‘Some of them fell to their knees'
On Jan. 29, a Diné woman told Searchlight New Mexico that ICE agents racially profiled and questioned her during a Jan. 22 workplace raid in Scottsdale, Arizona. The incident lasted around an hour and a half, she said, and deeply frightened her and her coworkers. What follows is a transcript of her account, edited for clarity and length.
'It could have been easy for me to say, 'You know what, where's your identification? You're on my land.' But I didn't do that. It would have triggered a problem for me.'
I was at work. It happened so fast, we didn't know what we were supposed to do. I mean, it's like you just turned on a light switch and you had to go do whatever the cops told you to do. They came in early, before the administration got there, and they came in from the back, before anybody could stop them. They went through and randomly picked out people. There was no, like, 'I have a search warrant. I need this person.' My office is right by the door, so they knocked and told me to go outside. I was like, 'What for?' I felt racially profiled. It was mostly Hispanics who were taken, and I'm Navajo. Several people got taken: there was probably about 10 of us, maybe 12.
They didn't put handcuffs on us or anything like that. They just walked us out to the parking lot and lined us up. But just that right there alone was very scary, the actual feeling of being taken out… I've never prayed so hard in my life. I didn't know what to do. I'm a minority here, and I'm far from home. There were vans. There were already people in them. Some of them looked like they'd been crying. The staff that were lined up, they were crying. I reached for my phone to record. But they told us to put our phones away.
They weren't mean or rude. They weren't being violent towards us. They told us if we wanted to we could sit on the curb. They asked us if anybody needed to use a restroom, or to get a drink of water. I wasn't afraid of them. I was more afraid of what the heck was happening. It was like, 'I know I didn't do anything wrong. I have a clear background. Why are you guys pulling us out?'
They were speaking in Spanish, and when an agent came to me, I said, 'I don't understand what you're saying.' Then he changed his tone. He was like, 'I'm sorry, I thought you were Hispanic.' I said, 'No, I'm Native American.' He asked me for identification. I said that I had my identification on my phone, and he told me to go ahead and take it out. I showed him my Certificate of Indian Blood and he let me go. It could have been easy for me to say, 'You know what, where's your identification? You're on my land.' But I didn't do that. It would have triggered a problem for me.
Once I was let go, I just wanted to help the others. Our company had made sure that we all had documentation. After the agents looked at everybody else's documents, they slowly let them go one at a time. As they came back inside, I gave them water, and we went into a little room, and they just let go. Some of them fell to their knees. They just cried. They thought ICE was coming to get them and take them out to never come back. The only thing you could do was hug them and comfort them, and to tell them that it was okay and that we're going to be alright. The company told us that if we wanted to leave and go home early, that was fine. Everybody was in shock.
We heard that morning that it was happening in Mesa, but we didn't think it would happen in Scottsdale. It's an upper-class community. It's run by the richest people. People had taken it as a joke, but when it really did happen, everybody was like, 'Oh, my God, this is real.' We have a school right down the street here. I have a child who goes to the school, and the school notified me that they would not let ICE in, no matter what.
Do I wish this upon anybody? No. Do I wish for this to stop? Yes. I called the Navajo Nation president about what happened. Someone told me he was in the meeting and would return my call. To this day, I haven't gotten a phone call. That's what made me more upset: I had nobody, nothing to turn to.
