Tag Archives: law enforcement
Modesto Bee: Counterprotester arrested on suspicion of assault at No Kings rally in Modesto
One person was arrested on suspicion of assault during Saturday’s No Kings protest in Modesto.
Police said the incident occurred near McHenry and Briggsmore avenues after a protester reported being pushed by a counterprotester.
According to the Modesto Police Department, the Real-Time Crime Center helped identify the suspect, who was later found away from the protest area and taken into custody without incident. The individual was cited for misdemeanor assault.
https://www.modbee.com/news/local/crime/article312594213.html
Fort Worth Star-Telegram: Pritzker, Feds Trade Blame After Protest Turns Violent
The Chicago Police Department (CPD) faces allegations of instructing officers to refrain from assisting U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents during a violent confrontation involving protesters. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin confirmed that the CPD’s Chief of Patrol ordered officers to stand down, during which an armed assailant, Marimar Martinez, was shot and injured. Martinez and Anthony Ian Santos Ruiz have been charged in connection with the attack. The incident has escalated tensions, with Illinois officials launching an independent inquiry into the CPD’s response and federal actions.
Get the ICE pigs out of Chicago and the problems will go away.
Newsweek: Children Zip-Tied During ICE Raid on Family Event in Idaho
Children were reportedly zip-tied during a multi-agency law enforcement raid in Wilder, Idaho, as hundreds of people were detained and police fired rubber bullets.
The operation took place on October 19 at La Catedral Arena, a horse racing venue west of Boise, according to The Idaho Statesman.

https://www.newsweek.com/children-zip-tied-during-ice-raid-on-family-event-in-idaho-10912697
The Root: Black Dallas Police Chief Was Offered $25M To Partner With ICE; Guess What He Said
The Dallas Police Department was offered $25 million for a partnership with ICE and then this happened.
https://www.theroot.com/black-dallas-police-chief-was-offered-25m-to-partner-w-2000068329
Slingshot News: ‘We’re Going To Change The Law’: Jeanine Pirro Goes On Angry Tirade, Says She Wants To Prosecute Minors In D.C. During Press Briefing [Video]
During her remarks in a press briefing in August, Jeanine Pirro said that she wants to change the law in order to prosecute minors in Washington, D.C. Pirro stated, “We’re going to change the law.”
Brain-dead Trump rambles about his efforts to micro-manage D.C. government.
CBS News: Clashes between ICE agents, protesters escalate across Chicago area
In recent weeks, confrontations with ICE officers have escalated across the Chicago area as the Trump administration continues its crackdown on immigration. CBS News’ Ash-har Quraishi reports on the incidents.
Washington Post: Signs popping up around D.C. note: ‘ICE kidnapping happened here’
The signs range in style and mark numerous locations where people have been taken by federal agents.
The signs — nailed to trees or wrapped around electricity poles — have appeared across some of the District’s heavily immigrant neighborhoods, marking the anger in a majority-Democratic city where federal immigration arrests have escalated.
“ICE kidnapped a community member here,” reads one. “Never forget/no nos olvidamos,” says another.
Barbara McCann, a city resident for 25 years, created one in August after she came upon a crowd of shouting people and broken glass on the street in her Columbia Heights neighborhood, where federal law enforcement agents had pulled two men from their car.
“People were kidnapped here this morning by ICE or ?” she wrote on the sign. “BANG pots HERE tonight 8pm.”
McCann said later that she thought of “stumbling stones” in Europe, the brass-topped cobblestones that have been placed in front of the former homes and businesses of those who were killed in the Holocaust.
“They are targeting those who are least able to defend themselves, people without homes and people without documentation,” she said. “In the past, when there’s been great injustice, moral clarity takes a long time.”
D.C. has a long tradition of protesting, including the massive marches during President Donald Trump’s first administration. The recent neighborhood signs, more personal and isolated, follow an older tradition of simply bearing witness — in this case, to the arrests of immigrants who make up the fabric of some neighborhoods.
Since late August, when Trump’s 30-day crime emergency in D.C. was in full effect, more than 11 signs and posters memorializing those arrested have appeared in neighborhoods such as Columbia Heights or Brightwood in Northwest Washington.
It’s unclear how much coordination there is between the different sign makers. Some messages are printed on 18-by-24-inch yard signs or smaller placards; others are drawn ornately by hand on paper or written in chalk. The few who will talk about the signs they created say the urgency of the moment compelled them to act.
