logo
For Some Black Angelenos, ICE Raids Reopen the Wound of Displacement

For Some Black Angelenos, ICE Raids Reopen the Wound of Displacement

Yahooa day ago

When federal immigration agents swept through Los Angeles' Fashion District, Boyle Heights, and Pico-Union neighborhoods last week, arresting dozens of migrants in coordinated raids, Bryant Odega was transported back into his childhood memories.
In elementary school, Odega's first airport visit was to watch his father, an immigrant from Nigeria, get deported back to his birth country. 'It's triggering,' the 27-year-old LA public school teacher said about the past week, 'to see the videos of people being basically kidnapped. It brings me back.'
The mass immigration raids across LA County triggered a lot more people in the region, home to the second-most undocumented migrants in the country. Still, the protests that erupted over the weekend told a story as much about who showed up as who stayed home.
Thousands of demonstrators filled the streets outside the federal building downtown. Local police doused protesters with tear gas and fired flash-bang grenades. Protesters hurled fireworks back at the police lines. And by Sunday night, President Donald Trump took an aggressive approach, deploying over 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 Marines to the city.
The question hanging over the protests for Black Angelenos quickly moved beyond just immigration policy to who belongs in neighborhoods and in the city where belonging itself has been contested for decades.
Across social media and in homes across the country's largest county, Black residents sparked heated debate about solidarity, displacement, and the complex racial dynamics that have reshaped one of America's most powerful cities over decades.
The protests have marked the first military deployment against American citizens since 1992 when riots erupted in LA after the white police officers who beat Rodney King were acquitted, and the first time in 60 years that a president had federalized a state's National Guard without the governor's consent. But, the crowds of protesters, some people said, were lacking the Black activists who had led similar resistance movements just years before.
The viral criticism was swift, and some Black folks responded with the argument that immigration enforcement wasn't a 'Black issue.'
On social media, one user wrote, 'Black people be warned. Go home. This is not your battle to fight.' The comment, which focused on the threat of violence against protestors, was shared thousands of times across social media to the tune of millions of views and, crystallized a painful truth about Los Angeles: The same neighborhoods now under siege by immigration enforcement were once the beating heart of Black LA, before decades of demographic change transformed South Central from Black strongholds into Latino communities. And as a result, violence could seep into Black communities.
Other Black residents expressed feeling the targeted attack on migrant communities was not their battle to fight because of their own experiences with displacement.
'There is a notion of disengaging that took root amongst Black folks and that this attack was seen as a Latino issue,' said Odega, who grew up in South LA and now teaches Black and ethnic studies. 'But it speaks to this culture of violence where we accept harm and choose not to speak up against what we know is wrong because we feel like we've been wronged, too.'
Read More: Trump's Travel Ban Targets Black Migrants as Protests and Deportations Spread
The Los Angeles area is the only American region to see most of its once majority-Black neighborhoods transform into majority-Latino neighborhoods, leading to racial animosity amongst the groups. Since 1980, LA County's Black population has grown by just 1%, while the county's Latino population has grown by 130%. Since then, 92% of the region's Black neighborhoods that experienced gentrification are no longer majority-Black, the highest rate in the nation.
'Growing up in South LA, the first anti-Black insults that I ever heard were from Latinos,' Odega said, 'so I understand how these conditions have divided people.'
What the debate missed, however, was how deeply immigration raids cut into the issue of displacement that still aches through Black Los Angeles and how the federal agents now hunting migrant families are wielding the same tools of surveillance and removal that have long targeted Black communities.
As Marne Campbell, the author of Making Black Los Angeles, told Capital B in 2023 after audio tapes leaked of Latino City Council members in LA disparaging Black communities and voters, the animosity amongst Black and Latino people in LA is rooted in decades of competition for the same struggling schools, the same scarce affordable housing, and the same low-wage jobs that have defined life in LA's working-class communities of color.
Surveys, including one done by the University of Southern California, have shown that in Los Angeles, 'newly arrived Latinos' typically enter the city with perspectives on Black people that are 'heavily influenced by anti-Black stereotypes,' leading to a 'maintained distance from their African-American neighbors.' Latino residents tend to hold negative beliefs about Black Angelenos because of the city's disparate rates of incarceration, crime, and excessive policing concentrated in Black communities. But in the same vein, Black residents respond negatively to new Latino residents because of these prejudices.
Kat Calvin, an LA resident and author of American Identity in Crisis: Notes from an Accidental Activist, said she believes Trump's plans are underscored by a desire to disrupt communities of color.
'We have to remember what we're fighting for. It is very easy for our communities to be pitted against each other, but this is pretty clearly Trump's war on California,' said Calvin. 'We can all agree [Trump's] not doing all of this, bringing in this chaos and the military presence, just to deport a few hundred undocumented immigrants.'
The debate around how Black residents should show up or not show up in these protests reflects another complex reality about immigration enforcement that few acknowledge: Black migrants face deportation at dramatically higher rates than other immigrant populations, making ICE raids as much a Black issue as a Latino one.
Adrienne Spires, an LA County resident and mental health professional, said that because of this reality, she believes there is a misconception around the ways Black people are showing up.
