
A British news photographer has undergone emergency surgery after being hit by non-lethal rounds during protests in Los Angeles.
Nick Stern was documenting a stand-off between anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) protesters and police outside a Home Depot in Paramount, a city in LA county and a location known as a hiring spot for day labourers, when a 14mm âsponge bulletâ tore into his thigh.
He told the PA news agency: âMy initial concern was, were they firing live rounds?
âSome of the protesters came and helped me, and they ended up carrying me, and I noticed that there was blood pouring down my leg.â
He was treated by a medic who urged him to go to hospital. At one point, Mr Stern says he passed out from the pain.
He is now recovering at Long Beach Memorial Medical Centre following emergency surgery.
Mr Stern, who emigrated to the US in 2007, said he typically makes himself âas visible as possibleâ while working in hostile situations.
âThat way youâre less likely to get hit because they know youâre media,â he said.
It is the second incident of its kind for Mr Stern, who said he sustained âsubstantialâ bruising after being hit by another live round during the George Floyd protests in 2020.
âThe communities in LA are very tight and very close-knit,â Mr Stern said.
âSo an outside organisation like Ice coming in and removing â whatever you want to call it, removing, kidnapping, abducting people from the community â is not going to go down well at all.â
It comes after US President Donald Trump announced plans to deploy 2,000 National Guard troops to California to quell the protests, which began on Friday in downtown LA before spreading.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the move was âessential to halting and reversing the invasion of illegal criminals into the United Statesâ.
The decision drew sharp criticism from Democratic politicians, including California Governor Gavin Newsom, who called the move âpurposefully inflammatoryâ.
Demonstrators have been protesting the Trump administrationâs immigration raids, which last month aimed to detain as many as 3,000 people per day.
Despite his injury, Mr Stern says he is eager to return to work.
âI intend, as soon as I am well enough, to get back out there,â he said.
âThis is too important and it needs documenting.â