Cheng said in an email to CNN. 'It shocks the conscience to see any human violently abducted by a group of mostly masked unidentified individuals. Such aggressive ICE abductions threaten the integrity of the court system and discourage participation.' Wednesday's detention happened outside the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center, according to the Times and the LA Public Press, which told CNN it obtained the video from a witness and published a shorter, edited clip on social media. In the longer video published by the Times, an onlooker asks one of the men detaining Reyes whether he is from ICE. The man responds, 'yes.' When further questioned by an onlooker, the man quickly flashes a badge twice. While the footage is too blurry to show exactly what the badge says, it resembles a Homeland Security Investigations badge. The person who appears to be taking the video asks if the men have arrest warrants, and the men do not respond to that question. CNN has reached out to ICE for information about the arrest, whether Reyes is in the country illegally, whether he is in ICE custody, where he is being held, and exactly what charges he faces. ICE and the Department of Homeland Security previously operated under guidelines that limited immigration enforcement at or near courthouses, but the Trump administration rescinded those guidelines shortly into the president's second term. Masked law enforcement officers have been showing up at courthouses across the country to arrest migrants. Trump officials have argued the previous guidance hampered the ability of immigration enforcement officers to apprehend people they say are dangerous individuals. 'The ability of law enforcement to make arrests of criminal illegal aliens in courthouses is common sense,' DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said in a May news release. 'It conserves valuable law enforcement resources because they already know where a target will be. It is also safer for our officers and the community. These illegal aliens have gone through security and been screened to not have any weapons.' Immigrant rights groups have said the increasing number of courthouse arrests by ICE reflect a broader trend of enforcement extending into places once considered out of bounds and no longer confined to border crossings or work sites. The Los Angeles County district attorney's office, which is prosecuting Reyes for the drug charge, said it had no prior knowledge of and played no part in Wednesday's detention outside of court. 'Our ultimate goal is to seek justice for victims and hold criminals accountable,' the district attorney's office wrote in a statement. 'Detaining a defendant before the judicial process has concluded interferes with our ability to prosecute cases and is not to the advantage of the pursuit of justice.' CNN's Holly Yan, Caroll Alvarado and Sara Smart contributed to this report.


Fox News
14 minutes ago
- Fox News
DC reaches legal settlement with Trump administration over federal police takeover
The nation's capital reached an agreement with President Donald Trump's administration after suing over federal authorities' takeover of the city's police force. The decision came on Friday afternoon, hours after the Trump administration named DEA chief Terry Cole as the new emergency head of the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD). Ultimately, both sides agreed to block Cole from assuming the role, while effectively returning the department to Police Chief Pamela Smith. Cole is now required to go through Mayor Murial Bowser before directing the MPD. Under the agreement, the Trump administration retains control of the police force. "In my nearly three decades in law enforcement, I have never seen a single government action that would cause a greater threat to law and order than this dangerous directive," Smith said in a court filing. The courtroom showdown was sparked by Trump's deployment of federal authorities within Washington D.C., with the city ultimately asking for a temporary restraining order blocking an executive order aimed at taking over the local police force. Yaakov Roth, an attorney for the Trump administration, argued in court that the decision to remove Smith from her post was a result of an immigration order that neglected to provide financial aid to federal authorities, while claiming the ability to determine what type of help the MPD must provide is within presidential authority. U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes, a Biden appointee, previously indicated the law does not allow Trump to broadly take over the city's police force, but conceded it could grant him more power than the city would like. "The way I read the statute, the president can ask, the mayor must provide, but the president can't control," Reyes said. However, District of Columbia Attorney General Brian Schwalb wrote in court filings that the move threatens to "wreak operational havoc," while arguing the president's power is limited to mandating that the mayor utilize the police force for federal purposes. Schwalb and the Department of Justice did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. Trump is the first president to utilize control over the capital's police department since the Home Rule Act was signed in 1973, granting the city the ability to elect its own city council and mayor. The law limits a president's control to 30 days without congressional approval, which Trump has indicated he will seek to extend.


