Dodger Stadium becomes flashpoint after team denied entry to masked feds
Who indisputably is here: Al Aguilar, one of many gathering outside the stadium hours before the Dodgers faced the San Diego Padres on June 19.
Aguilar, a lifelong Dodgers fan who says he was born and raised in Los Angeles, stood near the intersection on a corner near Dodger Stadium five hours before the team's game. And three hours before a scheduled protest sparked by the Dodgers' silence amidst immigration raids and unrest in Los Angeles.
'At least make a statement,' said Aguilar, 72, who came from his home about two miles from the stadium.
Aguilar held a sign that said 'Dodger Boo' instead of 'Dodger Blue' and many motorists honked as they drove past.
Aguilar said he was old enough to remember when Latinos were displaced from the Chavez Ravine area to make way for the construction of Dodger Stadium, critical to luring the team to Los Angeles from Brooklyn in the 1950s.
"I still love them, but say something," Aguilar said. "Especially on this day of Juneteenth. We stand on the shoulders of Martin Luther King and Cesar Chavez."
But even as drivers honked in apparent support of Aguilar's message, he said that "whether (the team) says something or not, people will still be Dodgers fans."
Himself included.
LOS ANGELES — About 100 protesters outside Dodger Stadium disrupted traffic before the team's game and prompted more than two dozen police officers to head to the scene.
At one point, the protesters spread out electric scooters across an intersection near an entrance and temporarily halted traffic. Police closed the gates and redirected traffic to another entrance while they tried to gain control of the situation.
While there were a couple of tense standoffs between protesters and police officers, there were no known arrests as of 8 p.m. PT.
All the while, the protesters kept up their chants, including 'Boycott the Dodgers.'
It was the Dodgers' silence over the Los Angeles protests sparked by immigration raids that galvanized the crowd on Thursday night.
'If the Dodgers can't say anything, I guess we can,' Dodgers fan Amanda Carrera, 31, told USA TODAY Sports.
The police officers calmly removed the scooters and seemed unbothered by the chants. But things grew more tense when some people lingered in the crosswalks.
'Get out of the street, move,' an officer shouted. A protester leaned toward the officer and yelled back, but the moment did not escalate further.
By 7:50 PT, a few innings into the game inside, the protest outside Dodger Stadium had dwindled to about two dozen.
But not everybody in the crowd was a fan of those who were trying to block traffic.
'Protesters like that ruin the cause," Carrera said. "It's people coming to cause problems.'
LOS ANGELES — The Dodgers were supposed to make an announcement about their "plans for assistance to immigrant communities" but club president Stan Kasten said the organization would be delaying an announcement after the federal agents showed up.
'Because of the events earlier today, we continue to work with groups that were involved with our programs," Kasten said in a statement, per the Los Angeles Times. "But we are going to have to delay today's announcement while we firm up some more details."
Amanda Carrera, who said she is a singer who wrote a song called "Dodger Girl," arrived with a sign that said "Proud to be a Latina."
"As much as I love the Dodgers, I love my people even more," said Carrera, 31.
Graffiti artists have left their mark near the ballpark, clearly targeting the organization over its perceived silence amidst the protests with messages like "stop selling out," "LA is our home" and "silence is the problem."
In the hours leading up to the game, there were fans around Dodger Stadium with megaphones and others chanting "ICE out of L.A."
One masked protester outside the stadium held a sign that read "Kiké Forever," referencing the longtime Dodgers utilityman who became the first active player to speak out against the immigration raids with an Instagram post in both English and Spanish.
"I may not be Born & Raised, but this city adopted me as one of their own. I am saddened and infuriated by what's happening in our country and our city. Los Angeles and Dodger fans have welcomed me, supported me and shown me nothing but kindness and love," Hernández wrote.
