L.A. activist indicted after giving face shields to anti-ICE protesters

A local activist who handed out protective face shields to protesters last month during demonstrations against the Trump administrationβs chaotic immigration raids was indicted by a federal grand jury Wednesday.
Alejandro Orellana, a 29-year-old member of the Boyle Heights-based community organization Centro CSO, faces charges of conspiracy and aiding and abetting civil disorder, court records show.
According to the indictment, Orellana and at least two others drove around downtown L.A. in a pickup truck distributing Uvex Bionic face shields and other items to a crowd engaged in a protest near the federal building on Los Angeles Street on June 9.
Prosecutors allege Orellana was helping protesters withstand less-lethal munitions being deployed by Los Angeles police officers and Los Angeles County sheriffβs deputies after an unlawful assembly had been declared.
Orellana is due in court on Thursday morning. An e-mail to his federal public defender seeking comment was not immediately returned.
U.S. Atty. Bill Essayli, a former California Assemblyman appointed by President Trump, has promised to aggressively prosecute anyone who interferes with Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations or harms police during protests. Federal prosecutors have brought at least 14 cases related to last monthβs demonstrations and Essayli promised more people will be charged.
Asked how handing out defensive equipment was a crime during a news conference last month, Essayli insisted Orellana was specifically handing out supplies to violent demonstrators.
βHe wasnβt handing masks out at the beach. … Theyβre covering their faces. Theyβre wearing backpacks. These werenβt peaceful protesters,β he said. βThey werenβt holding up signs, with a political message. They came to do violence.β
Essayli described anyone who remained at a protest scene after an unlawful assembly was declared as a βrioterβ and said peaceful protesters βdonβt need a face shield.β
Orellana, who works for United Parcel Service, has no criminal record and previously served in the U.S. Marines, according to Carlos Montes, a fellow member of Centro CSO.
Montes said he believes Essayli is specifically targeting Centro CSO for its pro-immigrant activism, noting FBI agents seized another memberβs cellphone last week as part of their investigation into Orellana.
βItβs ridiculous charges. Weβre demanding they drop the charges now. Theyβre insignificant, ridiculous,β Montes said. βThe most it amounts to is that he was passing out personal protective equipment, which includes boxes of water, hand sanitizer and snacks.β
A spokesperson for the U.S. Marine Corps did not immediately respond to a request for Orellanaβs service record.
Montes also challenged Essayliβs argument that peaceful protesters have no need for protective equipment, pointing to myriad instances in which people have been seriously injured by Los Angeles police and county sheriffβs deputies in recent years.
A Times investigation last month highlighted incidents in which protesters allege Los Angeles Police Department officers fired rubber rounds and other crowd control munitions without warning in recent weeks, causing demonstrators and members of the media to suffer broken bones, concussions and other forms of severe harm.
Times staff writer Brittny Mejia contributed to this report.