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California Today

From Sacramento to San Diego, Californians Join Protests

Monday: Snapshots from a chaotic weekend across the state.

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Protesters sat in the middle of Beverly Boulevard in the Fairfax district of Los Angeles on Saturday.Credit...Bryan Denton for The New York Times

Good morning.

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Over the weekend, in at least 140 cities across the country, demonstrators took to the streets in outpourings of grief and rage over the death of George Floyd, a black Minneapolis man who, before he died, pleaded with the white police officer who had pinned him to the ground with a knee on his neck.

“I can’t breathe,” he can be heard saying in a graphic video.

[See photos of the protests around the nation.]

In California — despite Gov. Gavin Newsom’s support of the demonstrations and assurances about the will to better address systemic racism — widespread protests sparked by Mr. Floyd’s death were yet another reminder that the state’s progressive politics haven’t healed deep wounds in black and Latino communities, which continue to be the targets of disproportionate policing here, just as they are in other parts of the country.

And so, Californians in cities large and small joined the protests. Many of the demonstrations started peacefully and became violent, with widespread looting. Hundreds have been arrested.

It’s not comprehensive, but here’s a look at some of what happened:

Protests in Los Angeles

In Los Angeles, Mayor Eric Garcetti at first reassured Angelenos that he wouldn’t call in the National Guard, although demonstrations downtown had taken a destructive turn.

“This is not 1992,” he said, referencing the riots that year spurred by Los Angeles police officers’ beating of Rodney King.

[Read about how past presidents responded to protests against police brutality.]

But by Saturday afternoon, after police officers and demonstrators clashed in the city’s upscale Fairfax district, Mr. Garcetti reversed course. He announced an overnight curfew.

Mr. Newsom declared a state of emergency in Los Angeles County.

And as the sun rose Sunday, for the first time since 1992, National Guard troops patrolled Los Angeles’s streets.

The Los Angeles Times reported that for many black Angelenos, the current moment bears similarities to that era. But as one resident told the paper: “It’s worse today than it was back then.”

Later on Sunday, while many peacefully marched in Santa Monica and Long Beach, looters ransacked department stores and smashed windows.

Officials announced another Los Angeles countywide curfew on Sunday night roughly an hour before it was set to go into effect.

[Read more about how business owners have pleaded with looters, even if they sympathize with the protesters’ message.]

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Protesters danced on the roof of a car in Oakland as a trash fire burned in the middle of Broadway.Credit...Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Protests in the Bay Area

In Oakland, the legacy of Oscar Grant III loomed large over the weekend’s unrest.

When Mr. Grant was killed by a transit officer at the Fruitvale BART station on New Year’s Day in 2009, the outrage that followed has been widely cited as a kind of antecedent to the Black Lives Matter movement.

NBC Bay Area reported that Mr. Grant’s mother, Wanda Johnson, spoke about the compounding trauma for black Americans: “We’re fighting the pandemic and we’re fighting this issue of hate,” she said.

As The San Francisco Chronicle reported, the pain inflicted by the pandemic was just one of several reasons this week’s protests have been more “explosive” in the Bay Area.

On Friday, during protests, two officers were shot while protecting Oakland’s federal courthouse — one fatally. Ken Cuccinelli, the acting deputy secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, called the shooting an act of domestic terrorism.

Violence and looting — the latter rising especially on Sunday — erupted in other Bay Area cities, like San Jose, Walnut Creek and Danville, which The Mercury News reported implemented curfews.

[Read more about how those protesting police use of force have been met with more force.]

Protests in the Central Valley and the Inland Empire

While demonstrations had some tense moments, protests in the Central Valley and Inland Empire largely remained calm, according to The Fresno Bee and The Press-Enterprise.

There were, however exceptions: In at least two instances, passing drivers appeared to target protesters.

In Bakersfield — the seat of Kern County, where The Guardian once reported the police killed more people per capita than anywhere else in the country — a 31-year-old man was arrested after the authorities say he drove through a crowd of protesters and struck a 15-year-old girl, according to KGET.

In Visalia, officials were investigating an incident on Saturday in which a person driving a blue Jeep flying flags supportive of President Trump struck two Black Lives Matter protesters, according to The Visalia Times Delta.

[Many leaders and others are claiming extremists and outside agitators are sparking protest violence. But which extremists?]

Protests around San Diego

In La Mesa, a small city in San Diego County, a crowd that had gathered in what started out as a peaceful protest on Saturday eventually blocked Interstate 8, set two banks ablaze and damaged City Hall, according to The San Diego Union-Tribune.

Protesters said they were gathering in solidarity with those in Minneapolis, but they also aimed to draw attention to what they said was the unfair detention last week of a black man by a white officer at a transit station in an encounter that was captured on video.

Protests in Sacramento

And in the state’s capital, what started as peaceful demonstrations on Friday, Saturday and Sunday deteriorated into chaos, according to The Sacramento Bee. Police officers shot rubber bullets and tear gas at protesters; looters left behind a trail of destruction in the heart of the city.

Mr. Floyd’s death touched a particular nerve there, according to CapRadio, following the death of Stephon Clark, an unarmed young black man who was gunned down in his grandmother’s backyard in 2018 when the police mistook a cellphone he was holding for a gun.

The fury over his death was a driving force behind the state’s passage last year of landmark legislation that makes it easier to prosecute police officers who kill people on the job by raising the standard for the use of deadly force.

[Read more about the death of Stephon Clark, and the law he inspired.]

Supporters of the measure have said it makes California’s police use-of-force laws some of the strictest in the nation.

Still, the officers who shot Mr. Clark were never charged in his death.

[Find all of The Times’s coverage of the protests here.]


We often link to sites that limit access for nonsubscribers. We appreciate your reading Times coverage, but we also encourage you to support local news if you can.

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The astronauts’ view of the cockpit controls.Credit...NASA
  • In the midst of everything, Elon Musk’s Hawthorne-based SpaceX sent a rocket with two astronauts into space. Their spacecraft docked at the International Space Station a little less than a day after launch. [The New York Times]

  • The Supreme Court on Friday rejected a Chula Vista church’s challenge to shutdown orders restricting public gatherings. [The New York Times]

Here’s what to know about California’s reopening process.


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Volunteers on Sunday in Los Angeles.Credit...Warrick Page/Getty Images

In a time like this, words often feel insufficient. But there are other ways to support black communities, and not just in times of crisis.

My colleague Tejal Rao posted a Google document compiled by Kat Hong listing black-owned restaurants in Los Angeles. The San Francisco Chronicle’s restaurant critic, Soleil Ho, compiled a similar list for the Bay Area. A local pastor did the same for the Fresno area.

KQED put together this piece, which includes information about community organizations that serve people who are homeless and others.

And if you want to better understand racism in America, here’s an antiracism reading list from the professor and author Ibram X. Kendi.


California Today goes live at 6:30 a.m. Pacific time weekdays. Tell us what you want to see: CAtoday@nytimes.com. Were you forwarded this email? Sign up for California Today here and read every edition online here.

Jill Cowan grew up in Orange County, went to school at U.C. Berkeley and has reported all over the state, including the Bay Area, Bakersfield and Los Angeles — but she always wants to see more. Follow along here or on Twitter.

California Today is edited by Julie Bloom, who grew up in Los Angeles and graduated from U.C. Berkeley.

Jill Cowan is the California Today correspondent, keeping tabs on the most important things happening in her home state every day. More about Jill Cowan

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