Chaos dominates aggravate sweeps days after Trump threatens to change ice swearing

Days after President Trump vowed to increase deportation in Los Angeles and other democratic cities, officials said they would stop ruling on Monday under federal immigration crackdowns a few days after certain economic sectors arrested workers.
Trump said in a truth-fact social post that officials “must expand efforts to detain and expel illegal foreigners in the largest U.S. cities such as Los Angeles, Chicago and New York, where millions of illegal foreigners live.” He then did not prove that people here illegally promote turnout among Democratic voters.
It is unclear how the threat last week was with immigration officials paused for arrest orders at farms, restaurants and hotels.
“Please keep all work-site enforcement investigations/agricultural operations (including aquaculture and meat packaging factories), restaurants and hotels running,” multiple news agencies said.
He added that the investigation “human trafficking, money laundering, drug smuggling into these industries is OK.”
The Trump administration has not clarified the changes, and it is clear that immigration operations continue throughout the weekend.
Since June 6, when immigration agents launched a campaign in Los Angeles to find them at work locations, churches, schools and elsewhere to find unauthorized workers, thus finding their tensions throughout the city.
Stephen Miller, White House vice president and lead architect of Trump’s immigration policy, said ICE officials would arrest at least 3,000 people a day during the first five months of Trump’s second term.
But Democratic lawmakers like California Sen. Adam Schiff warned that the plan would “inspire tensions, split families and inspire more chaos” while placing Trump’s base at the cost of the economy.
“Trump’s extreme policies have tear the country apart and are harmful to the United States,” Schiff wrote in a statement on X.
Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) briefly put on handcuffs when he tried to raise a question at a Homeland Security press conference last week, responding that Trump's move was too far away.
“He still hasn't provided meaningful solutions for the millions of law-abiding long-term residents who have contributed to our economy and communities here. They deserve better solutions,” he wrote in a statement.
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said on Monday that Trump’s plan to expand his deportation efforts is to “face everything we represent in Los Angeles, illegal, divided and flies.”
The protests at the city’s Civic Center sometimes resulted in violent conflicts between residents, immigration advocates, and local and federal law enforcement, while buildings and businesses in the area were damaged and damaged. The downtown curfew has mitigated damage, but in the area (still in the pandemic) brings economic activity to the crawl.
In the pockets of the city, rumors about ice checkpoints, ice raids and warnings about immigration – unauthorized or otherwise – stay home so that they are not stopped by agents, who may or may not believe that the person they are talking to is a citizen or someone legally allowed here.
When the president-deployed military forces remained in Los Angeles, the immigration sweep continued, and a series of critical showdowns between federal and state officials continued.
On Tuesday, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals is expected to rule that California’s bid to stop Trump’s deployment of the National Guard in Los Angeles. Experts say the legal battle could be equal to a test case of power that the White House has long wanted to wield.
U.S. District Court Judge Charles Breyer in San Francisco wrote Thursday that Trump was thriving when federal government in California and deployed it to protesters.
“His conduct is illegal, both beyond his legal authority and in violation of the Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution,” Breyer wrote.
During Saturday's protests, with the theme of “No King” (designed to oppose the Trump administration) – thousands of participants were brought to the streets of Los Angeles and other major cities in California and other parts of the country.
Late at night, officials arrested 35 people for suspected violations, one of whom was suspected of failing to disperse, one of whom was suspected of resisting, obstructing or delaying an officer and the other was suspected of resisting arrest, officials said.
Los Angeles police have arrested 575 people since the immigration protests began on June 6.
No arrests were made on Sunday, and the afternoon was very quiet compared to last week. Still, about 200 radicals were there, determined to keep the anti-ice and anti-Trump protests.
“Ice in Los Angeles! Whose street? Our street!” A group chanted as they marched at the City Hall and the Metropolitan Detention Center, whispered to the driver's support.
Christopher Lee, 39, of Venice, said: “It’s very modest today, but it’s great to see so many people willing to keep the momentum going.
Sunday was Lee’s first day since the surge in immigration raids and sparked more than a week of protests. He said he could have come out on Saturday with a massive “Kingless” but he knew there were few people on Sunday, so he chose to wait.
Sean Patterson also didn’t show up on Saturday, so he and a friend decided to camp in front of Town Hall on Sunday.
“I can’t sit in Los Angeles while everything is going on,” said Patterson, 23, of Hollywood. “It feels like we’re slowly approaching…anyone who wants to happen can happen.”
Before 8 p.m., there were only three people on the steps of the town hall.
Bryan Sagastume was happy to be home after being tear gas a few times during Saturday night's action without the sting of tear gas.
He stood calmly in front of the quiet town hall, holding up the Mexican flag, representing the place of birth of his mother.
“My parents are immigrants,” the 25-year-old said. “They grew up here and worked hard… there were no criminals, no that. I just felt like what Trump was doing was wrong.”
Sagastume was born in the United States, so he could come out to protest safely – want to do so for those who can't. Despite this, the sweep was under a lot of pressure on his family.
“My mom has been outside the house and stayed at home,” he said. “She is scared to go outside now.”
Staff workers Sonja Sharp, Andrea Castillo and Howard Blume contributed to the report.