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The Hill
30-06-2025
- Politics
- The Hill
More California July 4th events canceled due to immigration raids
(KTLA) – More Southern California communities have canceled or postponed their 4th of July celebrations due to federal immigration raids occurring across the region. Among the most prominent canceled events is the Gloria Molina Grand Park's Summer Block Party, originally scheduled for July 4. According to the event's website, the postponement comes 'in light of recent events affecting a portion of Downtown Los Angeles and the ongoing circumstances impacting the region.' No official rescheduled date was announced; the website only stated that the Summer Block Party will be held 'later in the summer.' In Cudahy – a city where 97% of the population identifies as Hispanic – the celebration originally set for July 3 has been postponed, officials announced. Parks will remain open, and regular programming is set to continue as scheduled. The community of Bell Gardens, which borders Cudahy, has canceled a concert and two outdoor movie showings, including one that was scheduled for this past Saturday and another planned for July 3. City officials said the cancellations were out of 'an abundance of caution regarding concerns for resident safety over federal immigration enforcement activities.' Another nearby community, Huntington Park, has also canceled its Independence Day celebration that was supposed to be held on July 3. No reason for the cancellation was given. Other local predominantly Hispanic communities have also called off their 4th of July celebrations, including El Sereno, where the community's annual Independence Day parade has been canceled this year. All July 4 celebrations in L.A. City Council District 14 – which encompasses many Hispanic communities in East L.A. – have been canceled or postponed in the wake of the immigration raids, a spokesperson for Councilwoman Ysabel Jurado told the Boyle Heights Beat. Speaking to Nexstar's KTLA on Monday morning, East Los Angeles resident Jordan Escobar said he understands why officials are canceling events and why many may not even be in the mood to celebrate. 'I have family members who are being affected by this, and I have other friends that I know who are being affected by these injustices right now,' Escobar said. 'So I get why people are refraining [from celebrating]. I believe it's important to voice our opinions.'

Yahoo
09-03-2025
- Yahoo
Cyclists struck by vehicle while handing out immigration rights cards in Boyle Heights
Police are still looking for the driver who allegedly rammed into a group of cyclists handing out immigration red cards to pedestrians last month in Boyle Heights before fleeing the scene. About 12 people attended the 'Know Your Rights Ride Out' event Feb. 25, organized by 33-year-old Boyle Heights resident Daniel Flores Resendiz. Resendiz and his friends planned to bike from Mariachi Plaza to Atlantic Boulevard down Cesar Chavez Avenue, then down Whittier Boulevard back to Mariachi Plaza. The group made about five stops, handing out red cards to street vendors. Red cards, also known as 'Know Your Rights' cards, contain information on a person's rights should they encounter a federal immigration agent. The incident occurred on mile three, he said. An unregistered vehicle ran into four bicyclists on the 600 block of South Lorena Street around 7:45 p.m., a LAPD spokesperson told the Boyle Heights Beat. Surveillance video shows the car slowing down and knocking over the bikers. 'This block was not well lit, but we all had lights on and were riding in the right lane and we are legally allowed to ride and take the full lane,' Resendiz said. 'I was the only one trying to stop the vehicle and had thrown my bike under it and she had run it over, and that gave us enough time for the folks in the back to grab the plates.' Three women were struck by the car and one man, Irvin Flores, was sent to the hospital with head lacerations, Resendiz said. One of the victims, Nancy Lopez, told Fox 11 that her impact broke off one of the driver's rear mirrors and caused a dent on the car. The car is believed to be a 2016 Kia sedan with the plate number 8GAN606, police said. A spokesperson for the Los Angeles Police Department told The Times on Sunday that no update is available for this incident. Anyone with information about the vehicle or the driver can call the LAPD at (877) 527-3247. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.


