logo
Ice raids in LA continue as armed agents target immigrant communities

Ice raids in LA continue as armed agents target immigrant communities

The Guardian16-06-2025

US immigration raids continued to target southern California communities in recent days, including at a popular flea market and in a Los Angeles suburb where US citizens were detained.
On Saturday, as mass protests swept the nation, including tens of thousands demonstrating in LA, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) agents descended on a swap meet in Santa Fe Springs in southeast LA county. Video showed dozens of heavily armed, masked officers carrying out the raid before a scheduled concert at the long-running event that features vendors, food and entertainment every weekend
Witnesses told the Los Angeles Times that agents appeared to be going after people who 'looked Hispanic in any way', sparking widespread fear.
A US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spokesperson said on Monday that it arrested two people at the swap meet who are now facing deportation.
The crowd at the swap meet largely cleared out before a scheduled 5.30pm concert, which was ultimately canceled, leaving the site unusually empty for a spring Saturday. Another witness told ABC7 agents were asking attendees where they were from: 'I told them I was from the United States, and then they proceeded to walk away, and they took a picture of me … I took it as a personal threat.'
The swap meet arrests came at the end of more than a week of sustained raids and Ice activity in the region that have targeted day laborers outside Home Depot, car washers, warehouse workers, people outside churches and other residents in public spaces. The raids have continued as Donald Trump has sent the national guard and marines to LA to respond to protests, despite the objections of California leaders, who have sued to stop a deployment they deem unconstitutional.
Also over the weekend, video emerged of immigration actions in Montebello, a suburb east of the city of LA. Last Thursday, armed border patrol agents, who drove in an unmarked car, ended up detaining Jason Brian Gavidia and pressing him against a fence by an auto body shop he runs, the New York Times reported.
An agent interrogated Gavidia, a US citizen, asking, 'What hospital were you born at?' Gavidia, 29, was born down the street, and video shows agents twisting his arm, as he said, 'I'm American! … I'll show you my ID. I was born here.' A witness filming the encounter is heard saying: 'Literally based off skin color.'
Gavidia was released, but Javier Ramirez, another US citizen who is Gadivia's friend and coworker, was detained by two agents, forced facedown on the ground and taken to federal detention, where he has remained in custody, the New York Times reported.
Salvador Melendez, the mayor of Montebello, a city that is 79% Latino, told the Guardian on Monday that the videos and reports of Ice in his community had caused widespread anxiety.
'This is racial profiling. They're stopping folks because of the way they look,' said Melendez. 'Ice agents are terrorizing our community. They are taking actions and asking questions later. There is absolutely no due process.'
Ice agents were spotted in a small area of Montebello, the mayor said. 'But psychologically, they are already in our whole city. People are not going to work, not going out, not going to school. People don't want to ride the bus. It's extremely unfair … seeing Ice agents come in with these big guns, it almost feels like a war zone. They're militarized to apprehend folks and they rough up our people.'
After millions protested Trump in national 'No Kings' demonstrations, the president pledged Sunday to escalate Ice raids in Democratic-run cities, including LA, Chicago and New York.
'Folks have to stay vigilant, we have to look out for one another. If you see something, alert your neighbors,' said Melendez. 'It's beautiful to see people coming together, helping their neighbors and rallying against this … This is not normal and we have to be outspoken.'
Immigrant rights' lawyers have said that people detained in the raids have disappeared or had little contact with their attorneys or families. Amid the crackdown, residents across the region have increasingly gone into hiding, turning typically lively immigrant hubs desolate.
DHS and border patrol did not respond to inquiries about the detentions in Montebello, but Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary, said in a press release Monday: 'DHS targets have nothing to do with an individuals' skin color. What makes someone a target is if they are in the United States illegally.'
A spokesperson added in a statement to the Guardian: 'DHS and its components continue to enforce the law every day in greater Los Angeles and throughout the country … DHS agencies will not be deterred from the completion of our mission.'
In LA's Koreatown, a dense immigrant neighborhood, street vendors have been staying home out of fear of raids, causing significant financial hardships, said Andreina Kniss, an organizer with Ktown for All, a mutual aid group. Volunteers identified more than 60 families of vendors out of work and fundraised more than $50,000 for them, she said. The group had distributed funds to 36 families covering a month of expenses, as of Monday morning, allowing vulnerable workers to stay home.
'We felt like we couldn't stand around and watch them have to make the choice between being kidnapped and paying their bills,' she said. 'The city is being held hostage economically, and it's not going to end until these Ice raids end.'
She hoped to see mutual aid efforts expand: 'The $2,000 you raise for a family might prevent a family separation. It can change people's lives. We're just normal neighbors who care about neighbors.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US sees spate of arrests of civilians impersonating Ice officers
US sees spate of arrests of civilians impersonating Ice officers

