Updated

Two protesters in Southern California were injured Saturday after a driver allegedly plowed through a demonstration where both President Trump supporters and Black Lives Matter demonstrators had gathered.

The driver in the Yorba Linda incident -- about 34 miles southeast of downtown Los Angeles -- didn’t stop after driving through the crowd and protesters chased the driver until she was detained by police soon after a crash, the Orange County Register reported. The unidentified suspect was arrested on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon and attempted murder, the report said.

The victims were taken to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries, Carrie Braun, a spokeswoman for the Orange County Sheriff’s Department, said.

The driver had been involved in the protest but officials didn’t say which side she was supporting. Authorities also declined to identify which side the victims were on, the Register reported, but videos on social media appeared to show the suspect driving through mainly Trump supporters.

LA POLICE DETAIN, RELEASE DRIVER AFTER VEHICLE PLOWS INTO PROTESTERS; AT LEAST 1 INJURED: REPORT 

The anti-police and pro-Trump protesters converged in the parking lot of the Yorba Linda Public Library and had been confronting each other when the white sedan split through the group in the parking lot.

The Register reported it was not known how fast the car was going. The vehicle's rear window had been broken out, and it had a flagpole sticking out of it. In the front, the windshield was smashed.

DENVER POLICE DETAIN DRIVER AFTER VEHICLE PLOWS INTO BREONNA TAYLOR PROTESTERS 

Previously, a driver plowed through a Hollywood anti-racism protest on Thursday night, sending at least one person to the hospital.

On Wednesday, a driver was detained in Denver after allegedly plowing a vehicle into a crowd of protesters, reports said.

A Seattle anti-racism protester was killed in July when a driver drove onto a closed freeway where protesters had congregated.

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Protests erupted across the country last week, following a grand jury decision in Louisville, Ky., on Wednesday in which it was announced no officer would be directly charged in the death of Breonna Taylor. One officer was charged with wanton endangerment after bullets entered a neighboring home during a March drug raid.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.