More than 200 arrested for failure to disperse after curfew, says LAPD
More than 200 people were arrested after police said they failed to leave the downtown area in compliance with the mayor’s curfew, the Los Angeles police department said in a post on X. They face a charge of failure to disperse.
In addition, 17 people were arrested on a charge of curfew violation. Others were taken into custody on charges of possessing a firearm, assault with a deadly weapon on a police officer, and discharging a laser at a police airship.
Police said that two officers were injured and received medical treatment, but did not say what caused their injuries.
Key events
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Deploying federalized troops to LA was ‘drastic, chaotic and completely unnecessary’, says mayor
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Unrest in LA was ‘provoked by the White House’, says LA mayor
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LA mayor Karen Bass to hold news conference
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Musk called Trump before posting ‘regret’ message on X – NYT
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White House declines to weigh in on Noem’s request to have military arrest LA protesters
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Trump reviewing China trade deal details, White House says
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Leavitt says 330 illegal immigrants arrested in connection with LA protests
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Trump appreciates Musk apology, White House says
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More than 200 arrested for failure to disperse after curfew, says LAPD
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White House press briefing
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‘There is no sanctuary’ from federal immigration laws in California, US attorney says
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Federal charges filed against two men accused of throwing molotov cocktails at police in LA
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Chuck Schumer says he’s ‘proud’ of Gavin Newsom for ‘refusing to be intimidated by Trump’
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Marines on LA streets ‘soon’, can detain but not arrest people
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Summary of the day so far
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Pam Bondi says Trump administration ‘not scared to go further’ in Los Angeles
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‘We have this under control’: NYC doesn’t need national guard’s help with protests, says NYPD
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Texas governor orders national guard to deploy for protests in San Antonio
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Trump again calls on Fed to lower rates by ‘one full point’, calling inflation figures ‘great’
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Trump to attend Les Misérables at Kennedy Center tonight
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Musk says he regrets some of his posts about Trump
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‘I have no hard feelings’: Trump doesn’t rule out reconciliation with Musk – New York Post
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Trump takes early-morning dig at Newsom
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Texas govenor announces deployment of National Guard
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Trump ‘going after families and children’ says LA mayor
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‘Mass arrests’ after curfew issued for city’s downtown area
Deploying federalized troops to LA was ‘drastic, chaotic and completely unnecessary’, says mayor
“When you raid Home Depot and workplaces, when you tear parents and children apart, and when you run armored caravans through our streets – you’re not trying to keep anyone safe, you’re trying to cause fear and panic,” says Bass.
Deploying federalized troops on the heels of the immigration raids, was a “drastic and chaotic escalation and completely unnecessary”, she says.
Unrest in LA was ‘provoked by the White House’, says LA mayor
The cause of the problems in the city of Los Angeles started on Friday with Ice immigration raids, says Bass.
“This was provoked by the White House,” she says, positing that “maybe we are part of a national experiment to determine how far the federal government can go in reaching in and taking power from a local governor, local jurisdiction and leaving our residents in fear.”
She is joined by more than 30 mayors from across the region. “All of us represent cities in this region where immigrants are key. And if in some cases, not the majority of the population,” Bass says.
She accuses the Trump administration of creating “fear and panic” by raiding workplaces and going after “mothers and fathers, restaurant workers, seamstress, home care workers, everyday Angelenos trying to make a living”.
“The individuals that are here with me today are all leaders in their area and we all stand in support and solidarity and call for the raids to end,” Bass says.
LA mayor Karen Bass to hold news conference
Los Angeles mayor Karen Bass is about to hold a press conference after a 10-hour curfew was imposed for parts of downtown LA last night. I’ll bring you all the key lines here.
Leavitt says “of course” peaceful protests would be allowed to go ahead on Saturday for the military parade.
“Of course the president supports peaceful protests. What a stupid question,” she says.
Musk called Trump before posting ‘regret’ message on X – NYT
Donald Trump received a phone call from Elon Musk late on Monday before the billionaire expressed regret over some of the posts he made on social media last week, according to the New York Times (paywall), citing three people briefed on the call.
White House declines to weigh in on Noem’s request to have military arrest LA protesters
Leavitt dodges a question asking what the president makes of homeland security secretary Kristi Noem’s memo to the Pentagon asking it to direct members of the military to arrest or detain “lawbreakers” inside the United States.
Pressed to comment on the fact that the military is not authorized to arrest people unless the president invoked the Insurrection Act, Leavitt says “the president understands the legal authority that he invoked [in federalizing California’s national guard]”.
