FBI foils New Year's Eve terror plot targeting Los Angeles
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At the end of the No Kings Day protest in Los Angeles on June 15, police used tear gas and faced off with pro immigration protesters. Photo by Shay Horse/NurPhoto via In the last two weeks in Los Angeles,
A Los Angeles synagogue was vandalized during a protest on Wednesday morning. The Los Angeles Police Department said the protest happened at about 10 a.m. outside of the Wilshire Boulevard Temple in Koreatown. Officers arrested two people, one for battery and another for vandalism.
The People’s Care Collective led a march from downtown Los Angeles to Boyle Heights, urging hospitals to protect patient privacy.
For a second time this year, a federal judge is ordering the Trump administration to end its deployment of federalized California National Guard troops in Los Angeles and return the troops to state control.
NBC Los Angeles on MSN
Two arrested following protest at Koreatown synagogue
Tensions flared at a synagogue Wednesday morning after protesters disrupted a private event at the place of worship in Koreatown. Wilshire Boulevard Temple’s Senior Rabbi Joel Nickerson says their temple was hosting a public safety event with Jewish and Korean leaders when the protesters disrupted the event around 10 a.
The Forward on MSN
Two arrested as LA mayor condemns protest outside synagogue event that featured Israeli defense firm
A protest outside a Los Angeles synagogue in Koreatown that was hosting Israeli speakers resulted in two arrests.
The L.A. County Sheriff’s Department is still searching for three people who they say threw large rocks at CHP officers during an anti-ICE protest in downtown Los Angeles earlier this year.
The second wave of the nationwide No Kings protests is hitting Los Angeles on Saturday, October 18, making the city a major hub for activism against what organizers call creeping authoritarianism in the Trump era. With over 2,500 rallies planned across the ...
The three males are alleged to have thrown large rocks from an elevated position above southbound lanes of the Hollywood (101) Freeway on June 8, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.
The order, handed down by U.S. District Court Judge Charles Breyer, is a blow to the Trump administration, and comes six months after the president in June deployed thousands of federalized National Guard troops to the city in response to a wave of immigration protests.
U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer said the Trump administration has made "clear that the only check" it wants "is a blank one."