
What to know about the troops and federal agents in LA's MacArthur Park
The operation left local officials and organizers with many questions. Here is a look at what we know.
What happened and was anyone arrested?
About 90 National Guard troops and dozens of federal officers descended on MacArthur Park in the morning. But it was nearly empty, since word spread of a potential raid. Mayor Karen Bass said she pulled over on her way to City Hall to witness officers on horseback and soldiers in tactical gear walking past a playground as children at a summer day camp were rushed indoors so they would not be traumatized.
The troops and officers left after about an hour.
The Department of Homeland Security did not say whether anyone was arrested. Associated Press journalists who arrived as the troops and agents entered the park did not see anyone detained. Some activists showed up to take videos and record the scene.
When asked about the appearance in MacArthur Park, the DHS said in an email that the agency would not comment on 'ongoing enforcement operations.' The Defense Department referred all questions to DHS.
Bass and Gov. Gavin Newsom called it a political stunt and spectacle meant to intimidate the city's immigrant communities.
What's the history of MacArthur Park?
The park dates back to the late 19th century when the city received a mudhole and trash dump spanning 35 acres in a land swap, according to the Los Angeles Conservancy. After a 'generous application of fertilizer,' it said the area was turned into Westlake Park with a small boating lake. In 1942, the name was changed to MacArthur Park for Army General Douglas MacArthur, who fought in WWII.
Since the 1980s, the Westlake neighborhood has evolved into a densely populated immigrant neighborhood with the settlement of Indigenous people from Mexico and Central America and other groups. It is also home to several immigrant rights organizations and legal aid offices.
Eunisses Hernandez, a council member whose district includes MacArthur Park said the park 'was chosen as this administration's latest target precisely because of who lives there and what it represents: Resilience, diversity and the American dream. It is no coincidence that the president would target a place that so clearly embodies the values he has spent his time in office trying to destroy.'
In recent years, the park has drawn homeless encampments. Outreach teams work there regularly, treating people with drug addiction.
In 2007, the park was the site of large May Day rallies to demand amnesty for immigrants without legal status that ended with police firing rubber bullets at protesters. Demonstrators later sued the city and received a $12.8 million settlement.
What did the Guard do?
Defense officials had said 90 National Guard troops and over a dozen military vehicles were sent to protect immigration officers.
The defense officials told reporters that it was not a military operation but acknowledged that the size and scope of the Guard's participation could make it look like one to the public. That is why the officials spoke on condition of anonymity to provide details about the raid before it happened.
The operation in the large park about 2 miles (3.2 km) west of downtown LA included 17 Humvees, four tactical vehicles, two ambulances and the armed soldiers, defense officials said.
The decision to have the soldiers provide security on the raids moves troops closer than ever before to carrying out law enforcement actions such as deportations, as President Donald Trump has promised as part of his immigration crackdown.
Why were military troops in Los Angeles?
Trump ordered the deployment of about 4,000 California National Guard troops and 800 active duty Marines against the wishes of Newsom in early June to respond to a series of protests against Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids in Los Angeles.
The federal troops' domestic deployment has raised multiple legal questions, including whether the administration would seek to employ emergency powers under the Insurrection Act to empower those forces to conduct law enforcement on U.S. soil, which they are not permitted to do except in rare circumstances.
The Marines are primarily assigned to protect federal buildings while hundreds of the National Guard troops accompany agents on immigration operations.
Newsom has sued the administration over the deployment and the case is ongoing.
How did the community react?
Immigration advocates urged people to avoid the area before the heavily armed troops and federal officers arrived in armored vehicles.
Betsy Bolte, who lives nearby, came to the park after seeing a military-style helicopter circling overhead.
She said it was 'gut-wrenching' to witness what appeared to be a federal show of force on the streets of a U.S. city. 'It's terror and, you know, it's ripping the heart and soul out of Los Angeles,' she said. 'I am still in shock, disbelief, and so angry and terrified and heartbroken.'
Chris Newman, legal director for the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, said he received a credible tip about the operation Monday.
The park is normally busy with families picnicking and vendors hawking food and toys but since federal agents have been making arrests around Los Angeles, Newman said fewer people have been going out.
'The ghost town-ification of LA is haunting, to say the very least,' he said.