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

US sees spate of arrests of civilians impersonating Ice officers

Police in southern California arrested a man suspected of posing as a federal immigration officer this week, the latest in a series of such arrests, as masked, plainclothes immigration agents are deployed nationwide to meet the Trump administration's mass deportation targets. The man, Fernando Diaz, was arrested by Huntington Park police after officers said they found a loaded gun and official-looking documents with Department of Homeland Security headings in his SUV, according to NBC Los Angeles. Officers were impounding his vehicle for parking in a handicapped zone when Diaz asked to retrieve items inside, the police said. Among the items seen by officers in the car were 'multiple copies of passports not registered under the individual's name', NBC reports. Diaz was arrested for possession of the allegedly unregistered firearm and released on bail. The Huntington Park police chief and mayor accused Diaz of impersonating an immigration agent at a news conference, a move Diaz later told the NBC News affiliate he was surprised by. Diaz also denied to the outlet that he had posed as an officer with border patrol or Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice). At the news conference, police showed reporters paper they found inside his car with an official-looking US Customs and Border Protection header. The arrest is one of several cases involving people allegedly impersonating immigration officials, as the nationwide crackdown on undocumented immigrants intensifies. Experts have warned that federal agents' increased practice of masking while carrying out immigration raids and arrests makes it easier for imposters to pose as federal officers. Around the country, the sight of Ice officers emerging from unmarked cars in plainclothes to make arrests has become increasingly common. In March, for instance, a Tufts University student was seen on video being arrested by masked Ice officials outside her apartment, after her visa had been revoked for writing an opinion article in her university newspaper advocating for Palestinian rights. And many federal agents operating in the Los Angeles region in recent weeks have been masked. In late January, a week after Trump took office, a man in South Carolina was arrested and charged with kidnapping and impersonating an officer, after allegedly presenting himself as an Ice officer and detaining a group of Latino men. In February, two people impersonating Ice officers attempted to enter a Temple University residence hall. CNN reported that Philadelphia police later arrested one of them, a 22-year-old student, who was charged with impersonating an officer. In North Carolina the same week, another man, Carl Thomas Bennett, was arrested after allegedly impersonating an Ice officer and sexually assaulting a woman. Bennett reportedly threatened to deport the woman if she did not comply. In April, a man in Indiantown, Florida, was arrested for impersonating an Ice officer and targeting immigrants. Two men reported to the police that the man had performed a fake traffic stop, and then asked for their documents and immigration status. Mike German, a former FBI agent and fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice, told the Guardian last week that the shootings of two Democratic lawmakers in Minnesota, by a suspect who allegedly impersonated a police officer, highlights the danger of police not looking like police. 'Federal agents wearing masks and casual clothing significantly increases this risk of any citizen dressing up in a way that fools the public into believing they are law enforcement so they can engage in illegal activity. It is a public safety threat, and it's also a threat to the agents and officers themselves, because people will not immediately be able to distinguish between who is engaged in legitimate activity or illegitimate activity when violence is occurring in public,' he said.