This article first appeared on Searchlight New Mexico and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
'Law and Order' President Trump Just Forced a Cop to Self-Deport
The Department of Homeland Security blamed local officials in Maine for using the department's federal database to determine the employment eligibility of a police officer who was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement last month, according to NBC News. ICE arrested Old Orchard Beach Police Department reserve Officer Jon Luke Evans late last month, shocking local law enforcement officials who had been told by the federal government that their colleague was permitted to work in the United States. ICE told the Associated Press Monday that Evans, who is originally from Jamaica, would be given the opportunity to voluntarily leave the country immediately. Evans has agreed to leave the United States. As Donald Trump ramps up his purported crackdown on crime in the nation's capital (and elsewhere), the removal of a law enforcement officer strikes a particularly ironic note—but Evans's removal hits on yet another crucial issue. Old Orchard Beach had previously confirmed Evans's immigration status by using E-Verify, DHS's online system for employers to quickly certify whether a potential employee can legally work legally in the U.S. based on records at the Social Security Administration and DHS. But apparently that's not good enough for the Trump administration. Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security Tricia McLaughlin accused Old Orchard Beach of 'reckless reliance' on her own department's program, according to NBC News. Critics of the program had said that it's easy to fool the E-Verify system with fake I-9 documents and stolen IDs. But employers have few alternatives to E-Verify. Nine states have even implemented laws requiring private-sector employers to use the fast and free program. Some opponents to the program have said that stricter enforcement could lead to discrimination and worker shortages. In the wake of Trump's sweeping deportation scheme, employers who use E-Verify have not been spared from immigration raids. In June, a food-packaging company in Omaha saw more than half of its workforce arrested, though the employer said he'd used E-Verify to check the work status of all of his employees. DHS recently added a new tool to notify employers when someone's employment authorization is revoked and must be reverified. If employees cannot provide new evidence of valid employment authorization, they will be terminated immediately. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Federal Agents Are the New Proud Boys
The beatdown in broad daylight in Washington, D.C., on Saturday was caught on video. Two masked men in tactical vests grappled with a delivery worker. One tased him, and he fell to the ground. A third man piled on, and then a fourth, a fifth, and a sixth, all in similar vests with faces covered. Pinning the worker face down on the pavement, agents tased him again and punched him repeatedly in the head. 'Get the fuck out of this city!' a bystander's voice yelled out at the masked men. 'Why are you guys here?' The masked men's vests only identified them as 'police,' as is often the case with Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, and later, their arrest—in the upscale Logan Circle neighborhood—was confirmed by the Department of Homeland Security. It was part of the escalation in the federal law enforcement occupation ordered by Trump, with multiple agencies patrolling neighborhoods, stopping residents at checkpoints, and making arrests. Throughout, these federal agents have met opposition from countless bystanders and witnesses, who record them, jeer at them, and demand they leave their city. In that sense, nothing about the assault on Saturday stood out so much as it captured all these dynamics in the span of three minutes. It laid bare too how this takeover of an American city—the nation's capital, no less—has been brewing in the far-right imagination for a long time. 'You guys are ruining the country,' said one of the bystanders to the masked agents, and one of them responded, 'Liberals already ruined it.' Once, it was far-right groups who flooded cities in the summertime, in masks and tactical vests, looking for a fight; now, those groups have no need to be in the streets, with ICE and other federal agents carrying out their mission for them. As one Proud Boy organizer said at a Portland, Oregon, rally in 2018, 'For all the illegals trying to jump over our border, we should be smashing their heads into the concrete.' What we are seeing now flows from those dramatic street confrontations, brought on by groups such as Patriot Prayer and the Proud Boys nearly a decade ago, when they made Portland their target and Patriot Prayer leader Joey Gibson pledged, 'The stench-covered and liberal-occupied streets of Portland will be CLEANSED.' Gibson was running as a Republican for the Washington state Senate at the time, and the Portland Police Bureau was in close contact with Patriot Prayer organizers, as reporting by Willamette Week exposed. The police regarded them as 'much more mainstream' than leftist counter-protestors, arresting more of them than Proud Boys or Patriot Prayer members—even as the far right groups were advocating the murder of immigrants and leftists. It is perhaps less perplexing to see law enforcement in Washington this week engaged in anti-immigrant, anti-'liberal' taunts knowing this. On Sunday, the ICE account on X posted a video of seven masked agents removing a large banner hanging in Mount Pleasant's main plaza, reading 'Chinga la migra, Mount Pleasant Melts ICE.' Clutching the torn-down banner, one agent said to the camera, 'We're taking America back, baby.' (A new banner quickly appeared in the same place: 'They are fascists. We are artists. We melt ICE.') It's petty, it's cruel, and it didn't come from nowhere. Ahead of January 6, members of the Proud Boys stole and destroyed