Multiple people arrested at Whipple Federal Building during ICE protest

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15 people protesting ICE were arrested at the Whipple Federal Building Sunday by the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office. Other agencies, including the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, made more arrests, according to the sheriff’s office.

In a statement, the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office said the protest was an “unlawful assembly as people were blocking roads and throwing objects.” The Minnesota State Patrol arrested 15 of those in attendance, according to the sheriff’s office. The office stated that mutual aid was requested during the gathering, which is why the department intervened.

Many on social media say that the gathering was a peaceful protest involving community members protesting ICE actions in the state. Videos posted to social media taken by witnesses show multiple agents putting people in handcuffs, and some show agents tackling people to the ground and dragging attendees by their bodies.

This report is ongoing.

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Thousands rally in Westwood as U.S.-Iran war escalates, calling for a ‘free Iran’

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By Matthew Ormseth, Los Angeles Times

Thousands gathered outside the Westwood Federal Building on Sunday afternoon celebrating the fall of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and dreaming of a “free Iran” as war continued to escalate between Iran and a united U.S. and Israel.

Residents of Los Angeles’ massive Persian diaspora continued to revel in the news of Khamenei’s death after the U.S. and Israel launched surprise attacks across the nation on Saturday. Many at Sunday’s demonstration were draped in American, Israeli or Iranian flags, the latter emblazoned with a golden lion that represented the traditional banner abandoned when the Islamic Republic came to power. Some wore green hats that said, “Make Iran Great Again.”

Members of the crowd chanted for a “free Iran” and danced in shuttered streets.

“We’re thrilled,” said demonstrator Shawn Araghi, who left Iran as an 8-year-old when Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi was ousted in 1979. “Most people think Iranians are the same as the regime. The people are way different than the regime. They could care less about the people. That’s why they’re killing them left and right.”

On Sunday, military officials confirmed that three U.S. service members were killed and five seriously wounded in a widening war across the Middle East, with intensifying counterattacks by Iran across the region. Hundreds in Iran, including dozens of civilians at a school, were reported dead in the attacks, and dozens more across the region.

But for many in and around Westwood — the epicenter of L.A.’s sprawling Iranian diaspora, earning the nickname “Tehrangeles” — the attacks on Iran signaled hope for a regime change that could bring increased freedom to their homeland.

The Greater Los Angeles area is home to the largest concentration of people of Iranian descent outside Iran. Since the Islamic Revolution in 1979, it has served as a capital for exiles.

Nilgoon Askari, a native of Iran, was in attendance at Sunday’s demonstration. She said Iranian Americans had gathered in West Los Angeles or downtown L.A. every weekend in February since Iranian security forces used lethal force to suppress a widespread popular uprising.

Askari said her best friend was killed in the crackdown on protesters and some of her relatives were arrested. The demonstrations in L.A. were often tearful affairs, she said. Sunday was different.

“It was impossible for 47 years,” Askari said of the killing of Iran’s supreme leader. She said President Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had assassinated a “dictator” whom the Iranian people could not depose themselves.

Askari and Araghi said they hoped the Islamic Republic would fall and the country will come under the leadership of Reza Pahlavi, the son of the shah.

Araghi said he wasn’t concerned that Israel or the United States would meddle in the future of Iran. “Anything is better than the current regime,” he said. “It can’t be worse than this.”

____

(Times staff writers Corinne Purtill and Grace Toohey contributed to this report.)

©2026 Los Angeles Times. Visit at latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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Oil prices jump 10% After Iran attack, pointing to economic risks

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Oil prices rose 10% as markets opened Sunday evening, underscoring the economic risks of the widening conflict in the Middle East.

The U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran could severely restrict supplies from a key oil and gas-producing region. Even if the disruption is brief, it will almost certainly make energy more expensive worldwide. The magnitude of those price increases and how long they last will depend on what the United States and Israel do next — and how Iran responds.

International oil prices had climbed about 20% this year, nearing $73 a barrel Friday. On Sunday, they crossed $80 a barrel.

The longer that the war disrupts the energy trade, the bigger the risk that consumers will face higher prices, not just at the gas pump but in a broad array of products, at a time when many people are already worried about the economy. That could cause domestic political blowback for President Donald Trump, whose approval ratings have tumbled in part because many Americans are concerned about inflation.

By Sunday, the flow of tankers carrying energy products through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway off Iran’s southern coast, had slowed to a trickle. About one-fifth of the world’s oil and a significant amount of natural gas usually pass through the choke point daily.

But in a crucial sign for oil markets, no major energy assets in the region appeared to have been struck as of late Sunday in Iran.

“The biggest question is what, if any, oil installations get damaged,” said Amy Myers Jaffe, director of the Energy, Climate Justice and Sustainability Lab at New York University. “If the answer to that is none, my opinion is the price of oil will come back down.”

The United States may be the world’s largest producer of oil and natural gas, but that does not fully insulate it from market shocks since those commodities are traded globally.

This is the second time in two months that the United States has taken military action in an oil-rich country. Prices barely moved in January after U.S. forces captured Nicolás Maduro, the president of Venezuela, partly because that country accounts for less than 1% of the world’s oil supply.

Not only does Iran produce more oil, but so do its neighbors, and the country sits at the mouth of the Persian Gulf, a vital oil and natural gas trading route.

Until this point, one of the main concerns in the global market had been that the world was producing a lot more oil than it needed. That oversupply is likely to blunt any increase in prices, at least for a while. Indeed, on Sunday, a group of oil producers known as OPEC+ said it planned to increase output modestly in April.

