Trump, deportation and Los Angeles
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By late morning it was clear, June 6 was no ordinary Friday in LA. Federal agents arrested people in and around downtown Los Angeles. Some day laborers near a Home Depot in Westlake, others working in the Fashion District at Ambience apparel.
Demonstrators hit the streets again in L.A. after President Trump deployed the National Guard due to protests against ICE raids.
Law enforcement agencies across Southern California violated state law more than 100 times last month by sharing information from automated license plate readers with federal agents, records show.
According to federal law enforcement officials, California’s sanctuary state policy that prohibits immigration enforcement in the state jail and prison system is responsible for many of the recent raids.
Amid widespread riots in Los Angeles against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), a California suburb Sunday night announced it’s scrapping
The Trump administration‘s immigration crackdown could pummel California‘s economy, which has come to rely on a surge in migration over the past two decades to boost its growth. California, which boasts the world’s fourth-largest economy,
Arrest made in Los Angeles after a man allegedly attacked CHP officers and set a patrol car on fire during a protest.
ESPN NFL analyst Mina Kimes claimed on a post on BlueSky that there was a mischaracterization about the anti-ICE riots as parts of Los Angeles have seen burning vehicles and chaos.
As the military presence ramped up in Los Angeles, communities are preparing for the largest protests against Trump since he took office.