LA police clear crowd outside federal building
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As the military presence ramped up in Los Angeles, communities are preparing for the largest protests against Trump since he took office.
Demonstrators hit the streets again in L.A. after President Trump deployed the National Guard due to protests against ICE raids.
6:30 p.m.: More than 100 people gathered at the immigration services building and detention center in downtown Los Angeles to protest the raids. DHS officers fired pepper balls at the protesters before the Los Angeles Police Department dispersed the crowd.
Despite the curfew, people are still coming to downtown LA to participate in immigration protests. Local residents are living with around-the-clock law enforcement and experiencing vandalism.
President Donald Trump has deployed 4,000 National Guardsmen and 700 Marines to LA. But California Gov. Gavin Newsom and California Attorney General Rob Bonta are suing the Trump administration, saying they unlawfully "trampled over" California’s sovereignty when they federalized the California National Guard.
President Donald Trump is thanking an appeals court for freezing an order that he return control of National Guard troops to California.
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FOX 11 Los Angeles on MSNLos Angeles immigration raids protests: 8 charged in LA countyLA County DA Nathan Hochman said that the vast majority of protesters over the last few days have been peaceful.
The Trump administration is deploying the California National Guard in response to protests in Los Angeles that begin Friday evening over immigration enforcement operations that have resulted in some clashes between demonstrators and authorities,
President Trump has said the city would be burning without military intervention, but the protests have been confined to a relatively small area.
Hong says protests in LA can change very quickly — one moment peaceful, the next chaotic. But he always tries to stay safe while telling the story through his images.
President Donald Trump signed a memorandum "deploying 2,000 National Guardsmen to address the lawlessness" in California as demonstrations opposing Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations continue in the state, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement Saturday evening.