No Kings, protest
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Thousands of "No Kings Day" protests are set to be held throughout the country on Saturday to protest the Trump administration.
Protests that break out remain mostly peaceful during the day, but at night agitators engage in fiery clashes with police.
News coverage of the immigration raids and protests in Southern California has transfixed Mexico, where reports have heavily sided with the immigrants against U.S. efforts to detain and deport them.
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With migrant communities already living in fear amid the Trump administration's immigration crackdown, ICE raids in downtown Los Angeles sparked days of protests.
Demonstrators gathered in communities large and small. Many events on the East Coast have ended, but police clashed with some protesters in L.A.
Andrea Nakano reports on an organizer pushing for peaceful protest. It comes as the FBI offers a reward for a person seen hitting a federal agent at a Concord protest. Website: YouTube: Facebook: I
Army's 250th anniversary celebrated with a military parade in Washington, D.C., on Trump's birthday. 'No Kings' protests by opponents are planned across the country.
Police on horseback dispersed crowds in L.A. before the curfew came into effect at 8 p.m. local time on Wednesday evening. (The curfew lifts at 6 a.m.) An estimated 400 arrests and detentions have taken place so far amid the ongoing protests in the southern Californian city.
The president deployed 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 Marines to Los Angeles in response to anti-ICE protests.
A frightening scene played out at the "No Kings" protest in Salt Lake City, UT on Saturday — as gunshots were fired leaving one man critically wounded.
In recent years, in Baltimore and elsewhere, there have been efforts and scholarship on how cities can best handle demonstrations and how organizers can most successfully promote their cause.
The Los Angeles Sheriff's Department declared an unlawful assembly on Saturday after "No Kings" protests ended. Local police are arresting people and trying to disperse the crowds. CBS News correspondent Adam Yamaguchi reports.