Hundreds arrested as calm returns to Los Angeles after curfew


Carl Nasman, Ana Faguy and Gary O’Donoghue

BBC News, Los Angeles, Washington DC and New York

Watch: “It’s important for me” – LA protesters on why they’re taking the streets

An uneasy calm has descended over Los Angeles after the first night of a curfew lifted on Wednesday, as cities across the US brace for more protests.

In Los Angeles, nearly 400 people have so far been arrested, including 330 undocumented migrants and 157 people arrested for assault and obstruction, including one for the attempted murder of a police officer.

Federal prosecutors have so far charged two men for throwing Molotov cocktails at police officers in two separate incidents.

A total of 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 Marines have been deployed to help quell the unrest.

Overnight, Los Angeles police said they made “mass arrests” after a fifth day of protests over US President Donald Trump’s immigration raids.

In a series of statements, the city’s police department said that those detained included 203 people arrested for failure to disperse, 17 for curfew violations, three for possession of a firearm, and one for assault with a deadly weapon on a police officer.

Two officers were injured in the skirmishes, the statement added.

Mayor Karen Bass declared an overnight curfew on Tuesday within a relatively small area of the city’s downtown district, saying businesses were being vandalised and looted.

Pam Bondi, the US attorney general, told reporters at the White House on Wednesday that the curfew “helped a bit”.

Elsewhere, the immigration raids that triggered protests last Friday have continued, alongside the National Guard troops.

Trump’s row with state officials ramped up after he deployed troops to LA. The president has now vowed to “liberate” the city, but has been accused by California Governor Gavin Newsom of an “assault” on democracy.

On Wednesday, the commander of the National Guard and Marine Corps forces deployed to Los Angeles clarified that the troops do not have the authority to make arrests, only to detain protesters.

Trump earlier this week defended his decision to send troops, saying it was to prevent the city being “conquered by a foreign enemy”.

Newsom hit back at the president: “He again chose escalation; he chose more force.”

The California governor, who is seen as a potential presidential contender for the Democratic Party, warned that “other states are next”.

On Wednesday, Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth backed Trump’s move, telling a Senate hearing that sending the troops to Los Angeles was “lawful and constitutional”.

After the LA curfew came into force at 20:00 local time on Tuesday (03:00 GMT on Wednesday), police moved through downtown areas, firing rubber bullets to try to disperse crowds.

Explaining the curfew, Bass said she wanted “to stop the vandalism, to stop the looting”. She added: “We reached a tipping point.”

The curfew order affects an area of about one square mile in the second-largest city in the US. McDonnell said the order was not impacting other parts of the city.

“Some of the imagery of the protests and the violence gives the appearance as though this is a city-wide crisis, and it is not.”

A BBC map shows the area of approximately one square mile in which a curfew has been declared from 20:00 to 06:00 local time in Los Angeles. This shows that the affected area is a relatively small part of the sprawling city

Chaotic protests also sprung up on Tuesday in several other US cities:

  • In Atlanta, Georgia, riot police used tear gas on protesters who set off fireworks towards officers at a demonstration attended by hundreds
  • Police in New York told the BBC dozens were arrested for blocking vehicular traffic after several thousand marched into lower Manhattan
  • Texas Governor Greg Abbott sent National Guard troops to San Antonio, where immigration rallies are planned

LA’s mayor said 23 businesses had been looted on Monday night, though she did not provide an estimate of financial losses to the city from the at-times violent disorder.

Police chief Jim McDonnell said the curfew was “not about silencing voices”, but was a necessary measure to save lives and safeguard property.

Bass also said Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) had provoked the unrest by conducting raids on Latino areas in the city in recent days.

“If [the raids are] going to go on for 30 days, and that’s what the rumour is, and, if we want to see our city peaceful again, I will call upon the administration one more time to end the raids,” she said.

National Guard troops who had previously been guarding federal buildings began assisting ICE agents with their “daily enforcement operations” on Tuesday, a spokesperson for the border agency told the BBC.

The military deployment to the LA area will cost $134m (£99m), the Pentagon said.

Trump described the protests as a “full-blown assault on peace and public order” while addressing troops at the Fort Bragg military base in North Carolina.

The Republican president said he plans to use “every asset at our disposal to quell the violence”.

Watch: LA protests are “full blown assault on peace”, Trump says

Meanwhile, Trump’s political row with state officials has intensified. The president has described the protesters as “animals” and vowed that “this anarchy will not stand”.

He urged troops to boo the names of Newsom and Joe Biden, his presidential predecessor, during his Fort Bragg speech.

In televised remarks of his own on Tuesday night, Newsom again criticised the president’s rare deployment of the US military without a request from state officials. He accused Trump of a “brazen abuse of power”.

“California may be first – but it clearly won’t end here,” he said. “Other states are next. Democracy is next. Democracy is under assault right before our eyes.”

Earlier in the day, a federal court denied an emergency request from California to block the use of troops sent to LA.

District Judge Charles Breyer scheduled a hearing on the motion for Thursday.

Trump has set a goal for border agents of at least 3,000 daily arrests as he seeks to ramp up mass deportations, a signature pledge of his re-election campaign.

Since assuming office, the president has drastically reduced illegal crossings at the US-Mexico border to historically low levels.

A CBS News/YouGov poll conducted in early June, before the protests kicked off, found 54% of Americans saying they approved of Trump’s deportation policy, and 50% approved of how he was handling immigration.

That compares with smaller numbers of 42% who gave approval to his economic policy and 39% for his policy on tackling inflation.

‘He did it on purpose’ – Newsom slams Trump for inflaming LA protests



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Anurag Dhole is a seasoned journalist and content writer with a passion for delivering timely, accurate, and engaging stories. With over 8 years of experience in digital media, she covers a wide range of topics—from breaking news and politics to business insights and cultural trends. Jane's writing style blends clarity with depth, aiming to inform and inspire readers in a fast-paced media landscape. When she’s not chasing stories, she’s likely reading investigative features or exploring local cafés for her next writing spot.

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