____
Watson reported from San Diego. Associated Press journalists Damian Dovarganes and Eugene Garcia in Los Angeles; Sophie Austin in Sacramento, California; Amy Taxin in Santa Ana, California; and Tara Copp in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Winnipeg Free Press
24 minutes ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
South Korea sends 6 rescued North Koreans back across sea border
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea sent six North Koreans back across the rivals' sea border on Wednesday morning, months after they drifted south in wooden boats in March and May. It came after months of failed efforts to contact North Korea to coordinate the repatriation of the six individuals, who officials say consistently expressed a desire to go back. Despite the lack of communication, a North Korean patrol boat appeared at the handover point as the six individuals headed back aboard a repaired wooden boat, according to South Korea's Unification Ministry. What would have been a routine event in years past was complicated by the North's decision to cut off communications with the South in recent years. North Koreans have occasionally drifted south in wooden boats before, sometimes accidentally and sometimes with the intention of defecting. In most previous cases, the two Koreas coordinated to send those who wished to turn back across the land border. South Korea twice informed the North of its intention to repatriate the North Koreans on Wednesday through the U.S.-led United Nations Command, but received no response, the ministry said. South Korean authorities are also investigating a North Korean man who crossed the heavily fortified land border between the Koreas on Friday and was taken into custody by South Korean troops. South Korean officials have not disclosed whether the man expressed a desire to settle in the South. North Korea has effectively suspended almost all diplomacy and direct communication with South Korea following the collapse of its nuclear negotiations with Washington in 2019. Relations between the Koreas have worsened since 2022 as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un used Russia's invasion of Ukraine as a distraction to accelerate his nuclear weapons and missile programs, while also sending troops and military equipment to support Russia's war effort. South Korea's previous conservative government responded to the growing North Korean threat by expanding combined military exercises with the United States and Japan, which the North condemned as invasion rehearsals. Border tensions have flared in recent months as the two Koreas traded Cold War-style psychological warfare, with North Korea sending thousands of trash-filled balloons toward the South and South Korea blasting anti-Pyongyang propaganda through loudspeakers. Since taking office last month, South Korea's new liberal President Lee Jae Myung has made efforts to rebuild trust with North Korea, halting the frontline loudspeaker broadcasts and moving to ban activists from flying balloons carrying propaganda leaflets across the border.


Calgary Herald
an hour ago
- Calgary Herald
Trump to hit Canadian copper with drastic 50% tariff, clobbering massive export market
Article content Copper is also used in plumbing, construction materials, and solar cells, notes a Natural Resources Canada document. Article content The impacts could be felt across Canada. British Columbia and Ontario lead in copper production, with nearly 46 and 44 per cent of the country's total output, respectively. But refined copper is produced in Quebec and Newfoundland and Labrador, while recycled copper is smelted in facilities in Quebec. Article content Pierre Gratton, President and CEO of the Mining Association of Canada, said the situation is less concerning for B.C. mines as they sell raw materials to Europe and Asia. But for the copper refineries and smelting in Quebec, the situation is 'very concerning,' he said. Article content 'As usual, President Trump has jumped the gun. We need to find out what this means, whether our trade talks include copper, and how it will be applied,' said Gratton. Article content Article content He added that the North American copper market is 'very integrated' so it could hurt both sides, while inadvertently helping China which operates 'newer, lower cost refineries.' Article content On American markets, futures contracts for copper jumped 13 per cent to an all-time high on Tuesday. Article content Carney has been in discussions directly with Trump in recent weeks in hopes of signing a new economic and security agreement with the U.S. Article content He has so far held off matching counter-tariffs of 50 per cent on steel and aluminum pending these discussions, but those could come into force on July 21 if they do not come to an agreement. It is unclear for now if Canada would retaliate on copper as well. Article content Carney is currently on a 'reduced schedule' this week to 'reflect a brief period of local vacation.' He is remaining in the National Capital Region and the surrounding areas, according to a statement put out by his team. Article content Article content Despite that, Carney's team said he would remain in close contact with his team and officials on key priorities including the ongoing negotiations with the U.S. Article content The looming copper tariffs are a sign that Trump plans to go ahead with a list of sectoral levies beyond his current import taxes on steel, aluminum and automobiles. Article content Earlier this year, Trump launched investigations under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 into multiple products, including copper and pharmaceuticals, citing national security concerns. Article content Trump said he also will announce duties soon on pharmaceuticals but suggests he would give manufacturers a year before introducing those tariffs. Article content 'After that they're going to be tariffed if they have to bring the pharmaceuticals into the country, the drugs and other things, into the country,' Trump said. 'They're going to be tariffed at a very, very high rate, like 200 per cent.'