'I think people are so used to seeing, historically, how Black people have shown up — and we're always leading the struggle — but just because we're not the loudest in the room today doesn't mean we're not supporting or caring about the issue,' she said. 'There are a lot of complex reasons behind stepping back.'
There are over 4 million Black immigrants living in the U.S., which is 20% of the nation's Black population, and California has the sixth-most Black immigrants in the country, with 60,000 Black immigrants living in LA alone.
Adding another wrinkle, studies show that when U.S.-born Black people are pushed out of neighborhoods, like they have been in LA for decades, the Black immigrant population actually increases in these neighborhoods. This potentially contributes to negative feelings between U.S.-born Black people and Black migrants.
Still, data shows that Black people are disproportionately targeted by law enforcement regardless of their citizenship status. Nationally, there are an estimated 582,300 Black undocumented immigrants, accounting for 5.6% of the total undocumented population. But Black migrants account for more than 1 in 5 noncitizens facing removal based on criminal convictions, meaning that in immigration courtrooms across America, Black people are disappearing at a rate that is four times more often than their numbers would suggest.
The odds are so steep that a traffic stop or minor arrest becomes a near-certain path to exile for Black migrants in ways that don't apply to other immigrant communities. Inside Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention centers, the targeting becomes even more brutal: Black migrants are almost twice as likely to be abused by guards and staff, according to reports.
The city's Black residents, who constitute roughly 40% of the county's homeless population while representing only 7% of the county's total population, understand intimately how federal enforcement targets communities of color. So the decision to participate in the protests is less about solidarity and more about survival in a city where they've already been displaced once, explained Odega, whose father was deported when he was in elementary school.
'I know what it feels like to have my family be separated by [immigration agents], but it sucks even if you haven't. Living in LA, the folks that are being targeted are the people who we've grown up with and go to school with.'
He added: 'If this government feels like it can do this to Latinos, we know that they can do that to Black folks, too.'
The protests that began Friday evening have now led to hundreds of arrests. The charges paint a picture of urban warfare, including assault with a deadly weapon on police officers, attempted murder with a Molotov cocktail, arson, and looting, as protesters blocked the 101 Freeway and tagged federal buildings with anti-ICE graffiti. What started as crowds trying to physically block federal vehicles from transporting detainees has evolved into a broader resistance movement demanding an end to Trump's deportation strategy, which aims to arrest at least 3,000 migrants daily nationwide. The protesters' central demands are focused on ending what organizers call federal overreach.
'This unnecessary and dangerous escalation occurs in conjunction with the Trump Administration's sweeping effort to criminalize migrants, especially migrants of color, and weaponize federal resources against protesters exercising their rights to express support for those targeted by this Administration's anti-civil and human rights policies,' said NAACP Legal Defense Fund President Janai S. Nelson in a statement. 'Through the deployment of military resources, President Trump seeks to usurp control of California from its Governor to promote an anti-immigrant agenda.'
Trump has threatened that this military action, which has targeted protesters and journalists alike, could be 'the first of many' such deployments if anti-ICE protests spread to other cities. He has justified the military presence by claiming protesters are 'paid insurrectionists' engaged in what he calls an 'insurrection,' warning that demonstrators will be 'met with equal or greater force' and stating that troops will remain in Los Angeles 'until there is peace.' He has even suggested he might invoke the Insurrection Act to give military forces broader law enforcement powers.
Read More: Atlanta Immigration Protest Draws Hundreds Amid Tear Gas and Fireworks
A coalition of 26 Republican-led states have backed his approach. 'In California, we're seeing the results of leadership that excuses lawlessness and undermines law enforcement. When local and state officials won't act, the federal government must,' a statement by the state leaders read.
However, California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass mounted a coordinated political and legal offensive against the deployment of federal troops, with Newsom filing an emergency motion in federal court Tuesday to block Trump's use of the National Guard and Marines, arguing the president had violated the Constitution and state sovereignty by federalizing troops without gubernatorial consent.
Newsom accused Trump of manufacturing a crisis to distract from his legislative struggles and trade war challenges, calling the president 'deranged' and claiming he had 'created the conditions you see on your TV tonight' by conducting provocative immigration raids designed to incite community backlash.
However, by Tuesday evening, Bass relented and declared a local emergency, imposing a curfew from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. covering 1 square mile of downtown. Their legal challenge also suffered a significant setback when U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer declined Newsom's request for an emergency restraining order to immediately block the military deployment, instead scheduling a hearing for Thursday and giving the Trump administration until Wednesday afternoon to file its response, effectively allowing federal troops to remain on Los Angeles streets for at least several more days.
'We have seen federal agents destabilize our city and Black LA, just look at the riots of '65 and '92,' Odega said. 'They know that we are powerful, and as Black people, we cannot deny the power that we have by choosing not to engage.'
The post For Some Black Angelenos, ICE Raids Reopen the Wound of Displacement appeared first on Capital B News.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Alex Padilla Tears Up Recounting His Kristi Noem Detainment on MSNBC: ‘It's All BS Coming From Trump'
Alex Padilla Tears Up Recounting His Kristi Noem Detainment on MSNBC: ‘It's All BS Coming From Trump'