Leavitt says California governor Gavin Newsom and LA mayor Karen Bass “need to actually do more”.
Referring to Newsom’s address last night and hinting at “his future political ambitions”, Leavitt says “he spoke a lot of words, we haven’t seen action”.
Trump reviewing China trade deal details, White House says
Donald Trump is reviewing the details of the China trade deal with his team, Leavitt says, adding that the president likes what he has learned about it so far.
Leavitt says the administration agreed to comply with the terms of the Geneva agreement it reached last month with officials from Beijing.
Leavitt says 330 illegal immigrants arrested in connection with LA protests
Since 6 June, “there have been 330 illegal aliens arrested as part of the riots in Los Angeles”, says Leavitt.
Trump appreciates Musk apology, White House says
Donald Trump appreciates Elon Musk’s apology, Leavitt says, adding that the administration has made no efforts to review government contracts with Musk’s companies.
More than 200 arrested for failure to disperse after curfew, says LAPD
More than 200 people were arrested after police said they failed to leave the downtown area in compliance with the mayor’s curfew, the Los Angeles police department said in a post on X. They face a charge of failure to disperse.
In addition, 17 people were arrested on a charge of curfew violation. Others were taken into custody on charges of possessing a firearm, assault with a deadly weapon on a police officer, and discharging a laser at a police airship.
Police said that two officers were injured and received medical treatment, but did not say what caused their injuries.
At the press conference earlier, US attorney for the central district of California, Bill Essayli, had also fed into Trump’s claim that the protesters are “paid insurrectionists”, saying that anti-Ice protests in Los Angeles appear to be “organized and orchestrated”.
“Well-funded agitators are coming into town and they are resisting federal law enforcement operations,” he said.
The Trump administration has yet to provide evidence for these claims, including Leavitt who dodged a request for more detail behind the claims just now.
Asked about Trump’s claims that protesters are “paid insurrectionists”, Leavitt says this is “common sense”.
She says images appear to show “boxes and boxes of very professionalised masks and rioting equipment being dropped off for these protesters”.
Leavitt says this raises questions “about who is funding these insurrectionists”.
Leavitt says Trump was in contact with Gavin Newsom on Friday evening and “told him to let law enforcement in California do their jobs”.
She says Trump warned Newsom to “get it together” and “24 hours later we had images like this”, she says holding up photos of the unrest, with “illegal criminals throwing rocks at our border patrol and Ice agents”, leading Trump to federalize California’s national guard.
White House press briefing
Karoline Leavitt is speaking to reporters now. I’ll bring you all the key lines.
‘There is no sanctuary’ from federal immigration laws in California, US attorney says
US attorney for the central district of California Bill Essayli says federal immigration laws will be enforced in the state.
“Some people really seem to have the notion that California is a sanctuary from federal immigration laws,” says Essayli. “Let me assure you: there is no sanctuary. Federal laws are applicable here and they will be enforced.”
He says that “nothing [protesters] have done to date” has impacted immigration enforcement efforts, “and they are continuing as we speak”.
Essayli says authorities are collecting video, photos, social media evidence and body-camera footage to identify other people who may have committed acts of violence during the unrest in Los Angeles last weekend.
Officials are looking into “hundreds of people”, he says.
He vows to identify and bring charges against those who were committing violence.
We’re coming after all these people, so let’s be clear this is the beginning, not the end.
ABC News had the story this morning that Emiliano Galvez and Wrackkie Quiogue were being charged by the US attorney in Los Angeles for possession of an unregistered destructive device for their alleged roles in the unrest in LA over the weekend.
Per ABC’s report:
When the LAPD approached Quiogue – who officials said was armed with a Molotov cocktail at Sunday’s protest in downtown LA – he allegedly “threw the Molotov cocktail into the air and attempted to flee”, the complaint said. The confrontation was caught on officer body camera.
LAPD officers subdued Quiogue and arrested him, prosecutors said.
Quiogue’s device was described as a clear bottle with a yellow rag sticking out of it; he also had a lighter, the complaint said.
Galvez is accused of throwing a Molotov cocktail over a wall toward LA sheriff’s deputies who were “engaging in crowd control activities” during a protest in Paramount, a city in south LA County, on Saturday, federal prosecutors said.
Home surveillance video showed Galvez allegedly throwing an object lit on fire over the wall, the complaint said.
Galvez was arrested after a foot chase, officials said.
A detective recovered a burnt wick or fuse from the area, the complaint said.