
U.S. immigration agents arrest Mexican boxer Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. for deportation
Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials arrested Chávez Jr. in Studio City on Wednesday and are processing him for expedited removal from the U.S., according to the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE.
A Homeland Security news release said Chávez Jr. had been flagged as a public safety threat, but 'the Biden administration indicated in internal records he was not an immigration enforcement priority.'
Chávez Jr.'s manager, Sean Gibbons, told The Times they are currently 'working on a few issues' following the boxer's arrest but had no further comment.
The son of Mexican boxing legend Julio César Chávez, Chávez Jr. faced off last month against influencer-turned-fighter Jake Paul and lost.
U.S. officials announced the arrest Thursday, referring to the younger Chávez in a as an 'affiliate of the Sinaloa Cartel.' The Trump administration has designated the Mexican drug trafficking group as a 'Foreign Terrorist Organization.'
'Under President Trump, no one is above the law—including world-famous athletes,' Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement.
According to the news release, Chávez Jr. entered the country legally in August 2023, with a B2 tourist visa that was valid until February 2024. He had filed an application for Lawful Permanent Resident status last year in April, officials said, based on his marriage to Frida Chávez, a U.S. citizen, who DHS said 'is connected to the Sinaloa Cartel through a prior relationship with the now-deceased son of the infamous cartel leader Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman.'
Last year, on December 17, according to the Homeland Security news release, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services made a referral to ICE that Chávez Jr. is 'an egregious public safety threat.'
'However, an entry in a DHS law enforcement system under the Biden administration indicated Chávez was not an immigration enforcement priority,' the release stated.
According to the release, Chávez Jr. was allowed to reenter the country on January 4 at the San Ysidro port of entry.
'Following multiple fraudulent statements on his application to become a Lawful Permanent Resident, he was determined to be in the country illegally and removable on June 27,' the Homeland Security release stated.
According to Homeland Security, Chavez Jr. was previously convicted in 2012 of driving under the influence of alcohol and was sentenced to 13 days in jail and 36 months of probation.
In 2023, according to Homeland Security, a district judge issued an arrest warrant for Chavez Jr., 'for the offense of organized crime for the purpose of committing crimes of weapons trafficking and manufacturing crimes.'
The release said the warrant was for 'those who participate in clandestinely bringing weapons, ammunition, cartridges, explosives into the country; and those who manufacture weapons, ammunition, cartridges, and explosives without the corresponding permit.'
Last January, officials said, the Los Angeles Police Department arrested Chavez Jr. and charged him with illegal possession of any assault weapon and manufacture or import short barreled rifle. He was later convicted of the charges.

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San Francisco Chronicle
42 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
California's resistance to Trump: This could be our finest hour
The speech a California leader should give. Apologies to Winston Churchill. From the moment President Donald Trump's raids began, it became clear that the U.S. regime has declared war against California. It's hard to accept this truth. Because we Californians have done nothing — not one thing — to justify the national government sending secret police and thousands of military personnel to attack us. Trump is offering no conditions and proposing no negotiations to end this war. That's because the war itself is Trump's goal, a realization of his violent delusions and desire for unchecked power. He is invading California for the same reason Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine — because the Golden State is a sovereign entity that won't accept dictatorship. Our existence threatens his tyranny. Trump is following Putin's playbook. Both lie the same way, blaming imaginary invaders for wars they themselves started. Trump, like Putin, has launched a war using deceit. In 2014, Russia sent its soldiers into Crimea with their faces masked, wearing unmarked uniforms and without identification, creating confusion about who they were. Trump's Homeland Security agents are also masked, favor unmarked vehicles, refuse to identify themselves and lie about their attacks on local people (even those captured on video). Trump, like Putin, is targeting regional and local elected leaders with violence, arrest and removal from office. Trump also seeks to destroy our economy — he arrests and disappears vital workers, cuts off funding for disaster and imposes illegal tariffs. And, just as Putin systematically takes Ukrainian children from families and sends them to Russia, Trump separates children from parents. Californians are underdogs in Trump's war, just as Ukrainians are in Russia's war. We face the world's largest military, and we have no army. Trump has lawlessly seized control of our California National Guard, which is supposed to defend us in emergencies. The courts don't help. While judges rule in California's favor in some cases, Trump ignores some orders and delays response to others. Congress won't save us. Trump's secret police assaulted our senior U.S. senator in a federal office building, and Trump-aligned colleagues falsely blamed the victim. Our very own local police seem to side with the regime. In Los Angeles, the sheriffs and police departments have fired their 'less lethal' weapons not against lawless federal agents kidnapping our people — but against Californians protecting our neighbors. The good news is that you and I can win this war. In some ways, we are already winning; Trump has sent his secret police and his troops, and still we are not conquered. Indeed, I declare here and now that we will win, because we have no other option than victory. As Albert Camus wrote: 'The moment despair is alone, pure, sure of itself, pitiless in its consequences, it has a merciless power.' We Californians must channel our despair at being attacked into winning a war not of our choosing. Collectively, we ought to muster our discipline to remain nonviolent. We will need to answer federal punches and tear gas with songs and prayers, even when the reward for our nonviolence will be more lies and violence from the Trump regime. We must play defense until this invading enemy loses heart and begins to retreat. Then we must do more: We must seize ground. We should march upon any federal facility where we expect our fellow Californians are being held in conditions that may constitute torture. We are Americans and taxpayers, and those buildings belong to us, and those detained are our neighbors. And when federal officials threaten us, let us protest more, insist more, demand more. These are our rights, and no one can take them away. In this fight, we will need allies. Trump is alienating most of the world, so we should send emissaries abroad to ask for help. We need money and trade to blunt the effects of Trump's economic war. We need tech and intelligence to monitor federal forces. We must convince other countries to exert economic, diplomatic and even military pressure until the secret police and troops are out of California. All this will not be enough. Californians must use seduction, too. While we loathe the regime, we must befriend individual federal agents and soldiers. When safe, we should invite them to our parties, barbecues and ball games. Trump tells them lies about Californians, so let these federal occupiers get to know us. Some may join our side. We shall defend our California, whatever the cost may be. We shall fight on the beaches. We shall fight on the freeways and the surface streets. We shall fight in the car washes and the Home Depot parking lots. We shall fight at food trucks and on farms, in bars, restaurants and dispensaries. We shall never surrender. This may be the most dangerous time in California history. Let us bear ourselves so that, if our Golden State lasts another thousand years, future Californians will look back and say, 'That was our finest hour.'


Chicago Tribune
2 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Bob Kustra: Donald Trump's ethnic cleansing is proof of man's inhumanity to man
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Wall Street Journal
3 hours ago
- Wall Street Journal
The Advertisers Spending Big in West Palm Beach Just to Reach Trump
Watching television in West Palm Beach, Fla., this year meant being a bystander to an array of groups seeking an audience with a single viewer. One ad that aired there showed a clip of President Trump standing before thousands of supporters, promising to oversee cures to cancer and Alzheimer's disease. It was from a group with ties to the pharmaceutical industry trying to persuade Trump to overturn a Biden-era drug pricing policy.