Yahoo

time39 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Alex Padilla Tears Up Recounting His Kristi Noem Detainment on MSNBC: ‘It's All BS Coming From Trump'

California Sen. Alex Padilla appeared on MSNBC's 'The Beat' for his first interview following his forceful removal from Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's Los Angeles press conference Thursday, giving correspondents a glimpse behind the viral moment. Padilla was forcefully removed by FBI agents and other plainclothes officials from the event after attempting to ask Noem a question about the Trump administrations ICE actions in L.A. Video footage shows the senator being pushed out of the room, pinned to the ground and being placed in handcuffs. NBC correspondent Jacob Soboroff pressed the senator on what made him particularly emotional speaking with the press pool outside after the incident. The Padilla came from a family of day laborers in the San Fernando Valley, and said this administration's target on immigrants, especially in L.A., feels personal. 'I understand their plight. I understand their struggle. I understand their sacrifice to just find the American dream, a good opportunity, maybe a good job, the ability to raise a family, and have the next generation have it a little bit better than you did,' Padilla told MSNBC with tears in his eyes. 'All the talk about immigration, you know, the — the misinformation, disinformation about, you know, invasions and insurrections, it's all B.S. coming from Trump.' Soboroff noted that the senator was raised by a father, who was a short order cook, and a mother, who was a housekeeper. After studying at MIT, Padilla returned to his hometown to rise the ranks in the public sector and serve his community. He told MSNBC that the Trump administration's targeting of immigrants is misguided. 'If all they were going to do is target violent, dangerous criminals, true threats to our national security, that'd be one thing. Nobody has a disagreement there,' he said. 'What's happening in practice is so many — yes, undocumented — immigrants, but who are otherwise law-abiding, peaceful and hardworking, to think this administration changed policy for federal agents to enter schools, houses of worship, let alone workplaces? If immigrants are that bad, why is that where you're looking for them?' The senator also responded to Noem's claims that he 'lunged' at her during the press conference. 'That's ridiculous. It's a lie, but par for the course for this administration, right?' he said. Padilla was down the hall in the federal building waiting for a scheduled briefing that had been pushed back because of the Secretary of Homeland Security's press conference, he said. The senator said he was escorted into the conference room to listen, but he had to speak up. 'At one point, it was just too much to take,' he said. 'This notion that Donald Trump and Kristi Noem have to come in and rescue the people of Los Angeles from Gavin Newsom and Karen Bass? It was too much. And so I spoke up. I introduced myself and said I had a question.' Padilla also told Soboroff and MSNBC host Ari Melber that he had an opportunity to speak with Noem, but he did not get an answer to his question or an apology. 'If this can happen to a United States senator for having the audacity to ask a question of the secretary of homeland security,' he explained, 'then just imagine what can happen to anybody in the country.' Watch the full interview below: The post Alex Padilla Tears Up Recounting His Kristi Noem Detainment on MSNBC: 'It's All BS Coming From Trump' | Video appeared first on TheWrap.