CNN
14 minutes ago
- CNN
Man yells for help as apparent ICE agents carry him from LA courthouse into unmarked car, video shows
A man yelled for help as a group of men – one of whom said he was with Immigration and Customs Enforcement – picked him up and pushed him into a car outside a Los Angeles courthouse Wednesday, video shows. The detention has been condemned by the county's top judge and the man's lawyers, who said such operations will deter people from showing up to court. Video obtained by the Los Angeles Times shows the man being carried away with his hands bound behind his back. Those detaining him are in plainclothes, and some are wearing masks. The detained man repeatedly screams, 'Can you help me, please?' as his body flails. The man is then pushed into the back seat of an unmarked car. It's not clear where he was taken. Neither ICE nor the Department of Homeland Security responded to CNN's questions about whether ICE was involved in the detention or why the man was detained. But the incident happened as ICE increasingly make arrests at courthouses under recent guidance from the Trump administration. Los Angeles County Superior Court's presiding judge issued a critical statement in response to questions about Wednesday's incident, saying such operations will have a negative effect on the judicial system. 'While the court is rarely notified of federal immigration enforcement activity occurring outside our courthouse, I am deeply disturbed by such actions,' the presiding judge, Sergio C. Tapia II, said in a release. 'These intimidating and unnecessary displays undermine public trust in the justice system, deter people from seeking justice, and send a dangerous message to immigrant communities that they are not safe to fully and freely participate in the legal process.' In Wednesday's video, an onlooker asks for the name of the man being detained, and he replies, 'Steven Reyes.' Court records show a man named Steven Reyes, who is represented by the Los Angeles County Alternate Public Defender's Office, had an appearance at the county's criminal justice center Wednesday on a state felony charge of having or buying illegal drugs with the intent to sell them. Records show he had pleaded not guilty to the charge on July 31 and was free on his own recognizance. The man detained in the video is represented by the Los Angeles County Alternate Public Defender's Office, spokesperson Jenny Cheng said. She did not confirm if the man detained is the same Steven Reyes with the drug charge. 'These alleged ICE agents, without a warrant or any explanation, clearly deprived our client of his liberty without due process,' Cheng said in an email to CNN. 'It shocks the conscience to see any human violently abducted by a group of mostly masked unidentified individuals. Such aggressive ICE abductions threaten the integrity of the court system and discourage participation.' Wednesday's detention happened outside the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center, according to the Times and the LA Public Press, which told CNN it obtained the video from a witness and published a shorter, edited clip on social media. In the longer video published by the Times, an onlooker asks one of the men detaining Reyes whether he is from ICE. The man responds, 'yes.' When further questioned by an onlooker, the man quickly flashes a badge twice. While the footage is too blurry to show exactly what the badge says, it resembles a Homeland Security Investigations badge. The person who appears to be taking the video asks if the men have arrest warrants, and the men do not respond to that question. CNN has reached out to ICE for information about the arrest, whether Reyes is in the country illegally, whether he is in ICE custody, where he is being held, and exactly what charges he faces. ICE and the Department of Homeland Security previously operated under guidelines that limited immigration enforcement at or near courthouses, but the Trump administration rescinded those guidelines shortly into the president's second term. Masked law enforcement officers have been showing up at courthouses across the country to arrest migrants. Trump officials have argued the previous guidance hampered the ability of immigration enforcement officers to apprehend people they say are dangerous individuals. 'The ability of law enforcement to make arrests of criminal illegal aliens in courthouses is common sense,' DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said in a May news release. 'It conserves valuable law enforcement resources because they already know where a target will be. It is also safer for our officers and the community. These illegal aliens have gone through security and been screened to not have any weapons.' Immigrant rights groups have said the increasing number of courthouse arrests by ICE reflect a broader trend of enforcement extending into places once considered out of bounds and no longer confined to border crossings or work sites. The Los Angeles County district attorney's office, which is prosecuting Reyes for the drug charge, said it had no prior knowledge of and played no part in Wednesday's detention outside of court. 'Our ultimate goal is to seek justice for victims and hold criminals accountable,' the district attorney's office wrote in a statement. 'Detaining a defendant before the judicial process has concluded interferes with our ability to prosecute cases and is not to the advantage of the pursuit of justice.' CNN's Holly Yan, Caroll Alvarado and Sara Smart contributed to this report.