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  • Students Lead Walkout In San Diego
    DUKAS_194319500_ZUM
    Students Lead Walkout In San Diego
    February 25, 2026, San Diego, California, USA: Students from Point Loma High School and High Tech High in San Diego, California, coordinate a joint rally and march outside the 52 Boats Memorial at Liberty Station during a campus walkout. Students are protesting against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and are calling for dignity, due process, and accountability in immigration enforcement and detention policies. (Credit Image: © Jake Lee Green/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • Ice 2026: Washington, DC: Hundreds Honor Memory Alex Pretti
    DUKAS_193233460_ZUM
    Ice 2026: Washington, DC: Hundreds Honor Memory Alex Pretti
    January 28, 2026, Washington, District Of Columbia, USA: Hundreds gather on DC's snow covered streets in front of the Department of Veterans Affairs headquarters to mourn the killing of VA ICU nurse Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapolis on January 24, 2026. (Credit Image: © Sue Dorfman/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • ICE 2026: Minneapolis Operation Metro Surge: Pretti Crime Scene
    DUKAS_193184975_ZUM
    ICE 2026: Minneapolis Operation Metro Surge: Pretti Crime Scene
    January 25, 2026, Minneapolis, Mn, USA: A bullet was found inside the Nicollet Adult Day Care, behind Alex Pretti's memorial, on January 25, 2025 an irony given Trump's justification for deploying federal agents to Minnesota was to protect day care centers while targeting illegal immigrant communities, even though no significant fraud was found, and most Somali-born are are legal US citizens. Minneapolis police entered the building that serves older adults to get warm and watch an unsecured crime scene. The Minneapolis state BCA located the bullet only after securing a warrant 24 hours later, following ICE's refusal to allow entry. (More than 30 hours after Pretti's death, federal investigators had still not visited the building, despite multiple people walking through rooms that may have held critical evidence.) Pretti had been there just days earlier, having coffee with the owner. The center is closed to the public while investigations continue. (Credit Image: © Amy Katz/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • ICE Crackdown 2026: Minneapolis Operation Metro Surge
    DUKAS_193146211_ZUM
    ICE Crackdown 2026: Minneapolis Operation Metro Surge
    January 25, 2026, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA: A US Border Patrol agent pulls the pin of a crowd control grenade before throwing it at assembled press and protesters outside a Minneapolis hotel where a demonstration was staged in the wake of the killing of a second local resident by US Border Patrol this month. (Credit Image: © Tom Hudson/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • ICE Crackdown 2026: Minneapolis Operation Metro Surge
    DUKAS_193140951_ZUM
    ICE Crackdown 2026: Minneapolis Operation Metro Surge
    January 25, 2026, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA: A US Border Patrol agent pulls the pin of a crowd control grenade before throwing it at assembled press and protesters outside a Minneapolis hotel where a demonstration was staged in the wake of the killing of a second local resident by US Border Patrol this month. (Credit Image: © Tom Hudson/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • ICE 2026 Minneapolis: Protestor Killing Aftermath Protests
    DUKAS_193128682_ZUM
    ICE 2026 Minneapolis: Protestor Killing Aftermath Protests
    January 25, 2026, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA: A protester holds a sign saying 'ONE OF OUR OWN' during a memorial rally for slain Minneapolis man A. Pretti, who was killed by federal immigration agents yesterday. (Credit Image: © Tom Hudson/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • ICE 2026: Minneapolis Anti-ICE Protest At Target Center
    DUKAS_193099971_ZUM
    ICE 2026: Minneapolis Anti-ICE Protest At Target Center
    January 23, 2026, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA: A giant ICE OUT of Minnesota Sign looms over tens of thousands of protestors who filled much of the Target Center after marching downtown. The sports and entertainment stadium opened its doors for free to thousands of people braving record cold temperatures to warm up and be with the community in a rally led by faith leaders and indigenous representatives. (Credit Image: © Amy Katz/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • ICE Crackdown 2026: Minneapolis Anti-ICE Protest
    DUKAS_193028091_ZUM
    ICE Crackdown 2026: Minneapolis Anti-ICE Protest
    January 22, 2026, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA: A man from North Dakota waves his military grandfather's flag upside down across from the Whipple Federal Building, where the ICE Detention center is housing those detained (many say kidnapped) by Federal ICE agents. He explained this is the international sign of distress, and he is flying it this way because of the extreme duress the USA is in due to the current President sending an aggressive militia into democratic cities, who are committing violence against the American people. Behind him is a tall, metal fence someone erected in the middle of the night, the night before. (Credit Image: © Amy Katz/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • ICE Crackdown 2026: Minneapolis Anti-ICE Protest
    DUKAS_192965459_ZUM
    ICE Crackdown 2026: Minneapolis Anti-ICE Protest
    January 21, 2026, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA: A sign bearing the image of slain Minnesota woman Renee Good sits as part of a memorial being maintained at the site where she was killed by Border Patrol agent Jonathan Ross earlier this month. (Credit Image: © Tom Hudson/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • ICE Crackdown 2026: Minneapolis Anti-ICE Protest
    DUKAS_192965442_ZUM
    ICE Crackdown 2026: Minneapolis Anti-ICE Protest
    January 21, 2026, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA: Signs, stuffed animals, and flowers are piled at a makeshift memorial at the site where Renee Good was killed by US Border Patrol agent Jonathan Ross earlier this month. Local activists have maintained an around the clock vigil at the site, despite attempts by officials to dismantle parts of it. (Credit Image: © Tom Hudson/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • Anti-ICE Protest: Virginia
    DUKAS_192548621_ZUM
    Anti-ICE Protest: Virginia
    January 9, 2026, Richmond, Virginia, USA: A man waves an American flag during a demonstration in South Richmond, protesting the murder of Renee Good by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis earlier this week. (Credit Image: © Tom Hudson/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381861_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381850_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    on Dec. 19th, The Louisiana National Guard got yet another extension to stay in New Orleans. They have been assisting the police department since Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans recently earned the dubious honor of having the highest crime rate in the nation. The areas of the city the Guard control are greatly under control but had they had to pull out, mayhem was almost certain to break out. Many in the state are against the Guard staying on due to the expense but the citizens of New Orleans for the most part are greatly relieved. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2008 by Julie Dermansky

