Astonishing moment CNN host realizes reporter is being detained by cops during live segment from LA riots

Astonishing moment CNN host realizes reporter is being detained by cops during live segment from LA riots
By: dailymail Posted On: June 10, 2025 View: 77

A CNN reporter and his crew were briefly detained, forced out of an area of the Los Angeles riots and warned by police if he trespassed again he would be arrested. 

Just after midnight, live coverage of the chaos was briefly interrupted as an anchor Laura Coates could hear someone speaking to police.  

Jason Carroll, a national correspondent covering the anti-ICE riots in his native California, was on the reporting from the scene when suddenly he was confronted by law enforcement. 

Coates interrupted CNN law enforcement and intelligence analyst John Miller: 'Wait one second, John. Hold on. I want to get Jason. What's going on? I hear you. What am I seeing? Jason Carroll being... What? What happened? Jason?'

Carroll finally speaks while talking to a member of law enforcement attempting to remove him from the area. 

'I am being detained. I am being detained, Laura,' he said to Coates, before turning to the officer and asking: 'I am not being arrested, correct?' 

One officer can be heard asking if Carroll heard what another officer told him, which the reporter says he could not hear.

'We're letting you go but you can't come back here, because then if you come back in, you go,' suggesting he would be arrested if he returned.

A CNN reporter was detained and forced out of an area of the Los Angeles riots and warned by police if he trespassed again he would be arrested
Jason Carroll, a national correspondent covering the anti-ICE riots in his native California, was on the ground when suddenly he was confronted by law enforcement

Carroll agrees and thanks the officer before telling him to 'take care.'

Before the reporter can explain what happened, he is stopped by another journalist who describes himself as being from The New York Times. 

'I'm Chris with the New York Times. We got video of you guys, if you need it later,' the second reporter said.

Carroll thanks the New York Times employee and then describes what had just happened.   

'I was called over, and the officer told me to put my hands behind my back,' he said.

Carroll asked the officer if he was being arrested before being told he was merely detained. 

'I was walked out of the area. They took down my information,' he added before his audio is lost.

A few minutes later, Coates reestablishes contact with Carroll and he gets into more detail.  

Carroll and his crew were briefly detained and told to leave the protest zone, though not arrested
A few minutes later, Coates reestablishes contact with Carroll and he gets into more detail

'They did not put me in zip ties, but they did grab both my hands as I was escorted over to the side,' he said.

Carroll described what occurred as one of the 'risks' that the press takes to cover these stories, though he admitted it was 'low on that sort of scale.'  

'It is something that I wasn't expecting simply because we've been out here all day,' Carroll said. 

He noted that typically, officers usually recognize that 'the press is there doing a job.'

Carroll then returned to reporting on those who were being arrested for not dispersing from the area.  

The network later reported that other members of Carroll's crew were also briefly detained and forced to leave the protest zone. 

Two security personnel for CNN were also detained Monday night but were not charged, they said. 

Carroll has been with the network for well over a decade. DailyMail.com has reached out to CNN for comment.

The network later reported that other members of Carroll's crew were also briefly detained and forced to leave the protest zone
At least 74 people have been arrested in connection with riots of over the weekend with more to come as the chaos continues to rage across the streets of California's biggest city

At least 74 people have been arrested in connection with riots of over the weekend with more to come as the chaos continues to rage across the streets of California's biggest city.

Hundreds of Marines have been mobilized to Los Angeles after Donald Trump sent National Guard troops to quell the immigration protests.

Chaos erupted after protesters clashed with immigration officials across downtown Los Angeles over the weekend, leading to three days of violence and 

Looters targeted businesses across the city amid the demonstrations, which saw cars torched and security forces firing tear gas at rioters.

Despite the National Guard's presence, the military is set to temporarily deploy about 700 Marines from the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center in Twentynine Palms to the city.

It is unclear what grounds the administration used to send the troops, but for now, the Insurrection Act is not expected to be invoked. 

California officials have been slammed for their handling of the riots as an understaffed police department struggles to quell the violence. 

Gov. Gavin Newsom launched a lawsuit against the Trump Administration for unlawfully' deploying another 2,000 National Guard troops.

Trump told reporters he would support border czar Tom Homan if he arrested the 'criminal' governor.

'I would do it,' the president said when asked about Newsom daring his administration to arrest him.

'I like Gavin Newsom; he's a nice guy, but he's grossly incompetent, everybody knows it,' the president added.

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