LA teen loses eye after being shot by US agent at No Kings march, lawyer says
On March 28th in downtown Los Angeles, Tucker Collins, an 18-year-old USC student, lost an eye after being struck by a "less-lethal" projectile fired by a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) agent at a No Kings march protesting Trump administration policies. Collins, who was photographing the demonstration near the Metropolitan detention center, was allegedly hit despite a federal injunction limiting DHS's use of force against journalists and legal observers posing no threat.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedOn March 28th in downtown Los Angeles, Tucker Collins, an 18-year-old USC student, lost an eye after being struck by a "less-lethal" projectile fired by a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) agent at a No Kings march protesting Trump administration policies. Collins, who was photographing the demonstration near the Metropolitan detention center, was allegedly hit despite a federal injunction limiting DHS's use of force against journalists and legal observers posing no threat. Collins's attorney, V James DeSimone, claims his client was not threatening anyone and will be filing a federal tort claim against DHS. DHS stated that their law enforcement followed training and used minimum force necessary, issuing seven warnings before deploying crowd control measures, asserting the First Amendment doesn't protect rioting. Authorities said tear gas was deployed after demonstrators threw concrete.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedDHS says its law enforcement used the minimum amount of force necessary.
A California judge issued a court order limiting DHS's use of force against journalists and legal observers.
The shooting occurred on March 28th in downtown Los Angeles.
A USC freshman lost an eye after being shot by a DHS agent at a No Kings march.
Authorities said demonstrators threw concrete blocks before teargas was deployed.