White House officials said in a statement last month that of more than 2,600 criminal arrests between Aug. 7 and Sept. 14, more than 1,000 involved “illegal aliens.” Attorney General Pam Bondi said D.C.’s lenient policies toward immigrants, which prohibited police from cooperating in ICE arrests, made the city more dangerous.
White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson told The Post in an email that ICE officers are facing an increase in assaults because of “untrue smears like false claims that they are ‘kidnapping’ people.’ ”
ICE has acted “heroically” and “with the utmost professionalism,” she said, and that those accusing agents of violating civil rights are sympathizing with undocumented immigrants and criminals.
Neighbors on Holmead Place in Columbia Heights say three masked agents in tactical vests tackled a man on the sidewalk in late August. As they struggled, onlookers gathered nearby, some with children dressed for the first day of school. According to five people who said they witnessed the event, the agents loaded the man into one of three unmarked cars with tinted windows and drove away.
In the days that followed, residents say they spotted a poster on Holmead Place NW, fastened by screws into a sycamore tree. It described the Aug. 25 arrest of “Angel H.” and the words “Never forget.”
Jacob Stokes, who witnessed the arrest with his wife that morning, came upon the sign while on a walk. Like McCann, he also thought of the stumbling stones and “remembering and associating an event with a particular place.”
“I’m not on the list of people who they’re coming for now,” he said. “It reminded me that those people are our neighbors.”
He and his family have lived in Columbia Heights since May. And he says it’s been quieter than other D.C. neighborhoods where he’s lived in previous years — until the past few months.
Jessica Loya remembers running down from her Brightwood apartment at the sound of a distressed voice outside her window on the morning of Aug. 22. She found her building’s handyman surrounded by three federal agents.
She said he told her in Spanish that he’d gone to his car to get a tool when he was stopped. She and others questioned the officers to understand why he had been approached.
“You can’t tell us what we’re going to do and what we’re not going to do,” a masked officer told Loya, according to video obtained by The Post. The video shows that officers shoved the handyman toward an unmarked vehicle and handcuffed him, then put him in a car and drove away.
Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security, said the handyman had entered the country illegally from Guatemala at an unknown date.
“ICE is not ‘kidnapping’ illegal aliens,” she said in an email. “These smears are leading to our officers facing a 1000% increase in assaults against them including terrorist attacks, cars being used as weapons, and bounties on their heads.”
The next day, Loya said she stared at the spot where the handyman had stood and added that the flashbacks of his disappearance were “unbearable.” She worked late into the night with Julio Obscura, an artist and friend, to design a sign.
At one point, she considered the monarch butterfly symbol often associated with migrant advocacy groups, but felt the positive feeling wasn’t fitting for the moment.
“What I was trying to capture here in the sign was this terror,” she said.
They settled on the black sign with bold white lettering: “ICE kidnapped a community member here.”
Loya ordered three at a cost of $297.86 and picked them up from a printer three days later. With her landlord’s blessing, she planted one of them next to her building and kept the others in case the first one was damaged or stolen.
Her voice buckled as she talked about the handyman’s family. His wife is terrified, she said, and his three children, who all are younger than 10, don’t understand what’s happened to their father.
Loya said she has been helping the family since he was detained, hoping to show them “not every U.S. citizen believes in what this administration is doing.”
Polling shows Americans overall are split on whether immigrants deported by the Trump administration should have been removed. A majority of D.C. residents oppose D.C. police helping with deportations, according to a Washington Post-Schar School poll.
Another man was working as an Uber driver when he was detained by federal agents and D.C. Police on 8th and Tuckerman Street the night of Aug. 26. Council member Janeese Lewis George (D-Ward 4) rushed to the intersection and began live-streaming the arrest.
Lewis George told The Post she couldn’t get information about the man at the time of his apprehension and was unable to locate him in nearby police precincts afterward. His car and phone were left behind, she said, so neighbors were able to make contact with a friend.
“There was a moment where, like, is this really happening to us?” Lewis George said. “I kept thinking, like, Oh, my God, are our neighbors going to have to end up in our basements and attics?”
Former Advisory Neighborhood Commission member Sophia Tekola — who said she spoke to the man in Amharic and has been in touch with his family — learned that he’d been detained in a facility outside Washington and was released the next day.
Loya, who saw Lewis George’s live stream of the arrest, rushed up the street that same night with her extra signs from the incident with her building’s handyman and approached a neighbor lingering nearby.
“I think it’s important to put these up,” Loya told the woman. The neighbor fastened the memorial to a tree in her yard, near the spot where the man had been arrested.