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381847_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381981_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    EXCLUSIVE: September 8, 2005 - New Orleans, Louisiana, United States: Clothilde Mack would not evacuate when hurricane Katrina neared. She stayed put to look after her three cats. She lived for more than half her 85 years in a clapboard house in the Crescent City's Lower Ninth District. She had sat out big storms before. As the waters rose and neighbors fled or drowned, she called the emergency 911 number on her mobile telephone. Ten days later, members of the Oregon National Guard rescued her by boat. Mrs Mack almost sang with joy when the rescue party arrived. "Thank the Lord for you all!" she exclaimed. "I waited and waited but no one came to my door." (Toby Harnden/Polaris) (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    Toby Harnden

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381978_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    EXCLUSIVE: September 8, 2005 - New Orleans, Louisiana, United States: Clothilde Mack would not evacuate when hurricane Katrina neared. She stayed put to look after her three cats. She lived for more than half her 85 years in a clapboard house in the Crescent City's Lower Ninth District. She had sat out big storms before. As the waters rose and neighbors fled or drowned, she called the emergency 911 number on her mobile telephone. Ten days later, members of the Oregon National Guard rescued her by boat. Mrs Mack almost sang with joy when the rescue party arrived. "Thank the Lord for you all!" she exclaimed. "I waited and waited but no one came to my door." (Toby Harnden/Polaris) (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    Toby Harnden

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381975_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    on Dec. 19th, The Louisiana National Guard got yet another extension to stay in New Orleans. They have been assisting the police department since Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans recently earned the dubious honor of having the highest crime rate in the nation. The areas of the city the Guard control are greatly under control but had they had to pull out, mayhem was almost certain to break out. Many in the state are against the Guard staying on due to the expense but the citizens of New Orleans for the most part are greatly relieved. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2008 by Julie Dermansky

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381972_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    on Dec. 19th, The Louisiana National Guard got yet another extension to stay in New Orleans. They have been assisting the police department since Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans recently earned the dubious honor of having the highest crime rate in the nation. The areas of the city the Guard control are greatly under control but had they had to pull out, mayhem was almost certain to break out. Many in the state are against the Guard staying on due to the expense but the citizens of New Orleans for the most part are greatly relieved. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2008 by Julie Dermansky

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381969_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381965_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381962_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381959_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    EXCLUSIVE: September 8, 2005 - New Orleans, Louisiana, United States: Clothilde Mack would not evacuate when hurricane Katrina neared. She stayed put to look after her three cats. She lived for more than half her 85 years in a clapboard house in the Crescent City's Lower Ninth District. She had sat out big storms before. As the waters rose and neighbors fled or drowned, she called the emergency 911 number on her mobile telephone. Ten days later, members of the Oregon National Guard rescued her by boat. Mrs Mack almost sang with joy when the rescue party arrived. "Thank the Lord for you all!" she exclaimed. "I waited and waited but no one came to my door." (Toby Harnden/Polaris) (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    Toby Harnden