Black Lives Matter signs from two historically Black churches in D.C., as they posed for cameras in their tactical vests, and mockingly chanted 'Whose streets? Our streets.' Seeing how ICE in particular have conducted themselves over the last few months, some people have feared that the masked agents Trump has unleashed might be the same people he pardoned for their involvement in the January 6 insurrection. Had they now infiltrated or been secretly hired into ICE and other agencies? A former assistant ICE director told Slate in July that he was 'very worried' that 'Proud Boys and other insurrectionists and hoodlums' would be hired at ICE, because '[w]hat self-respecting person who wants a meaningful career in law enforcement would go to work [for Enforcement and Removal Operations] right now?' There is no evidence that J6ers have been secretly deputized as federal agents; if anything, the Department of Homeland Security is openly making appeals to far right and white nationalist groups in their recent ICE recruitment drive, and some of have, in fact, volunteered. Stewart Rhodes, the Oath Keepers founder, who was convicted of seditious conspiracy for his role in the January 6 insurrection, praised Trump's deployment of the National Guard to Washington last week. Rhodes also said he planned to relaunch the Oath Keepers, and asked Trump to invoke the Insurrection Act and 'call up' the far right militia group and others for immigration enforcement. 'That's what I urged him to do in 2020, when the left was rioting in open insurrection across the country,' Rhodes said, referring to the massive, nationwide protests after Minneapolis police murdered George Floyd. For the far right, it's as if the street fights they started in Trump's first term never ended. What ICE and other federal law enforcement agents are now doing in the streets should be understood in that much longer context, in which Trump has gone from tacitly endorsing such violence, from the 'very fine people' at the deadly Unite the Right rally in 2017 and his televised order to the Proud Boys in 2020 to 'stand back and stand by,' to pardoning their members in his first days in office in 2025. One January 6 rioter has advised Trump's 'immigration czar' Tom Homan. Another now works advising the Department of Justice on the 'weaponization' of the department (for anti-Trump ends). From the beginning, violence against Trump's perceived enemies has been invited and rewarded. Now, it is just being institutionalized. Solve the daily Crossword


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Boxer Julio César Chávez Jr. arrested and jailed after being deported to Mexico
Boxer Julio César Chávez Jr. was deported from the United States and entered a prison in the northern Mexico state of Sonora, according to the country's national arrest registry. Chávez had been arrested in the U.S. in July and Mexican president Claudia Sheinbaum confirmed on Tuesday, Aug. 19 that the 39-year-old had been deported to Mexico. A former middleweight world champion, Chávez was arrested July 2 in Southern California and then detained by ICE, according to the Department of Homeland Security. Mexican prosecutors allege he acted as a henchman for the Sinaloa Cartel, which Washington designated a foreign terrorist organization earlier this year. Chavez Jr's lawyer and family have rejected the accusations. Mexico's national arrest registry showed that he was arrested at a checkpoint in the border city of Nogales and transferred to a federal institution in Sonora's capital of Hermosillo. Chávez is a Mexican citizen and was being processed for expedited removal from the United States after his arrest, according to DHS, which said Chávez has an active arrest warrant in Mexico for his involvement in organized crime and trafficking firearms, ammunition, and explosives. His arrest came four days after losing a high-profile boxing match to celebrity boxer Jake Paul. Chávez, the son of legendary Mexican fighter Julio César Chávez Sr., held the WBC middleweight title in 2011 and 2012. He was critical of immigration raids in Los Angeles. In August 2023, Chávez entered the country legally with a B2 tourist visa that was valid until February 2024. Chávez was on a scooter by his home in Studio City, a neighborhood in Los Angeles, when he was detained by ICE agents, according to the Associated Press, which also reported Chàvez would appear in court Monday. In January 2024, Chávez was arrested in Los Angeles on charges of felony gun possession charges after police said they found him in possession of two AR-style ghost rifles, according to ESPN and the Los Angeles Times. He pleaded not guilty to the gun possession charges and agreed to enter a residential treatment program, according to those reports. Court records indicate Chávez was granted pretrial diversion. As of the last progress report on June 18, he was still in the program, said Greg Risling of the Los Angeles County District Attorney's June 25. In its press release, DHS stated former President Joe Biden's administration allowed Chávez to reenter the country in January and paroled him into the country at the San Ysidro port of entry in California. Chávez Jr. says ICE immigration raids 'scared me' Chávez trained in Los Angeles before the fight against Paul and addressed the immigration raids that triggered protests in the city's downtown. "It even scared me, to tell you the truth, it is very ugly,' he told the Los Angeles Times for a story published June 23. 'I don't understand the situation, why so much violence. There are many good people and you are setting an example of violence to the community.' He also addressed federal agents wearing masks and not identifying themselves while targeting workers who appeared to be immigrants, according to the Los Angeles Times. 'Seeing children left alone because their parents are grabbed,'' Chávez said. '... That is common sense, we are people and we are going to feel bad when we see that situation.'' Contributing: Reuters