Stunning reason why mother gave marijuana edibles to 6-year-old daughter
Stunning reason why mother gave marijuana edibles to 6-year-old daughter

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Stunning reason why mother gave marijuana edibles to 6-year-old daughter

An Arkansas mother allegedly confessed to giving her children - including her youngest daughter - marijuana, claiming it was a method to discourage them from smoking it themselves. Deanna Sue Woods, 36, was sentenced to prison on Wednesday after allegedly admitting to allowing her three children - ages 6, 10, and 15 - to consume marijuana in various forms, including honey and chocolate edibles, as well as drags from her own vape pen, according to a probable cause affidavit obtained by People. She will now serve 120 days in jail, with 60 days of credit, followed by 60 months of supervised probation and a no-contact order with her children. In January, a Department of Human Services (DHS) employee spoke with Woods' six-year-old daughter, through whom they learned that the mother had been allowing three out of four of her children to ingest marijuana and THC-infused edibles, the doc alleges. The young girl was quickly taken for a drug test, which confirmed traces of THC in her system. Armed with this information, the agency swiftly contacted a detective with the Brookland Police Department, who arrested Woods the following day, according to the affidavit. Once in custody, Woods - who has a valid medical marijuana card, according to KBTX News - allegedly agreed to speak with the arresting detective after being read her Miranda rights, during which she confessed to additional drug-related offenses. According to court documents, Woods allegedly told Detective Dustin Norwood that she had given three out of four of her children both honey and chocolate edibles laced with marijuana. She also allegedly confessed to allowing both her six-year-old daughter and her 10-year-old child to take hits from her personal vape pen. While speaking with Norwood, Woods allegedly admitted to smoking marijuana herself - often around her one-year-old toddler, even claiming she had used the drug while breastfeeding, according to court documents. She also allegedly confessed to either giving marijuana to or smoking it around her four children at least 12 times over the past year, as reported by KBTX. However, Woods allegedly claimed that she did this in an attempt to 'deter' her children from using the drug, the docs claim. Following her confessions, according to the affidavit, the 36-year-old mother agreed to write down her statement. On Wednesday, Woods pleaded guilty and was charged with 12 counts each of endangering the welfare of a minor in the first degree and introduction of a controlled substance into the body of another person, as reported by People. She is only allowed contact with her children under the conditions set by the DHS and at the discretion of their guardian, according to KBTX. A judge also ordered Woods to complete parenting classes, undergo a substance abuse assessment, and attend a rehabilitation program as part of her sentence. Additionally, she was ordered to pay all court costs and fees. Woods' arrest comes less than a month after a Texas woman was taken into custody after her one-year-old nephew inhaled from her marijuana vape pen. Vianney Alyssa Acosta, 20, was arrested and booked into the El Paso County Jail last month on charges of child endangerment and possession of a controlled substance. She was released the same day after posting $6,000 bail. The incident occurred on May 16 when emergency responders were called to a home on Walker Post Avenue in east El Paso for a toddler who was having difficulty breathing. A criminal complaint later stated the child had been 'smoking a THC vape,' according to the El Paso Times. When deputies arrived the boy was inconsolable, they said. He 'had droopy eyes and was trying to go to sleep,' the affidavit states. The child's father, grandmother, and Acosta were home at the time, while his mother was at work. According to the affidavit, the grandmother said she had stepped into the bathroom when Acosta heard the child coughing and found him in her bedroom holding the vape. The grandmother told deputies the device contained 'weed' and belonged to Acosta. When asked if she knew her daughter used THC vapes, she allegedly responded: 'Well she's 20.' Acosta told deputies she had left the vape in her room and believed it was out of reach. She 'right away stated that she had her THC vape somewhere in her room where she thought the victim couldn't reach it,' a deputy noted in the report. Acosta then brought deputies into her bedroom and pointed out the spot where she had left her vape - on top of a nightstand she believed was out of the toddler's reach. The nightstand stood about two feet tall, investigators noted. She acknowledged that her nephew 'has ways to get on the bed to reach out for things' and admitted the vape 'was out in the open with just miscellaneous items on top covering it,' according to the affidavit. Although she didn't see the child actually use the pen, Acosta told deputies she assumed he had because 'he was red; coughing and observed a little bit of smoke,' which she identified as typical 'side effects of using THC vapes.' She also claimed she believed the vape was not working at the time, telling deputies it was likely not charged and had already run out of THC. Deputies then transported the boy and his father - who told officers he had no idea what had happened - to The Hospitals of Providence East, where a urine test confirmed the presence of THC, authorities said.

