Times Standard (Eureka)

More than 2,700 arrests in Los Angeles so far

- By John Antczak, Brian Melley and Kathleen Ronayne

LOS ANGELES » More than 2,700 people have been arrested since protests and violence began in Los Angeles in response to the death of George Floyd.

Chief Michel Moore told the city Police Commission on Tuesday that about 2,500 of those arrests were for failure to disperse or curfew violations.

The remainder were for crimes including burglary, looting, assaults on police officers and other violence, chief told the panel, which functions as the Police Department’s civilian oversight board.

A huge new demonstrat­ion filled streets in the Hollywood area, with police and National Guard troops on scene.

Earlier, police officers took a knee with clergyled demonstrat­ors near the downtown police headquarte­rs where speakers urged everyone to heed the call of Floyd’s family for people to protest peacefully.

Other major cities including San Francisco and San Diego also were calm.

Los Angeles County, however, announced its 10 million residents would again be under curfew starting at 6 p.m. Other jurisdicti­ons around the state also renewed curfews.

The full impact of curfews on the ability to police downtown Los Angeles and other areas of the city was evident by Sunday night, Moore said on Monday.

Violence and thefts on Monday were not on the scale of the weekend, when blocks of stores were devastated, police cars torched and officers injured.

In Sacramento, where two-thirds of downtown businesses were damaged over the weekend, 500 National Guard troops were deployed and the city imposed a Monday night curfew.

Most demonstrat­ions were peaceful and sympathy was expressed by law enforcemen­t. Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco took a knee at the invitation of demonstrat­ors.

“We support and will protect those who wish to demonstrat­e peacefully,” U.S. Attorney Nick Hanna in Los Angeles said while announcing the FBI will help identify people who commit serious crimes.

San Diego Police Chief David Nisleit said Floyd’s death prompted him to revisit department policy and stop the use of a controvers­ial neck restraint method. Floyd, who was black, was handcuffed and on the ground pleading for air as a white police officer pressed a knee on his neck for several minutes.

Most of Monday’s demonstrat­ions ended when curfews took effect. But remaining crowds tossed fireworks and bottles in several cities, and authoritie­s responded with tear gas and rubber bullets.

Police who had been overwhelme­d during the weekend were reinforced by 4,500 National Guard troops.

“Don’t be dumb,” Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti warned before the night’s curfew went into effect.

Even so, scattered attacks on stores threatened to overshadow the message of protesters. Televised images showed attacks on stores in Van Nuys and Hollywood. Police said some people carried hammers.

At one point, a handful of protesters stopped would-be thieves from entering a Walgreens on Sunset Boulevard.

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