
Live updates: Protests against Trump ICE raids flare across US
Update:
Date: 52 min ago
Title: At least three detained in Tuscon, Arizona during anti-ICE protest
Content:
At least three people have been detained in Tucson, Arizona, during an anti-ICE protest, according to CNN affiliate KOLD.
More than 100 people gathered in the city Wednesday, KOLD reported.
'We're here to protect Tucson. We're here to protect our neighborhoods. We're here to protect our community,' one unnamed protester told KOLD.
Some protesters vandalized property, including breaking windows and spray painting walls, video from KOLD shows. Four policemen can be seen carrying one protester by their arms and legs, video shows.
Update:
Date: 34 min ago
Title: 700 mobilized Marines will be deployed to LA within 2 days. Here's how they've been preparing
Content:
Activated US Marines have completed their training and will be deployed to Los Angeles within the next 48 hours, according to the US Northern Command.
About 700 Marines have finished a 'pre-deployment workup,' it said late on Wednesday.
'When called up for this mission, the battalion underwent additional training specific to this mission. This training included de-escalation, crowd-control, and understanding the Standing Rules for the Use of Force (SRUF),' it said.
These rules govern the use of force by military personnel during missions to support law enforcement inside the US. Northern Command notes the forces themselves 'do not conduct civilian law enforcement functions.'
The Marines are bolstering a deployment of about 2,000 National Guard troops currently on active duty and helping ICE agents, and another 2,000 Guard members who will be ready for duty Thursday afternoon, according to Maj. Gen. Scott M. Sherman, who is leading the task force.
Happening today: A hearing is scheduled for this afternoon in federal court over whether the Trump administration can use the National Guard and Marines to assist with federal immigration enforcement actions.
Update:
Date: 1 hr 34 min ago
Title: 8 arrested in Seattle following Wednesday's protests
Content:
Police in Seattle, Washington, have arrested eight protesters after anti-ICE protests flared in the city Wednesday, its police department said in a statement.
Protesters 'marched peacefully from Capitol Hill to downtown Seattle as part of a demonstration,' the statement said.
While most of the march was peaceful, officers intervened after some individuals set fire to a dumpster at around 10 p.m. local time, police said.
'Police staged near the group while they waited for the Seattle Fire Department to arrive. Individuals from the group confronted them, throwing bottles, rocks, and concrete chunks at them,' the statement said. 'A protestor threw a large firework at officers, but no one was injured.'
Update:
Date: 1 hr 9 min ago
Title: LAPD detains protesters outside of curfew area
Content:
Footage shared with CNN on Wednesday night shows Los Angeles police pulling people out from the crowd of protesters to be detained.
The video, provided by non-profit news organization CalMatters, showed police confronting protesters in and around Koreatown, about 3 miles from the curfew zone that went into effect at 8 p.m. Pacific Time.
It showed officers walking toward a group of protesters, taking hold of one person and escorting them away with their hands held behind their back.
In another video, several officers are seen running toward a different group, shouting: 'Get back, get back!' as they detain another individual.
Earlier on Wednesday night, a CNN reporter on the ground witnessed protesters driving through an area where the curfew does not apply — heading in the direction of Koreatown.
Videos shot by CNN show a line of cars honking loudly, with some passengers leaning out the window or standing upright on truck beds waving Mexican and American flags. Some protesters are seen walking on foot.
The curfew currently in place only covers about 1 square mile in area in Downtown Los Angeles where the protests had been concentrated.
Update:
Date: 2 hr 48 min ago
Title: In maps: Where protests are hitting the US
Content:
Protests have spread beyond Los Angeles, with demonstrations against ICE and the Trump administration popping up in major cities across the United States.
In both LA and Spokane, Washington, city authorities imposed curfews on Wednesday night. In many other cities, police departments worked to disperse protesters long after night fell.
The curfew in parts of downtown LA lasts from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. Pacific Time. But the curfew is only in place for a very small strip of the city, measuring about 1 square mile in area.
LA Mayor Karen Bass said the curfew could be in effect for several days.