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381956_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    EXCLUSIVE: September 8, 2005 - New Orleans, Louisiana, United States: Clothilde Mack would not evacuate when hurricane Katrina neared. She stayed put to look after her three cats. She lived for more than half her 85 years in a clapboard house in the Crescent City's Lower Ninth District. She had sat out big storms before. As the waters rose and neighbors fled or drowned, she called the emergency 911 number on her mobile telephone. Ten days later, members of the Oregon National Guard rescued her by boat. Mrs Mack almost sang with joy when the rescue party arrived. "Thank the Lord for you all!" she exclaimed. "I waited and waited but no one came to my door." (Toby Harnden/Polaris) (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    Toby Harnden

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381953_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    EXCLUSIVE: September 8, 2005 - New Orleans, Louisiana, United States: Clothilde Mack would not evacuate when hurricane Katrina neared. She stayed put to look after her three cats. She lived for more than half her 85 years in a clapboard house in the Crescent City's Lower Ninth District. She had sat out big storms before. As the waters rose and neighbors fled or drowned, she called the emergency 911 number on her mobile telephone. Ten days later, members of the Oregon National Guard rescued her by boat. Mrs Mack almost sang with joy when the rescue party arrived. "Thank the Lord for you all!" she exclaimed. "I waited and waited but no one came to my door." (Toby Harnden/Polaris) (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    Toby Harnden

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381950_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    EXCLUSIVE: September 8, 2005 - New Orleans, Louisiana, United States: Clothilde Mack would not evacuate when hurricane Katrina neared. She stayed put to look after her three cats. She lived for more than half her 85 years in a clapboard house in the Crescent City's Lower Ninth District. She had sat out big storms before. As the waters rose and neighbors fled or drowned, she called the emergency 911 number on her mobile telephone. Ten days later, members of the Oregon National Guard rescued her by boat. Mrs Mack almost sang with joy when the rescue party arrived. "Thank the Lord for you all!" she exclaimed. "I waited and waited but no one came to my door." (Toby Harnden/Polaris) (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    Toby Harnden

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381946_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381943_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381940_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381937_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381934_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381931_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381928_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    EXCLUSIVE: September 8, 2005 - New Orleans, Louisiana, United States: Clothilde Mack would not evacuate when hurricane Katrina neared. She stayed put to look after her three cats. She lived for more than half her 85 years in a clapboard house in the Crescent City's Lower Ninth District. She had sat out big storms before. As the waters rose and neighbors fled or drowned, she called the emergency 911 number on her mobile telephone. Ten days later, members of the Oregon National Guard rescued her by boat. Mrs Mack almost sang with joy when the rescue party arrived. "Thank the Lord for you all!" she exclaimed. "I waited and waited but no one came to my door." (Toby Harnden/Polaris) (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    Toby Harnden

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381923_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    EXCLUSIVE: September 8, 2005 - New Orleans, Louisiana, United States: Clothilde Mack would not evacuate when hurricane Katrina neared. She stayed put to look after her three cats. She lived for more than half her 85 years in a clapboard house in the Crescent City's Lower Ninth District. She had sat out big storms before. As the waters rose and neighbors fled or drowned, she called the emergency 911 number on her mobile telephone. Ten days later, members of the Oregon National Guard rescued her by boat. Mrs Mack almost sang with joy when the rescue party arrived. "Thank the Lord for you all!" she exclaimed. "I waited and waited but no one came to my door." (Toby Harnden/Polaris) (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    Toby Harnden

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381918_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    EXCLUSIVE: September 8, 2005 - New Orleans, Louisiana, United States: Clothilde Mack would not evacuate when hurricane Katrina neared. She stayed put to look after her three cats. She lived for more than half her 85 years in a clapboard house in the Crescent City's Lower Ninth District. She had sat out big storms before. As the waters rose and neighbors fled or drowned, she called the emergency 911 number on her mobile telephone. Ten days later, members of the Oregon National Guard rescued her by boat. Mrs Mack almost sang with joy when the rescue party arrived. "Thank the Lord for you all!" she exclaimed. "I waited and waited but no one came to my door." (Toby Harnden/Polaris) (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    Toby Harnden

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381913_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    on Dec. 19th, The Louisiana National Guard got yet another extension to stay in New Orleans. They have been assisting the police department since Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans recently earned the dubious honor of having the highest crime rate in the nation. The areas of the city the Guard control are greatly under control but had they had to pull out, mayhem was almost certain to break out. Many in the state are against the Guard staying on due to the expense but the citizens of New Orleans for the most part are greatly relieved. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2008 by Julie Dermansky