Los Angeles Times
09-03-2025
- Los Angeles Times
Cyclists struck by vehicle while handing out immigration rights cards in Boyle Heights
Police are still looking for the driver who allegedly rammed into a group of cyclists handing out immigration red cards to pedestrians last month in Boyle Heights before fleeing the scene. About 12 people attended the 'Know Your Rights Ride Out' event Feb. 25, organized by 33-year-old Boyle Heights resident Daniel Flores Resendiz. Resendiz and his friends planned to bike from Mariachi Plaza to Atlantic Boulevard down Cesar Chavez Avenue, then down Whittier Boulevard back to Mariachi Plaza. The group made about five stops, handing out red cards to street vendors. Red cards, also known as 'Know Your Rights' cards, contain information on a person's rights should they encounter a federal immigration agent. The incident occurred on mile three, he said. An unregistered vehicle ran into four bicyclists on the 600 block of South Lorena Street around 7:45 p.m., a LAPD spokesperson told the Boyle Heights Beat. Surveillance video shows the car slowing down and knocking over the bikers. 'This block was not well lit, but we all had lights on and were riding in the right lane and we are legally allowed to ride and take the full lane,' Resendiz said. 'I was the only one trying to stop the vehicle and had thrown my bike under it and she had run it over, and that gave us enough time for the folks in the back to grab the plates.' Three women were struck by the car and one man, Irvin Flores, was sent to the hospital with head lacerations, Resendiz said. One of the victims, Nancy Lopez, told Fox 11 that her impact broke off one of the driver's rear mirrors and caused a dent on the car. The car is believed to be a 2016 Kia sedan with the plate number 8GAN606, police said. A spokesperson for the Los Angeles Police Department told The Times on Sunday that no update is available for this incident. Anyone with information about the vehicle or the driver can call the LAPD at (877) 527-3247.


Los Angeles Times
07-02-2025
- Politics
- Los Angeles Times
L.A.'s week of pro-immigration protests
Sitting down in my Boyle Heights home to write this newsletter on Thursday morning, I was quickly distracted by a steady stream of car horns honking from nearby 1st Street. I got up from the table and walked to my porch to see what the commotion was all about. A group of about a hundred or so Latino students, many of them wearing hoodies and with their backpacks in tow, was marching on the westbound lane of the street on their way to City Hall for a third straight day of pro-immigrant rallies. The distracting cacophony I heard, it turns out, was coming from drivers heading in the opposite direction displaying their solidarity. Since taking office, President Trump has taken several actions to crack down on immigration, from declaring a national emergency at the southern border to issuing an executive order ending birthright citizenship for children of undocumented immigrants (an effort that, for now, has been blocked by the courts). In turn, Angelenos have responded with a series of weeklong demonstrations. On Sunday, thousands headed to downtown Los Angeles to protest Trump's actions and show their support for an immigrant community that is very much woven into the fabric of the region. Many of them carried flags — from Mexico, El Salvador and other Central and South American countries — and signs with messages like 'MAGA—Mexicans always get across' and 'I drink my horchata warm because f— I.C.E.' The protest was peaceful but also disruptive; demonstrators blocked traffic at Spring and Temple streets before eventually shutting down the 101 Freeway for several hours. On Monday, in addition to protests, several businesses across the region closed up shop in observance of 'A day without immigrants.' It wasn't just Southern California. Over the last week, anti-Trump and pro-immigrant protests have popped up in places like Cincinnati, Atlanta, Houston, San Antonio and Montgomery, Ala., to name a few. In L.A., despite the rain, the kids have kept the momentum going. On Thursday, for a third day in a row, students walked out of their classes and marched downtown. The multi-day protests have resulted in a significant decrease in school attendance — according to the local new outlet Boyle Heights Beat, some Eastside schools reported a 32% drop. But for many students, these attacks on immigrant communities are personal. 'I'm trying to defend my parents, who immigrated here to get me a better life,' one student told De Los contributor Sarah Quiñones Wolfson. 'How are people going to hate when they don't even know the real us.' 'I cry at night thinking that my dad won't come home,' Johanna, a student whose family is from El Salvador, added. The protests are yet another episode in Los Angeles' long history as a center for pro-immigrant action and youth activism, from the Chicano Blowouts of 1968, when thousands of students walked out of school to demand equal education, to the student-led walkouts against Proposition 187 in 1994, to the 2006 May Day rally when hundreds of thousands of people marched downtown to demand immigration reform. While Sunday's protests brought Angelenos from all walks of life, the last few days of demonstrations have very visibly been carried out by the youth. 