Protesters held "no work, no school, no shopping" strikes across the US on Friday (local time) to oppose the Trump administration's immigration crackdown.
The demonstrations took place amid widespread outrage over the killing of Alex Pretti, an intensive care nurse who was shot multiple times after he used his cellphone to record Border Patrol officers conducting an immigration enforcement operation in Minneapolis. The death heightened scrutiny over the administration's tactics after the January 7 death of Renee Good, who was fatally shot behind the wheel of her vehicle by a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer.
"The people of the Twin Cities have shown the way for the whole country — to stop ICE's reign of terror, we need to SHUT IT DOWN," said one of the many websites and social media pages promoting actions in communities around the United States.
Some schools in Arizona, Colorado and other states preemptively cancelled classes in anticipation of mass absences. Many other demonstrations were planned for students and others to gather at city centres, statehouses and churches across the country.

Protests continue in Minneapolis
Just outside Minneapolis, hundreds gathered in the frigid cold early Friday at the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building, the site of regular protests in recent weeks.
After speeches from clergy members, demonstrators marched toward the facility's restricted area, jeering at a line of DHS agents to "quit your jobs" and "get out of Minnesota." Much of the group later dispersed after they were threatened with arrest by local law enforcement for blocking the road.
Michelle Pasko, a retired communications worker, said she joined the demonstration after witnessing federal agents stopping immigrants at a bus stop near her home in Minnetonka, Minnesota, a suburb of Minneapolis.
"They're roaming our streets, they're staying in hotels near our schools," she said. "Everyone in this country has rights, and the federal government seems to have forgotten that. We're here to remind them."

High schoolers stage walkouts and some businesses close
In Michigan, dozens of students walked out of Friday morning classes at Groves High School in Birmingham, north of Detroit. The students braved the -18C temperatures and walked about 1.6km to the closest business district where a number of morning commuters honked horns in support.
"We're here to protest ICE and what they're doing all over the country, especially in Minnesota," said Logan Albritton, a 17-year-old senior at Groves. "It's not right to treat our neighbours and our fellow Americans this way."
Abigail Daugherty, 16, organised the walkout at Collins Hill High School in Suwanee, Georgia, on Friday.
"For years, I have felt powerless, and seeing other schools in the county being able to do this, I wanted to do something," the sophomore said.
Numerous businesses announced they would be closed during Friday's "blackout." Others said they would be staying open but donating a portion of their proceeds to organisations that support immigrants and provide legal aid to those facing deportation.
Otway Restaurant and its sister Otway Bakery in New York posted on social media that its bakery would stay open and 50% of proceeds would go to the New York Immigration Coalition. The restaurant remained open as well.
"As a small business who already took a huge financial hit this week due to the winter storm closures, we will remain open on Friday," they posted.

Maine residents revel in end of immigration enforcement surge in state
In Maine, where Republican Senator Susan Collins announced that ICE is ending its surge, people gathered outside a Portland church on Friday morning, holding signs that said "No ICE for ME," a play on the state’s postal code.
Grace Valenzuela, an administrator with Portland Public Schools, decried an "enforcement system that treats our presence as suspect." She said ICE's actions brought "daily trauma" to the school system.
"Schools are meant to be places of learning, safety and belonging. ICE undermines that mission every time it destabilises a family," Valenzuela said.
Portland Mayor Mark Dion, a Democrat, spoke about the importance of speaking out in the wake of ICE's actions in the city.
"Dissent is Democratic. Dissent is American. It's the cornerstone of our democracy," Dion said.
Federal agents deploy chemical sprays at Los Angeles protest
In Los Angeles, where Trump's immigration surge first began last June, thousands of protesters gathered in front of city hall in the afternoon and later marched to the federal detention centre. As the demonstration stretched into the evening, federal agents began using chemical sprays to push the crowd back.
Democratic Representative Maxine Waters joined the protest, chanting "ICE out of LA" in front of a line of officers in riot gear.
"What I see here at the detention centre are people exercising their constitutional rights," Waters said. "And of course, they're now trying to tear gas everybody. It's in the air, but people are not moving."
Nebraska student hit by SUV flying a Trump flag
On Thursday, a student in Nebraska was hit by an SUV flying a Trump flag at a student-led protest against the immigration crackdown.
A few students entered the street outside Fremont High School around 2pm (local time) and one was hit by a vehicle that had stopped in front of the crowd, then began moving, Fremont Public Schools said in a statement.
Officials said the student was taken to a hospital but they didn’t release details on the extent of the student's injuries.
Video from the scene shot by News Channel Nebraska shows a red SUV displaying a blue Trump 2024 flag accelerating as a student carrying a sign walks in the direction of the vehicle. The student is knocked onto the hood and falls onto the ground. The vehicle stops briefly and then takes off.





















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