Things could pick up on Saturday, when there are 'No Kings' protests and anti-Trump rallies scheduled across the country. The protests, organized by the nonviolent 50501 movement, come on the same day as President Donald Trump's planned military parade through Washington, DC.
The name of the protests represents a rejection of the Trump administration's sweeping actions since he took power, which the group describes as authoritarian.
'In America, we don't do kings,' the 50501 movement's website reads. 'The corruption has gone too. far. No thrones. No crowns. No kings.'
Update:
Date: 3 hr 4 min ago
Title: In pictures: Protests across the nation
Content:
Protesters took to the streets in cities across the country Wednesday, demonstrating against President Donald Trump's immigration policies and raids by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The protests began on Friday in Los Angeles, where a curfew is in place and where the Trump administration has federalized the National Guard.
See more images from the protests in Los Angeles.
Update:
Date: 3 hr 1 min ago
Title: Hundreds gather in San Antonio as anti-ICE protests spread
Content:
Hundreds of people gathered in San Antonio, Texas, late Wednesday to protest against raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, according to CNN affiliate KSAT.
The protests were peaceful and there were no reports of violence, KSAT reported.
'I'm here because I want to be a voice for the people that are too scared to come out here and speak their own truth,' one protester told KSAT.
The gathering started before 7 p.m. local time with a crowd of about 100 people, before swelling to hundreds by about 9 p.m., according to KSAT.
Texas' governor deployed the Texas National Guard to San Antonio ahead of the protests.
San Antonio Police Chief William McManus said Wednesday that officers would intervene if 'it turns violent,' KSAT reported.
Troops with the Texas Department of Public Safety were seen patrolling the area as San Antonio police officers drove through downtown, according to KSAT.
Update:
Date: 3 hr 4 min ago
Title: Seattle firefighters extinguish dumpster fire as police work to disperse crowds
Content:
Firefighters in Seattle extinguished a dumpster fire that was set on the road and police were still working to disperse protesters just before midnight, according to the city's police department.
Videos shot on Wednesday night showed a large crowd on the streets and a fire burning at an intersection. At points, protesters threw items into the fire, including a traffic cone.
The fire department 'has extinguished the dumpster fire. Police are attempting to get crowd to disperse,' the police department wrote on X.
'Officers continue moving the groups away from the federal building. Individuals are shining lasers at officers as well as throwing rocks and bottles at them. We will continue to move protestors until the individuals stop assaulting officers,' it wrote.
Update:
Date: 3 hr 1 min ago
Title: Protests are flaring across the US. Here's what you need to know
Content:
Protests flared Wednesday night across the US, with two cities imposing curfews and police working to disperse crowds late into the night.
In Los Angeles, police declared an unlawful assembly outside City Hall ahead of the curfew taking effect. CNN Correspondent Nick Watt reported seeing 20 to 30 people being taken into custody ahead of curfew.
The protests began on Friday in LA after ICE immigration raids that detained dozens of people, including at their workplaces.
Here's the latest:
Update:
Date: 3 hr 12 min ago
Title: Trump administration officials dig in on president's decision to deploy military
Content:
Trump administration officials are doubling down on their defense of President Donald Trump's decision to mobilize National Guard troops and Marines to respond to protests in Los Angeles.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth suggested to lawmakers yesterday that Trump's order on Saturday to federalize the National Guard was also intended to create a precedent so that playbook could be replicated in other states.
'Part of it was about getting ahead of the problem, so that if in other places, if there are other riots, in places where law enforcement officers are threatened, we would have the capability to surge National Guard there, if necessary,' Hegseth said.
Hegseth said that 'thankfully, in most of those states, you'd have a governor that recognizes the need for it, supports it and mobilizes it, him or herself. In California, unfortunately, the governor wants to play politics with it.'
Attorney General Pam Bondi said Wednesday the Trump administration 'is not scared to go further' in expanding its legal authorities to deploy troops in Los Angeles.
'Right now in California, we're at a good point. We're not scared to go further. We're not frightened to do something else if we need to,' she said when answering questions at the White House from CNN about the threshold for invoking the Insurrection Act, which permits the president to use military forces to end an insurrection or rebellion on US soil.
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