"This is my second home. And I cannot stand to see our community being violated, profiled, abused and ripped apart. ALL people deserve to be treated with respect, dignity and human rights. #CityOfImmigrants"
Hernández has spent nine seasons with the Dodgers over two stints, winning World Series titles in 2020 and 2024.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dodger Stadium is flashpoint for ICE protests after denying feds entry
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
23 minutes ago
- New York Times
Kirby Yates hits the IL with back injury as Dodgers' bullpen depth tested again
Kirby Yates' frustrating season has hit its latest hurdle, as the Los Angeles Dodgers veteran reliever was placed on the injured list with lower back pain on Friday. Manager Dave Roberts told reporters in Tampa that Yates was dealing with a pelvic issue. Yates went back to Los Angeles for further testing. Advertisement The 38-year-old right-hander has not had the season he envisioned after the Dodgers signed him to a one-year, $13 million deal late this offseason to reinforce a bullpen they hoped they wouldn't have to add to at this year's trade deadline. Instead, the Dodgers made deals to acquire relievers and two that they wound up adding — veteran Brock Stewart from the Minnesota Twins and rookie Paul Gervase from the Tampa Bay Rays — officially joined the Dodgers as Yates hit the shelf. Yates has a 4.31 ERA through 39 appearances with the Dodgers this season. He also missed time in May with a hamstring issue. The two-time All-Star said recently he lost the feel for his signature splitter shortly before that injury. The search for the pitch has been maddening ever since. 'It's a pitch that — I've never really struggled with it,' Yates said last week. 'I wouldn't call before a struggle, but sometimes it would just be off, but never for a sustained period of time. It's probably like an outing or two. Right before I got hurt, ever since I've come back, I don't have the feel for it. Haven't had the feel for it.' Opposing hitters have hit .278 and slugged .519 against the pitch in 2025, way up from his 2024 marks (.114 batting average, .139 slugging percentage). Given his struggles, Yates has largely pitched in lower-leverage situations for the last week even as the Dodgers' big free agent signing, Tanner Scott, hit the shelf with forearm trouble. The Dodgers bullpen, which has logged the most innings in baseball, only recently got Blake Treinen back from the IL and has been undermanned most of this season. Evan Phillips is out for the year after Tommy John surgery. Injuries have limited Michael Kopech to seven innings. The team is still holding out hope that Brusdar Graterol could be an option after offseason shoulder surgery. Now, a painful back issue Roberts said has plagued Yates for weeks adds another variable into the mix.


The Hill
2 hours ago
- The Hill
Congressional Hispanic Caucus chair accuses Texas Republicans of silencing Latino voters with redistricting plan
Congressional Hispanic Caucus Chair Adriano Espaillat (D-Texas) accused Texas Republicans of silencing Latino voters with their proposed redistricting plan in a letter first obtained by The Hill on Friday. In a letter addressed to J.M. Vasut, chair of the Texas Committee on Redistricting, and the committee's Jon Rosenthal, Espaillat described the new congressional map proposed by Texas Republicans as 'a blatant power grab that undermines democracy and silences Latino voters.' Espaillat specifically noted that in Harris County, where Latinos make up 46 percent of the population, Texas Republicans have slashed the Hispanic Voting Age population in the 29th congressional district from 65.5 percent to 43 percent. 'Across the state, Republicans are using surgical precision to redraw maps and erode minority voting strength,' Epaillat wrote. 'The goal is not fairness, it's submission—to Trump, to extremism, and to a toxic political agenda that enriches the powerful while working families, children, seniors, and veterans are left behind. This redistricting scheme would be more at home under a dictatorship than in a functioning democracy.' Rep. Sylvia Garcia (D-Texas) presented the letter while testifying in the Texas state House Select Committee on Congressional Redistricting. Espaillat's letter comes as the committee is gearing up to vote on the proposed House map, which would create five new House seats that President Trump won by double digits in November. President Trump had called on the state's Republicans to redraw the lines to protect the party's narrow 219-212 House majority in the 2026 midterms.


USA Today
5 hours ago
- USA Today
Mookie Betts Player Props: August 1, Dodgers vs. Rays
Mookie Betts will try for a better performance after going hitless in his last game (0-for-5). He and the Los Angeles Dodgers face the Tampa Bay Rays on Friday, who will send out Shane Baz to start, at 7:35 p.m. ET on MLB Network, FDSSUN and SportsNet LA. Find odds, stats, and more below to make your Mookie Betts player prop bets. Betts is hitting .240 with 15 doubles, a triple, 11 home runs and 41 walks. Watch tonight's Dodgers game on Fubo! Mookie Betts Prop Bets and Odds How to Watch Los Angeles Dodgers vs. Tampa Bay Rays Mookie Betts prop bet insights MLB odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated Friday at 1:25 p.m. ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub. Mookie Betts stats against the Rays Rays starter: Shane Baz