The next day, the council member took to social media and made a six-minute, 34-second video urging her followers to call their representatives. As Lewis George spoke, a photo of Loya’s black and white memorial was visible in the background.
Shows of disapproval and protest of Trump and his administration’s policies haven’t matched the volume seen in Trump’s previous term despite concerns about potential abuse of power. For people like Loya and McCann, who have spent years in a town known for its statues and monuments, the act of remembering those taken away isn’t just an act of empathy — it’s a signal.
McCann said she’s long had an interest in history. This moment in the city has made her reflect on what may lie ahead for it and the country, she said.
“What I always have on my mind is like, well, what’s next?” she said.
Fox News: Trump admin cutting $20M in DC security funding after federal law enforcement ordered to increase presence
‘If D.C. doesn’t get its act together, and quickly, we will have no choice but to take federal control of the city,’ Trump said
The Trump administration plans to cut millions in security funding for Washington, D.C., despite the president also directing federal law enforcement to increase its presence in the city because of its “totally out of control” crime.
In a grant notice posted last week, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) said that D.C.’s urban security fund would receive $25.2 million, a 44% year-over-year reduction.
The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees FEMA, said on Friday it slashed funds to multiple cities to be consistent with the “current threat landscape.” Chicago, New York City, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Jersey City also had their security funds cut, but the decrease in D.C. was the largest for any urban area that received funding from the program last fiscal year.
DHS has “observed a shift from large-scale, coordinated attacks like 9/11 to simpler, small-scale assaults, heightening the vulnerability of soft targets and crowded spaces in urban areas.”
Violent crime in D.C. dropped by 35% between 2023 and 2024, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for D.C. said in December, stating that there were 3,388 incidents last year compared to 5,215 incidents the year before.
Crimes that saw significant drops last year included homicide, which was down 30%, sexual abuse down 22% and assault with a dangerous weapon down 27%. Robberries and burglaries slightly dropped to 8% for both.
The federal funding covers security needs in the National Capital Region, which includes D.C. and surrounding cities in Maryland and Virginia.
FEMA has $553.5 million to spend to support cities across the U.S. to boost security. It is unclear how much of the National Capital Region’s total security budget comes from that program.
In the past, local officials have used federal funds for hazmat training, hiring officers and replacing fiber in their emergency communications network, according to a 2016 report from D.C.’s Homeland Security and Emergency Management Agency.
On Thursday, Trump directed federal law enforcement to increase their presence in the nation’s capital, following a string of violent crimes, including an incident in which former DOGE staffer Edward Coristine, nicknamed “Big Balls”, was beaten in the city’s streets earlier this week.
“Crime in Washington, D.C., is totally out of control,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “Local ‘youths’ and gang members, some only 14, 15, and 16-years-old, are randomly attacking, mugging, maiming, and shooting innocent Citizens, at the same time knowing that they will be almost immediately released. They are not afraid of Law Enforcement because they know nothing ever happens to them, but it’s going to happen now!”
The president said that the nation’s capital “must be safe, clean, and beautiful for all Americans and, importantly, for the World to see.”
“If D.C. doesn’t get its act together, and quickly, we will have no choice but to take Federal control of the City, and run this City how it should be run, and put criminals on notice that they’re not going to get away with it anymore,” he continued. “Perhaps it should have been done a long time ago, then this incredible young man, and so many others, would not have had to go through the horrors of Violent Crime.”
So King Donald and his suck-ups are whining about crime in D.C. (which has actually been decreasing significantly!) while they cut security funding for D.C.? Go figure!
MeidasTouch News: Trump Threatens to Seize Control of Washington DC and ‘Federalize’ the City
In a controversial escalation, Trump warns he may assume direct authority over the nation’s capital to tackle crime and governance failures, imposing federal control unless local officials act swiftly.
President Donald Trump warned Tuesday that his administration could assume direct federal control over Washington, D.C., if the city’s government fails to take stronger action against crime.
In a post on social media, Trump accused local leaders of being too lenient on young offenders and called for sweeping changes to the city’s criminal laws.
“The Law in D.C. must be changed to prosecute these ‘minors’ as adults, and lock them up for a long time, starting at age 14,” the president wrote.
Trump said his administration was prepared to step in if necessary.
“If D.C. doesn’t get its act together, and quickly, we will have no choice but to take Federal control of the City.”
The statement comes amid rising political debate over crime in the nation’s capital and renewed discussions about the limits of D.C.’s home rule, which grants the city self-governance but leaves ultimate authority with Congress and the president.