“Americans will see some impact at the gasoline pump,” said Jason Bordoff, the founding director of the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University in New York. “But even with a massive strike on Iran that killed the leader of the country, at this point we’re still talking about oil prices that are well within historical norms — and much less than one would have ever expected with a strike of this magnitude.”

Higher prices for oil traded on commodity futures markets will not immediately lead to a big increase in prices at gas pumps in the United States. But fuel prices tend to respond relatively quickly, within a matter of days or weeks.

The pace “will really depend on how severe the supply constraint reveals itself to be,” said Ken Medlock, an energy fellow at Rice University’s Baker Institute in Texas.

In the week after Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, oil prices climbed around 20%. But the average price of a gallon of regular gasoline in the United States only rose about 3% in that time, according to AAA motor club data. It was not until the following week that drivers started to see significantly higher gasoline prices. U.S. gasoline prices eventually hit a record above $5 a gallon several months later, in June.

As a general rule of thumb, for every $10 a barrel increase in the cost of oil, the price of gasoline that consumers see at local stations might rise 20 to 30 cents a gallon, said Jaffe. Gasoline cost an average of $2.98 a gallon in the United States on Sunday, according to AAA.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine also drove up the price of natural gas, a key fuel for the power sector and heavy industry. That contributed to increases in the prices of electricity in Europe, the United States and elsewhere. A lot of liquefied natural gas is shipped through the waters around Iran, and a sustained disruption of those flows could, over time, also hurt the global economy.

On Sunday, attention remained on the Strait of Hormuz, where videos verified by The New York Times showed a tanker ablaze while anchored near Oman. Another vessel was also reportedly struck in the area, and a separate projectile was said to have exploded near a third ship.

In other conflicts, naval vessels have escorted commercial ships that have come under threat, though a Defense Department spokesperson said the United States had no such plans for the Persian Gulf.

As of Sunday afternoon in Iran, just six tankers used to carry energy products had traveled through the strait, down from 65 on Friday, according to S&P Global Energy’s Commodities at Sea.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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Scrappy Blues steal one from Wild with late rally

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Sometimes it’s not easy to come home again. Especially when the scrappy St. Louis Blues are visiting.

Playing at Grand Casino Arena for the first time in a month, the Minnesota Wild saw a second period lead disappear quickly, as the Blues rallied for a 3-1 win on Sunday.

Pavel Buchnevich scored the game-winner late in the third period for the Blues, snapping a shot just under the crossbar behind Wild goalie Filip Gustavsson as Minnesota lost back-to-back games for the first time since mid-January.

Robert Thomas added an empty-net goal for the Blues in the final minute.

Kirill Kaprizov scored the only goal for the Wild, who got 21 saves from Gustavsson in the loss.

“I thought we had enough looks to be able to get, you know, more than one goal,” Wild coach John Hynes said. “Then they had a good look in the third and that was a heck of a shot by their guy. Unfortunately it was a game where we didn’t find a way to penetrate through, but I thought our effort was there.”

While the Blues applied steady pressure in the scoreless first period, Minnesota had the best scoring chance when a long lead pass sprung Kaprizov on a breakaway from the blue line. But St. Louis goalie Joel Hofer thwarted the Russian star’s attempt at a flip of the puck over the leg pad.

Minnesota finally broke through late in the second on a power play. After St. Louis made a shorthanded rush to the net, Minnesota came back with numbers, and put the game’s first goal on the board when Matt Boldy fed Kaprizov for a chip-in at the side of the net.

The goal was Kaprizov’s 219th of his career, which tied him with Marian Gaborik for most in franchise history.

“We see him every day, so we just know how good he is,” said Wild center Joel Eriksson Ek. “I think it’s just a matter of time and he’s going to break it. The more he scores, the better chance we have to win the game.”

The lead was brief, as Blues defenseman Logan Mailloux zipped a shot through a screen and past Gustavsson with less than two minutes to play in the middle frame.

“It just goes very close to (Quinn Hughes’) leg there,” Gustavsson said. “You lose it for half a second and that’s all it takes.”

The Blues got 22 saves from Joel Hofer, to even their season series with Minnesota at 1-1. With Gustavsson on the bench for an extra attacker, Hofer’s shot at the empty net with 1:07 to play was deflected and went just wide.

“I think we go to the net a lot today, and we have so many chances,” Kaprizov said. “(Their) goalie played pretty good.”

The Wild suffered a loss before the game began, with veteran winger Marcus Foligno missing due to a lower body injury he incurred on Friday in Utah. There was no update on the severity of the injury after the game, with Hynes saying Foligno is still being assessed. Minnesota had called up Tyler Pitlick from Iowa to take Foligno’s place on the fourth line. It was the 32nd game for Pitlick, the former Centennial High School standout who is in his first season with the Wild.

Prior to the opening faceoff, the Wild honored eight of their 10 players, and several members of their support staff, who participated in the 2026 Winter Olympics, including their three American gold medal winners.

Briefly

The Wild made a minor league trade on Sunday evening, sending Iowa forward Boris Katchouk to the Philadelphia Flyers in exchange for defenseman Roman Schmidt. Originally from Michigan, Schmidt, 23, is listed at 6-foot-5 and 218 pounds. He has spent all of this season with the Flyers’ AHL team and will report to Iowa for the Wild.

Katchouk was acquired by the Wild on Dec. 28 and had played eight games for Iowa.

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