Los Angeles, street protests
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Overtime for police officers responding to the protests reached nearly $12 million, according to the city's top budget analyst.
LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Press Club and investigative reporting network Status Coup today sued the Los Angeles Police Department and its chief, alleging in federal court that reporters’ rights were violated by police while covering recent immigration raids and subsequent civil unrest.
The ongoing protests in Los Angeles began with small demonstrations against immigration raids in the nation's second largest city.
The Trump administration has deployed the California National Guard in response to protests in Los Angeles that began Friday evening over immigration enforcement operations, which 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.
The hearing comes after the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals granted a request by the administration last week to temporarily pause a lower court order that directed President Donald Trump to return control of the soldiers to the governor who filed a lawsuit over the deployment.
Edwin Osvaldo Manriquez is accused of dispersing multiple paintball rounds at a helmeted officer who was struck on the head, an FBI affidavit states.
In *** lengthy social media post, he called on officials to do all in their power to achieve the very important goal of delivering the single largest mass deportation program in history, telling them to expand efforts in cities like New York,