'This week, students have once again assumed the leadership to send a strong message that they, their families and their communities must be honored, respected and supported,' said Paula Crisostomo, who helped organize the 1968 East L.A. student walkouts. These days, the majority of Latinos in the U.S. are native born, but these demonstrations prove that the immigrant experience is still very much a major aspect of Latinidad. The student protesters have also made it clear that while some of their parents and family members might be unable to demonstrate freely because of their immigration status, they have no qualms being twice as loud on their behalf, and have made it clear that they don't plan on quieting down anytime soon. 'I definitely want to preface that this is a movement, not a moment. It's not a trend, and it's something that will keep going until we are protected by laws that protect our rights and basic human needs,' Bella Gomez, 16, told The Times. Latinx indie queer drama 'In the Summers' is finally available on streaming. The film, which won the U.S. grand jury prize in the dramatic competition at last year's Sundance Film Festival, centers on the uneasy and messy relationship between two sisters and their father (played by René Pérez Joglar, better known as Residente, of Calle 13 fame). Despite being praised by critics ('Coming-of-age dramas may be a dime a dozen at Sundance, but one this tender and truthful can make an entire subgenre feel shimmeringly new,' wrote my former colleague Justin Chang), 'In the Summers' had a very limited theatrical release. It became available on Hulu and Disney+ on Wednesday. Here's hoping the movie finds the audience it so rightfully deserves. Why waving the Mexican flag at immigration rallies isn't wrong In his latest column, my colleague Gustavo Arellano wrote about the online discourse that has emerged over the presence of the Mexican flag at this week's rallies. Critics argue that waving another country's flag at a pro-immigrant rally is counterproductive. Arellano, who previously held this view, now disagrees and writes about what led him to have a change of heart. Scholars grapple with loss of Chicano studies giant Juan Gómez-Quiñones' archives in Palisades fire Juan Gómez-Quiñones, who died in 2020, was a legend of Chicano Studies who taught some of the first classes in the discipline at UCLA and mentored a generation of young Chicano activists. As De Los contributor Shaanth Kodialam Nanguneri writes, he had stored decades of Mexican American history – books, investigations, artwork, essays – at his family's home in Pacific Palisades. The archive was destroyed in the Palisades fire and scholars are now struggling with the loss. These families have long pushed to remember the Mexican repatriation. It's more urgent than ever, they say. During the Great Depression, more than 1 million Mexicans and Mexican Americans were deported as a result of nativist rhetoric. Nearly a century later, their descendants are fighting to ensure that this history is not forgotten. Gigi Zumbado takes the edge off new Valentine's Day slasher 'Heart Eyes' De Los reporter Andrea Flores spoke with Cuban American actress Gigi Zumbado, who stars in 'Heart Eyes,' the cheeky and gory horror film out in theaters today. Latin Mafia has always trusted its gut. It's finally paying off It's been a whirlwind year for the De la Rosa brothers, better known as the musical trio Latin Mafia. In the last 12 months, the band played their first U.S. show (at Coachella, no less); signed with Rimas Entertainment (the same label as Bad Bunny); released their critically acclaimed debut LP 'Todos Los Días Todo El Día;' and kicked off their inaugural U.S. tour with a sold out show at the Palladium two weeks ago. Reporting fellow Cerys Davies caught up with the band during their recent L.A. stop. A mass hunger strike transformed solitary confinement in California prisons. This documentary captures the fight In 2013, thousands of California inmates in long-term solitary confinement orchestrated a months-long hunger strike as a protest against the conditions that they were being subjected to by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. This (spoiler alert!) successful campaign is the subject of a new documentary called 'The Strike,' which premiered this Monday on PBS and is currently available online. Thump Records celebrates 35 years of lowrider jams Founded in 1990, Thump Records has made a name for itself thanks to the distribution of mixtapes like 'Lowrider Oldies' and 'Old School Collection.' The L.A.-based label has kept the oldies alive through pop-up trucks, word-of-mouth and a new wave of young fans enjoying the music and culture of their parents. 'We try to cater to everyone ... whether they're young little kids with families or older people who are taken back to a different time,' owner Steve Hernandez told The Times. 'It makes me feel like we are doing something good.'