Migrants face restrictions on social housing
Migrants face restrictions on social housing

Times

time2 hours ago

  • Times

Migrants face restrictions on social housing

A new immigration clampdown will limit access to social housing to people with strong, long-term connections to Ireland, and emergency homeless accommodation will also be restricted. Under plans due to go to cabinet in the next fortnight, social housing applicants must be lawfully and habitually resident in Ireland, meaning they must have close ties with the state, have been living in Ireland for some time and intend to stay for the foreseeable future. The government first floated the suggestions in a proposed law early last year, but later dropped the plans. It is understood that, after extensive legal advice in recent months, the measures are back on the table. The rules could spark controversy because they are likely to lead to an increase in non-Irish nationals being excluded from housing and homeless lists. Ministers will be told that the law is needed to eliminate 'ambiguity' over existing rules for non-Irish nationals who want to apply for social housing at a time of intense public and political scrutiny over housing waiting lists. Alongside the new rules, ministers are also due to approve plans to introduce similar eligibility criteria for access to homeless accommodation. This will mean that local authorities will not be required to assess households for homeless supports unless they are legally and habitually resident in the state. Local authorities currently do not have a legal basis to refuse accommodation based on legal or habitual residence. • Ministerial row stalls use of empty offices to house asylum seekers The issue of immigration and its effect on the homeless figures was previously raised by Simon Harris, the tanaiste, in an interview with The Sunday Times. At the time, the Fine Gael leader said: 'People understand the fact that homelessness numbers are heavily impacted by the fact we are seeing many people seek protection in our country, seek asylum in our country and many people come from abroad hoping to have a new future in Ireland and immigration. It has many, many pluses, but it has had a challenge there.' The Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission previously raised concerns about any move to change social housing eligibility, saying it could have a 'discriminatory and disproportionate impact on ethnic minority communities, and on the most vulnerable groups in our society'. It added that applying the new habitual residence condition to social housing assistance was likely to result in criticism of Ireland by human rights monitoring bodies. Under further changes due to be signed off, there will be an independent­ appeals mechanism for people who feel they have been unfairly excluded from social housing eligibility. Changes to the criteria for getting homeless accommodation will be made by way of an amendment to the Housing Act 1988, which sets out what assistance can be offered by local authorities in terms of homelessness. It comes after homeless figures again reached another record high. Figures released last week by the Department of Housing show that 15,747 people were living in emergency accommodation in May, an increase of 167 people on those recorded as homeless in April. The total includes 4,844 children. At present, asylum seekers are not entitled to housing support or emergency beds. However, if an asylum seeker is granted leave to remain and has nowhere to stay, and potentially leaves direct provision, they will show up on official homeless figures. The homeless figures for May show that 3,031 adults in emergency accommodation, or 28 per cent of the overall adults, were not citizens of the European Economic Area. Separately, it has emerged that the planned delivery of almost 3,000 social homes has been delayed over value-for-money concerns. The homes were due to be built in Dublin, Wicklow, Kildare and Sligo by a consortium under the public-private partnership model. The Department of Housing said this weekend the decision 'reflects a careful consideration of the costs and taxpayer funding'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store