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Downtown LA hit by widespread vandalism, damage as city struggles to calm unrest

Grace Toohey, Hailey Branson-Potts, Matthew Ormseth, Rebecca Ellis, Hannah Fry and Rachel Uranga, Los Angeles Times on

Published in News & Features

LOS ANGELES — An ugly night of vandalism, burglaries and clashes in downtown Los Angeles left city officials struggling to get the upper hand after three days of scattered unrest over immigration raids.

Some businesses were vandalized and burglarized overnight downtown, concluding hours of unrest that saw Waymo cars burned, police cruisers crushed with rocks and electric scooters, and various forms of vandalism downtown and in the Civic Center. While most of the problems occurred within a few blocks, they have taken on worldwide attention after President Trump deployed the National Guard to L.A. after clashes between immigration agents and protesters.

Trump has threatened to bring in “troops” to help calm the unrest, but it is unclear what that would look like.

Los Angeles Police Chief Jim McDonnell said Sunday that violence in the city has only escalated since protesters clashed with officers Friday outside a federal detention center in downtown L.A. He described the violence as “disgusting.” Law enforcement stopped short of implementing a curfew in the city, which it has done during past protests including those in 2020.

“These past few nights we’ve seen a level that disgusts every good person in this city,” he said.

The Los Angeles Police Department arrested 10 people on Sunday, including a man who allegedly rammed a motorcycle into a line of officers, and 29 additional people on Saturday on suspicion of failing to heed a dispersal order, officials said.

Nine people, including Service Employees International Union California leader David Huerta, have been federally charged in connection with the protests, according to the U.S. attorney’s office in Los Angeles.

On Monday — a day of gray, June gloom and chill — downtown Los Angeles bore the vulgar graffiti of a weekend of chaos and protest. In the blocks surrounding City Hall and LAPD headquarters, buildings were scrawled in spray paint. The epithet “F— ICE” was ubiquitous.

In front of the federal building on Los Angeles Street, yellow city street sweepers rolled back and forth between blooming jacarandas and scores of police vehicles.

Graffiti marred the exterior of City Hall, an Art Deco landmark built in 1928. “F— ICE,” “F— LAPD,” and “F— Trump” were all spray-painted on walls and stairs, along with a rendering of excrement radiating stink lines. The former Los Angeles Times building bore many of the same vulgarities, and the words: “Immigrants rule the world.”

Spent rubber rounds and broken glass were scattered along Spring Street, remnants of a chaotic night in downtown.

Octavio Gomez, a supervisor with the DTLA Alliance, quickly rolled black paint on a wall next to Grand Central Market, covering the words “LA IS NOT SAFE!” and others.

“Today’s a bad day because of … last night,” Gomez said. “It’s all going to come back right? Because there’s still protests.”

The T-Mobile store on South Broadway had several windows boarded up and glass strewn across the sidewalk. Some nearby stores typically open on Mondays remained shuttered, including Blue Bottle Coffee. Others, including Grand Central Market, were already busy with customers.

Eric Wright and his wife, Margaux Cowan-Banker, vacationers from Knoxville, Tenn., were jogging downtown — past scores of police vehicles — Monday morning when they paused to take a few photos of the graffiti-covered federal building.

It was bizarre, they said, seeing the city portrayed on the news and social media as a place of total chaos on the news when most of Los Angeles was carrying on like any other summer day.

“People back where we live are going to completely be horrified,” said Cowan-Banker, a 42-year-old personal trainer. “I’m sure they think it’s a war zone here. ”

Many downtown residents seemed completely unbothered by the protests and aftermath. Los Angeles has seen large-scale protests in the past, such as in 2020 following the death of George Floyd.

“It’s kind of the usual, we always have protests,” Eileen Roman said as she walked her dog near Grand Central Market.

She wasn’t home Sunday when protests escalated and some violence broke out but she said the situation didn’t worry her. As the daughter of Guatemalan immigrants, she understands why people were out.

“I think we all are concerned about what’s going on,” Roman, 32, said of the federal government’s immigration crackdown.

Thomas Folland, a downtown resident and art history professor at Los Angeles Mission College, also said he wasn’t particularly concerned by the graffiti and minor vandalism he saw Monday morning as he walked near his apartment building.

“I’m not that offended by graffiti. ... This is at least a genuine community expression,” Folland said. More troubling, he said, is the direction of the country.

Folland, a Canadian, said he became a dual citizen during Trump’s last administration, but is still anxious about a trip out of the country in a few days. He understands why so many are so outraged.

“Even if I have a passport, I don’t feel 100% safe,” he said.

