San Francisco, protest
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San Francisco officials prep for more anti-ICE protests following demonstrations that turned violent
San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie and city officials announced preparations for more protests after police arrested 154 people Sunday night when an anti-ICE demonstration turned violent on city streets.
With immigrants being mandated to report to an ICE-affiliated building this weekend, demonstrators showed up for a second day
SAN JOSE — Hundreds of people gathered Monday evening in San Jose, Oakland and San Francisco to protest deportation efforts by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, as well as to stand in solidarity with protesters in Southern California.
Protestors started gathering at Wilma Chan Park around 11 a.m. then marched to Frank Ogawa Plaza, where they held a rally in Oakland.
Multiple people were detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in downtown San Francisco on Tuesday morning, merely 12 hours after thousands of protesters took to the streets in the Mission to rally against the widespread raids taking place across California.
Protesters filled the streets on Saturday, marching at noon from Dolores Park to the Civic Center as part of the nationwide No Kings protests. Thousands of protests were organized across all 50 states as a rejection of President Donald Trumps agenda.
Nationwide ICE protests erupt in Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, Chicago, and other cities, as a No Kings Day march is planned.
San Francisco police arrested 154 people Sunday night after a downtown protest against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement reportedly escalated with the arrival of law enforcement in riot gear.