Donald Trump’s supporters were mobbed and assaulted by protestors after a rally in San Jose, Calif., Thursday night, with one woman cornered, spit on and pelted with eggs.

NBC News writes the violence broke out after the event wrapped up just before 8 p.m. local time. Some supporters were punched, NBC reports. Watch video from the event:

Trump himself said the rally was “great” and that “thugs” burned an American flag outside.

Trump reassigns “Lyin’” nickname from Ted Cruz to Hillary Clinton: “Ted Cruz is no longer a liar, we don’t say ‘Lyin’ Ted’ anymore,” Trump said at the rally in San Jose, according to the Hill. “We love Ted, we love him, right?” Trump said about his former GOP primary rival. But Clinton? “I’d love to pull it out and just use it on lying, crooked Hillary because she is a liar.” He was speaking after the Democrat blasted his foreign policy in a speech in San Diego.

Also read: Clinton rips Trump’s ‘dangerously incoherent’ foreign policy ideas.

Trump hammers ‘Mexican’ judge: Trump, meanwhile is keeping up attacks on the federal judge presiding over the civil fraud lawsuits against Trump University. He told The Wall Street Journal that U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel had “an absolute conflict” in presiding over the litigation since the judge is “of Mexican heritage” and a member of a Latino lawyer’s association. (The judge was born in Indiana.) “I’m building a wall,” Trump said in reference to his pledge to seal the southern U.S. border. “It’s an inherent conflict of interest.”

Gun control group backs Clinton: Hillary Clinton won the endorsement of a major gun-control group on Friday. The group, Everytown for Gun Safety, was founded in 2014 by former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. The New York Times reports Everytown also pledged to help Clinton’s campaign get out the vote in California’s primary on Tuesday. The Democratic presidential candidate has frequently addressed the issue of gun control, and Trump has accused her of wanting to abolish the Second Amendment.

Prince’s death may spur opioid-bill action:The official confirmation of the musician Prince’s death by opioid overdose is likely to reverberate in Washington, writes the New York Times. Lawmakers are still trying to hammer out a deal on legislation that attempts to stem a national crisis in abuse of those drugs. The Times notes high-profile drug fatalities have spurred lawmakers in the past. The death from a cocaine overdose of college basketball star Len Bias in 1986 is widely credited with starting the crackdown that came to be known as the war on drugs.