Los Angeles immigration protest clashes: What’s the latest and what’s next?

Los Angeles immigration protest clashes: What’s the latest and what’s next?

Summary

About 500 US marines are ready to be deployed in LA as clashes continue during immigration protests. On Saturday, Trump deployed about 2,000 national guard soldiers to Los Angeles despite objections from California Governor Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass. The protests began on Friday night after ICE officials arrested 44 people for violating immigration laws. The US military’s Northern Command issued a statement on Sunday saying about 500 marines are in a “prepared to deploy status” and they areready to assist the Department of Defense. “The National Guard, and Marines if need be, stand with ICE,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth wrote in an X post on Sunday. The scenario would mirror the events of 1992 when marines were deployed alongside the national guard for law enforcement in Los Angeles during riots that followed the acquittal of four policemen filmed beating Rodney King, a Black man. The protest also spilled over to San Francisco, where protesters rallied in solidarity with those in LA outside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) building. On Sunday, the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) declared the protests in downtown LA an “unlawful assembly” “You are to leave the Downtown Area immediately,’ the LAPD said in a post on X. One group of protesters shut down a major thoroughfare in central Los Angeles, the 101 Freeway. The LAPD wrote that the freeway was shut down “due to demonstrators throwing objects onto the SB [San Bernardino] lanes of the 101Freeway and damaging multiple police vehicles” The protests are largely taking place in downtown Los Angeles where protesters spray-painted anti-ICE slogans on the walls of the Edward R Roybal Federal Building.

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