LAPD Chief McDonnell demurred over the weekend when asked if the city needed National Guard troops, whom Trump deployed over the wishes of the governor and mayor.

“Do we need them? Well, looking at tonight, this thing has gotten out of control,” he said. Still, McDonnell said he needed to know more about how the troops could help maintain order before he decides if their presence was necessary.

Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday that California planned to sue over Trump’s deployment of National Guard troops in Los Angeles. So far, the National Guard troops have mostly protected federal buildings.

 

Trump defended his decision on Monday, writing on Truth Social that “if we had not done so, Los Angeles would have been completely obliterated.”

Mayor Karen Bass has decried the disorder but also placed some of the blame on Trump.

“If people get violent, if people break the law they will be subject to arrest and they will be held accountable,” she said. “It’s as simple as that.”

Bass called Los Angeles a “city of immigrants” and pushed back on the federal government’s assertion that immigration officials had targeted criminals and violent individuals during the raids at workplaces and Home Depot parking lots in recent days.

“What we’re seeing in Los Angeles is chaos that is provoked by the administration,” Bass said. “When you raid Home Depot and workplaces, when you tear parents and children apart, and when you run armored caravans through our streets, you cause fear and you cause panic.”

Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif., blasted the Trump administration, saying sending troops and cracking down on immigrant communities diverts attention away from what he called a “devastating” congressional bill, and he encouraged peaceful protest to continue.

“Keep protesting because Donald Trump would love for everybody to sit back quietly while he continues to overreach, to bring cruelty to every corner of America and violate the law,” he said.

“What he is doing is classic Donald Trump. He is trying to deflect and distract,” he said. “They have this devastating bill coming through Congress that would cut health care for so many Americans, raise costs on working families and underwrite tax breaks for billionaires. Trump doesn’t want people talking about that, so he goes back to immigrants, demonizing immigrants and trying to thump his chest for being a tough guy.”

Padilla blamed some of the violence on agitators taking advantage of the situation, but he said they are not immigrant advocates or organizers and he called on the National Guard to pull back.

“Let local law enforcement do their job,” he said.

Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis said Trump appeared to be intentionally escalating the situation. She emphasized that burning cars and other non-peaceful protests were not appropriate, but said local law enforcement has the capacity to deal with such matters.

“There’s no reason to send in the National Guard other than to show a flex of strength,” Kounalakis said in an interview Sunday evening. “Typically that is one of the ways things will start to escalate. So my conclusion is that he announced sending in the National Guard not because there was a need, but because he wanted to take the opportunity of the protests to have a demonstration of his own strength and ruthlessness.”

Sunday was filled with dramatic images across downtown.

Protesters converged on the Civic Center area of downtown L.A. on Sunday morning, spilling onto the 101 Freeway around 3:30 p.m. The roadway was then closed to traffic for several hours as California Highway Patrol officers worked to push demonstrators back, detaining several in the process.

A group of demonstrators then descended on five Waymo taxis lined up on Los Angeles Street between Arcadia and Alameda streets around 5 p.m.

Tires were slashed, windows smashed, and anti-ICE messages spray-painted over the self-driving taxis, three of which were then set on fire.

Protesters swarmed around vehicles, tearing the doors off and stomping on windshields. One man with a mask smashed car windows with a skateboard. Another appeared to use a makeshift flamethrower to set the interior of a car ablaze.

As the cars were consumed by flames, some people were seen throwing Lime electric scooters into the burning shells, while others stood back from the fiery scene. At one point, the besieged Waymos began honking their horns in coordinated cacophony, punctuated by the chants of protesters and the whirring of police helicopters overhead.

Some in the crowd milling above the 101 lobbed rocks and chunks of concrete down toward CHP who had detained people who protested on the freeway. One struck a police cruiser with a thud, prompting a big cheer. CHP officers responded by firing flash-bang rounds above the crowd.

Maria Patiño Gutierrez lives in East L.A. but was back downtown Monday morning to join the rally in support of Huerta, the union leader arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Friday. As a U.S. citizen, she feels safe enough to join the rallies, knowing that many others in her community feel too vulnerable to be as vocal.

While she noticed graffiti as she walked to Grand Park, she said it was barely a concern compared with the recent ICE roundups that have had devastating consequences.

“Graffiti is going to be painted over, but family’s lives are impacted,” she said. “I’m just trying to stay hopeful, but I’m also really worried, really scared, really sad.”

“Everyone in L.A. is impacted one way or another — or everyone should be impacted,” Patiño Gutierrez said. “This is not business as usual.”

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(Staff writer James Queally contributed to this report.)

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©2025 Los Angeles Times. Visit at latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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