More than 125 join anti-ICE protest along Trinity Drive in Los Alamos
More than 125 people marched and gathered along Trinity Drive in Los Alamos to protest ICE; photos show demonstrators carrying signs near Ashley Pond.

More than 125 people turned out for an anti-ICE demonstration that marched and gathered along Trinity Drive in Los Alamos on Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026, according to local coverage. Published photographs show demonstrators carrying signs and walking near Ashley Pond and along the Trinity Drive corridor.
The event was documented in multiple courtesy photos published by the Los Alamos Reporter, which ran a post headlined “More Than 125 People Participate In Sunday’s Anti-ICE Protest In Los Alamos.” A separate summary corroborated the date, attendance figure and general activity, describing the gathering as an anti-ICE demonstration that drew “more than 125 participants who marched and gathered along Trinity Drive.” The summary’s extract ends mid-sentence and did not provide additional context.
Organizers’ names, statements from participants, and any comment from law enforcement or county officials were not included in the published material. The coverage likewise did not report arrests, citations, injuries, property damage, permit details, or the protest’s precise start and end times. Photographs are credited as courtesy photos but provide the primary on-the-ground documentation in the available reporting.
For residents, the protest is notable because Trinity Drive and the Ashley Pond area are visible public spaces where demonstrations are likely to be seen by commuters, shoppers and neighbors. The turnout of more than 125 people represents a measurable instance of civic engagement in Los Alamos County on a federal policy issue, signaling local interest in debates over Immigration and Customs Enforcement practices. Demonstrations like this can influence local civic discourse, prompt inquiries to elected officials, and shape voter attention on immigration and public-safety matters ahead of future civic cycles.
Institutionally, the subject of the protest - ICE - is a federal agency, so local demonstrations offer a way for county residents to express views about federal policy in a public forum. County government, municipal authorities and law-enforcement agencies typically handle the local public-safety and permitting aspects of such events; however, no comments from those bodies appeared in the available reporting. That absence leaves open questions about official responses, crowd management and any follow-up coordination between organizers and local authorities.
What comes next for readers is practical: monitor local outlets for statements from organizers and local officials, and watch for any follow-up coverage that may provide names, demands, or official responses. The demonstration on Trinity Drive is one of several visible indicators that immigration enforcement remains a mobilizing issue for some Los Alamos residents, and it may shape local civic conversations and engagement in the weeks ahead.
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