
LAPD chief denies ICE director's claim of 2-hour response time during protest
Los Angeles Police Department Chief Jim McDonnell responded Sunday to an earlier accusation by ICE Acting Director Todd Lyons, who said the LAPD took "over two hours" to respond Friday to an incident were anti-ICE protesters confronted federal agents.
"Our brave officers were vastly outnumbered, as over 1,000 rioters surrounded and attacked a federal building," Lyons said in a statement, referring to the Edward R. Roybal Federal Building in downtown L.A. "It took over two hours for the Los Angeles Police Department to respond, despite being called multiple times."
Speaking at a news conference Sunday evening, McDonnell did not mention Lyons by name but said the accusation was untrue.

"When we heard that, I think anybody who's a police officer couldn't believe it, and certainly anyone with LAPD couldn't imagine how that could happen," McDonnell told reporters. "Well, it didn't happen."
The police chief said the LAPD's response time was just under 40 minutes, citing traffic, crowd density and previous tear gas deployment by federal agents at the scene as factors in the response time.
McDonnell added that the Police Department was not made aware of the federal operation in advance, and LAPD teams were not prepositioned as a result.