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Toronto's unhoused population reaches 'crisis' level, more than doubling in 3 years: survey
Street Needs Assessment says homeless population estimated at 15,400 last fall, calls situation a 'crisis' Toronto's unhoused population more than doubled in three years, reaching an estimated 15,400 last fall, according to a new city survey that calls the numbers a "crisis." Toronto's 2024 Street Needs Assessment homelessness survey, a point-in-time count of people experiencing homelessness, says the situation is one that "no single organization, sector, or level of government can address alone." The survey, released on Monday, says the latest estimate from October 2024 is an increase from the 7,300 unhoused people estimated to be in Toronto in April 2021. "When multiple systems such as affordable housing, health care, mental health, income support, and the justice system fail, people are left with nowhere to turn and the shelter system or staying in encampments becomes the option of last resort," the survey says. Research shows the increase being driven by a lack of affordable housing, unmet health needs, inadequate income support and individual struggles with substance use, the survey says. It also says the increase mirrors trends seen in Ontario and across Canada. Racialized people continue to be overrepresented in homelessness rates, according to the survey. It found that nine per cent of the total unhoused population surveyed in October identified as Indigenous, while 58 per cent identified as Black. Indigenous people make up only three per cent of the city's population, while Black people make up 10 per cent. The survey says Indigenous people make up 31 per cent of people experiencing what it calls outdoor homelessness. The number of unhoused people who identified as part of the 2SLGBTQ+ community has also doubled since 2021, with the greatest representation among refugee claimants at 31 per cent and young people staying in city sites at 27 per cent. Numbers of unhoused people dropping, city says In a news release on Monday, the city said it has seen a drop in the numbers of unhoused people since the survey was conducted. It attributes the drop to a decrease in refugee claimants in shelters, lower encampment numbers across the city and movement of people into permanent housing. Gord Tanner, general manager of the city's Toronto Shelter and Support Services, described the increase in the city's unhoused population on Tuesday as "significant" and he said the numbers are driven by failures by a number of systems, including housing, income support, immigration, child welfare and health care. Tanner said the survey helped to identify unhoused people's needs in terms of housing and the supports needed to get them out of homelessness. "Fundamentally, this is an affordability issue. People need more money to afford a place to live. They need more money to maintain their housing," he said. "And when you look beyond the income issue, people need support finding housing. They need support with some mental health and unmet health needs." He said the city needs a long-term, coordinated plan from the federal and provincial governments to invest more in preventing homelessness. That means efforts to keep people from losing their housing, working with young people and children so that they never become homeless and supporting refugee claimants as they arrive to prevent them from ending up in shelters. "What we really need is that upstream support to have somewhere for them to go permanently." CBC Toronto has reached out to the Ontario and federal governments for comment. Tanner said the city is building more supportive and affordable housing, as well as supporting thousands of refugee claimants to leave the shelter system and to get into housing. Its teams are connecting with people in encampments and on the transit system, he said. According to the city, 1,078 people living outside were referred into shelters last year, more than 4,300 people were housed and 25,000 outreach visits were made to people experiencing homelessness. Up to 45 new front-line and outreach workers are being hired this year. Report is 'devastating,' advocate says One homeless advocate says she hopes the numbers are a "turning point" for change, while others say they aren't entirely surprising. All say the numbers demand a response from all three levels of government. "It takes a lot to shock me, but I was shocked by the numbers. And I say that knowing that they're clearly even an underestimation of the numbers, especially of people living outside. So over 15,000 people are homeless in the city of Toronto," longtime street nurse Cathy Crowe said on Monday. "I think this is a devastating report overall because of the numbers," she said. "They're not numbers. They're people. They're men and women and youth and families with children," she added. "I hope it's a wake-up call." Greg Cook, an outreach worker at non-profit organization Sanctuary and a member of the steering committee of Shelter and Housing Justice Network, said the numbers and trends identified in the survey are concerning. He noted that the survey says outdoor homelessness has increased in Toronto since 2021 from 742 to 1,615 in 2024. "From what I'm seeing on the ground, no big surprises, although it does, I think, portray just how much worse the crisis has gotten," Cook said. Cook said the solution is clearly housing and all three levels of government need to be involved in the effort. "I think ultimately we need housing that people can afford and we have done that in the past. The government knows how to do this. Really, what we need is tens of thousands of units every year of subsidized housing built," Cook said. On Wednesday, city council's economic and community development committee will discuss the findings and the city's plans for shelters.