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381908_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381903_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381898_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381893_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381889_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381885_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381880_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    EXCLUSIVE: September 8, 2005 - New Orleans, Louisiana, United States: Clothilde Mack would not evacuate when hurricane Katrina neared. She stayed put to look after her three cats. She lived for more than half her 85 years in a clapboard house in the Crescent City's Lower Ninth District. She had sat out big storms before. As the waters rose and neighbors fled or drowned, she called the emergency 911 number on her mobile telephone. Ten days later, members of the Oregon National Guard rescued her by boat. Mrs Mack almost sang with joy when the rescue party arrived. "Thank the Lord for you all!" she exclaimed. "I waited and waited but no one came to my door." (Toby Harnden/Polaris) (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    Toby Harnden

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381876_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    EXCLUSIVE: September 8, 2005 - New Orleans, Louisiana, United States: Clothilde Mack would not evacuate when hurricane Katrina neared. She stayed put to look after her three cats. She lived for more than half her 85 years in a clapboard house in the Crescent City's Lower Ninth District. She had sat out big storms before. As the waters rose and neighbors fled or drowned, she called the emergency 911 number on her mobile telephone. Ten days later, members of the Oregon National Guard rescued her by boat. Mrs Mack almost sang with joy when the rescue party arrived. "Thank the Lord for you all!" she exclaimed. "I waited and waited but no one came to my door." (Toby Harnden/Polaris) (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    Toby Harnden

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381873_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    EXCLUSIVE: September 8, 2005 - New Orleans, Louisiana, United States: Clothilde Mack would not evacuate when hurricane Katrina neared. She stayed put to look after her three cats. She lived for more than half her 85 years in a clapboard house in the Crescent City's Lower Ninth District. She had sat out big storms before. As the waters rose and neighbors fled or drowned, she called the emergency 911 number on her mobile telephone. Ten days later, members of the Oregon National Guard rescued her by boat. Mrs Mack almost sang with joy when the rescue party arrived. "Thank the Lord for you all!" she exclaimed. "I waited and waited but no one came to my door." (Toby Harnden/Polaris) (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    Toby Harnden

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381870_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    on Dec. 19th, The Louisiana National Guard got yet another extension to stay in New Orleans. They have been assisting the police department since Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans recently earned the dubious honor of having the highest crime rate in the nation. The areas of the city the Guard control are greatly under control but had they had to pull out, mayhem was almost certain to break out. Many in the state are against the Guard staying on due to the expense but the citizens of New Orleans for the most part are greatly relieved. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2008 by Julie Dermansky

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
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    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    DUKAS_188381864_POL
    US National Guard deployed to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Three years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans still needs the military to help keep order in certain neighborhoods. This year alone, New Orleans has had at least 127 murders, stunning given that roughly a third of the city's population has not returned since Katrina. About 300 members of the Louisiana National Guard still patrol the streets in some neighborhoods, using cars no longer needed by the state police. These soldiers do not make arrests, but they can handcuff and detain suspects until the police arrive. (POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • USS Nimitz at Sea
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    USS Nimitz at Sea
    October 25, 2013 - Ionian Sea: A Blackhawk helicopter flies near the nuclear powered United States Navy aircraft carrier USS Nimitz (CVN-68) which was on patrol in the Ionian Sea. The photo was taken from the cruise ship Celebrity Equinox that was in the Ionian Sea en route to Kotor, Montenegro. (Ron Sachs/CNP/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2013 Ron Sachs Consolidated News Photos All Rights Reserved

     

  • USS Nimitz at Sea
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    USS Nimitz at Sea
    October 25, 2013 - Ionian Sea: The nuclear powered United States Navy aircraft carrier USS Nimitz (CVN-68) on patrol in the Ionian Sea. The photo was taken from the cruise ship Celebrity Equinox that was in the Ionian Sea en route to Kotor, Montenegro. (Ron Sachs/CNP/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2013 Ron Sachs Consolidated News Photos All Rights Reserved

     

  • Ukrainian Navy on patrol in Black Sea off Odesa coast
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    Ukrainian Navy on patrol in Black Sea off Odesa coast
    A machine gun is aboard a Ukrainian Navy cutter while on patrol in the Black Sea along the coast of Odesa, Ukraine, on April 17, 2025. (Photo by Nina Liashonok/Ukrinform/POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    Ukrinform

     

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