Dallas historical marker recognizing lynching site back in place after vandalism
Dallas historical marker recognizing lynching site back in place after vandalism

Yahoo

time39 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Dallas historical marker recognizing lynching site back in place after vandalism

The Brief The Dallas Parks Department temporarily reinstalled the historical marker for Allen Brooks, a Black man lynched in 1910, four weeks after it was vandalized. Brooks was seized by a mob and hanged in downtown Dallas; no one was ever held responsible for his death. Police aren't treating the vandalism as a hate crime, despite concerns from advocates, and full repairs are expected to take three more months. DALLAS - The Dallas Parks Department was able to reinstall the vandalized historical marker memorializing the lynching of Allen Brooks in 1910. The new marker is only a temporary fix until the damaged marker can be replaced. The backstory On March 3, 1910, Allen Brooks was lynched in Dallas. Brooks, a Black man, was accused of raping a young white girl without evidence. On the day he was set to face trial, members of the mob seized Brooks from law enforcement officers, tied a rope around his neck and threw him from the second floor window of the courthouse. Brooks was dragged by the lawless mob several blocks to Main and Akard Streets, He was then hanged from a telephone pole in front of thousands of onlookers. No one was ever held responsible for the lynching of Allen Brooks. Dig deeper A historical marker that shares Brooks' story was vandalized about four weeks ago. The marker was removed from its base, according to Ed Gray, the president of the Dallas County Justice Initiative. Gray says the sign was sheered off, indicating the vandals had a tool to make the cut. He says the cast iron and aluminum sign would not be easy to carry far. With no clear motive and no identified suspects, the Dallas Police Department is not treating it as a hate crime. Gray is spearheading the effort to get a permanent replacement for the sign. What they're saying "For someone to go ahead and vandalize the sign and move it 30 feet away, that took effort. This wasn't a matter of just knocking a sign down, they were making a statement," Gray said. "This is a sharp reminder we still have a long ways to go if people are still vandalizing history in this way." Gray says it was important to get the marker up quickly, and especially before Juneteenth. "We can never forget. Because if we choose to forget, we're moving to a place in our history that I dare say would be even more troublesome than what happened to Allen Brooks," Gray said. What's next The full repairs are expected to take about three more months. The Source Information in this article comes from the Dallas Police Department and a conversation with Ed Gray, the president of the Dallas County Justice Initiative.

Judge invokes monarchy talk while mulling Trump's National Guard deployment
Judge invokes monarchy talk while mulling Trump's National Guard deployment

Yahoo

time39 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Judge invokes monarchy talk while mulling Trump's National Guard deployment

A federal judge warned at a Thursday hearing that accepting the Trump administration's assertion he has no authority to review the president's National Guard deployment in Los Angeles is a slippery slope. U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer said he hoped to rule later in the day on California Gov. Gavin Newsom's (D) request to immediately restrict the troops' power on the ground, suggesting federal law at minimum required President Trump to alert the governor. The judge repeatedly emphasized that Trump is exercising presidential authority — not a king's — and the role comes with limitations. 'That's the difference between a constitutional government and King George,' Breyer said. 'It's not that a leader can simply say something and then it becomes it. It's a question of is a leader, a president or the governor, following the law as set forth in both the Constitution and statutes,' he continued. 'That's what a president, a governor or any leader must act under. Otherwise, they become something other than a constitutional officer.' Breyer seemed willing to agree with Newsom that Trump's deployment was legally defective, but it's still a question as to whether the judge will enjoin the president's directive or give the administration a chance to institute it the proper way. At the same time, Breyer appeared skeptical of blocking at this stage the 700 Marines sent to assist the several thousand guard members deployed. The Trump administration argues Breyer has no authority to review Trump's deployment of the National Guard because it is in the president's sole discretion. Justice Department attorney Brett Shumate argued that Trump was not required to seek approval from Newsom in mobilizing the guard, calling the governor 'merely a conduit.' The president does not have to call up a governor and 'invite them to Camp David' for a negotiation summit to call up the National Guard in their state, he said. 'There is one commander in chief of the armed forces, and when the president makes a decision, the states are subservient to the president's decision,' Shumate said. Newsom and California Attorney General Rob Bonta (D) contend that Trump was required to receive Newsom's consent before deploying the National Guard. 'They suggest, your honor, that there are no guardrails,' Nicholas Green, a lawyer for the state, said. Amid the legal battle, Trump said Thursday that he 'doesn't feel like a king.' He was responding to questions about 'No Kings' demonstrations expected around the country this weekend, which are set to coincide with a military parade marking the U.S. Army's 250th birthday. 'I have to go through hell to get stuff approved,' Trump said. Breyer during the hearing kept returning to monarchy talk, trying to determine how he could side with Trump without giving him unchecked power. 'What makes America great, different, is our Constitution and our robust discussion of views of the citizens,' the judge said. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store