Trump warns protesters at military parade Jun. 14
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Trump, immigration and Local protests
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From Los Angeles, to New York, Chicago, Atlanta and Lincoln, Nebraska, protesters demanded ICE thugs and soldiers leave their communities and return kidnapped family members.
5hon MSN
President Donald Trump warned that the use of the military in response to protests against his illegal immigration crackdown won't be limited to just Los Angeles.
Unlike the 1992 riots, protests have mainly been peaceful and been confined to a roughly five-block stretch of downtown LA, a tiny patch in the sprawling city of nearly 4 million people. No one has died. There’s been vandalism and some cars set on fire but no homes or buildings have burned.
Demonstrations were reported in major cities around the country, including New York, D.C., Boston, Dallas and Chicago.
Olympic organizer Reynold Hoover assured security coordination is "extraordinary" despite senator's concerns over local leadership's handling of unrest.
Protesters and police are facing off in Los Angeles, and anti-ICE protests have occurred across the country. Follow for live updates
Tensions flared in Los Angeles late Monday. On Tuesday, teams worked to scrub away, cover up or fade out protesters' graffiti.
Dozens of people gathered in Kansas City's West Side, one of the city's historically Latino neighborhoods, to protest President Donald Trump's immigration policies and stand in solidarity with protesters in Los Angeles.
Languages: English Officials in Parker, Colorado, denied a permit for a planned "No Kings" anti-Trump rally after the organizer was told it conflicted with the town's annual Parker Days festival, according to a report from local television station CBS Colorado.
Trump vowed to "liberate" Los Angeles, hurling insults at the protesters during the US army anniversary. Meanwhile, US and Chinese trade negotiators in London announced reaching a "framework." Follow DW for more.