In June 2016, BAMN led a counter-protest against a rally held by the
Traditionalist Worker Party, a
white nationalist group, outside of the
California State Capitol in Sacramento. Violence at the protests resulted in nine people being hospitalized, seven with stab wounds. Yvette Felarca, a BAMN spokeswoman, said their protest successfully "chased away the neo-Nazis and kept them from recruiting new members." In July 2017, a year after the riot, authorities arrested Felarca and charged her with "inciting and participating in a riot and assault likely to cause great bodily injury." Felarca and her lawyer, BAMN's national chair Shanta Driver, say the white nationalists were the aggressors and BAMN members had the right to defend themselves. Felarca told
The Guardian that she was stabbed in the arm and struck in the head which resulted in her getting stitches. In December 2018 the group were present during the
Central American migrant caravans of 2018. Various militants were present during riots and demonstrations against the security forces, in the city of
Tijuana, holding back the eviction migrants in some parts of the city. Some civilian organizations distanced themselves from the group, for their violent protests and history of riots in the United States. ==See also==