Utah, protest and No Kings
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ABC4 Utah on MSN‘Peacekeeper’ in Salt Lake City No Kings shooting was safety volunteer, organizers sayUtah 50501, the organizers of the No Kings protest that took place in Salt Lake City on Saturday, confirmed the “peacekeeper” who was involved in a deadly shooting during the protest
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East Idaho News on MSN‘Safety volunteer’ who fired shots during ‘No Kings’ protest is a military veteran, Utah organizers sayAlthough police say the so-called “peacekeeper” who shot two people during the “No Kings” protest in Salt Lake City — including an innocent bystander who was killed — had no law enforcement experience,
Saturday marks the first full day of Marines on duty in Los Angeles, one week after protests against Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids ignited in LA.
Arthur Folasa Ah Loo, 39, a Samoan-born fashion designer, was participating in an anti-Trump protest in Salt Lake City on Saturday when he was shot by a man working security, the police said.
Some 10,000 people gathered in Salt Lake City for a "No Kings" rally and march as President Donald Trump was overseeing a military parade in Washington, D.C. About an hour into the march, shots were fired.
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Organizers of the SLC 'No Kings' protest told KSL TV that a volunteer peacekeeper fired his weapon believing there was an "imminent threat to protesters."
Five people were shot, three fatally, at the festival in Utah's West Valley City after an altercation broke out between two groups of people.
No Kings” protests, said in an emailed statement to FOX 13 News on Tuesday that the “peacekeeper” was a volunteer and military veteran.
Two days after Arthur Folasa Ah Loo was shot and killed at a Salt Lake City protest, over a hundred people showed up to pay tribute to him.