
LA Mayor Karen Bass's shocking connection to mom who 'faked ICE raid for GoFundMe cash' exposed
The city leader took to X to share an article about the 'abduction' of Yuriana Julia Pelaez Calderon by ICE agents earlier this month.
Bass, 71, claimed that Calderon had been snatched from her car by officers urging her to 'self-deport'.
'She's a mother from L.A. — taken out of her car on her way to work, and then held in a warehouse as officers hoped she would 'self-deport.' No hearing. Just fear. This doesn't make anyone safer.,' Bass wrote on July 1.
However, since then Calderon, 41, has been charged with conspiracy and making false statements to federal officers.
The charges came after family of Calderon – an illegal immigrant from Mexico living in Los Angeles – claimed she was ambushed by armed men in two unmarked trucks at a Jack in the Box parking lot in the downtown LA area.
They then set up a now-deleted GoFundMe account demanding $4,500 to help with the case.
Bass's humiliating defense of Calderon emerged following the charges against her and prompted fury from The Department of Homeland Security who blasted the mayor.
'Mayor, you pushed a HOAX,' the DHS X account posted.
'There is still time to delete this. Yuriana Julia Pelaez Calderon was NEVER arrested or kidnapped by ICE or bounty hunters — this criminal illegal alien scammed innocent Americans for money and diverted limited DHS resources from Los Angeles.'
The Daily Mail has reached out to Bass for comment.
Bass's post came just one day after Calderon's family members and attorneys held a press conference on June 30, where they said she was brought to San Ysidro, a district of San Diego close to the Mexican border.
Her family alleged that she was then, 'presented to [a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement] staffer' and, 'presented with voluntary self–deportation paperwork,' according to officials.
The family's attorney said Calderon refused to sign the paperwork, and was then 'punished' by being held in a warehouse, a report from the US Attorney's Office, Central District of California detailed.
Videos of the press conference show supporters of Calderon holding signs saying, 'our mom is missing,' 'stop the abduction,' and 'where is Yuli?'
Following attention from the media, the family then created the fundraiser, which raked in a measly $80 before it was shut down.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) vehemently denied claims that the immigrant mother was abducted.
The DHS launched an investigation into the 'kidnapping,' during which they spent days looking for Calderon and even had ICE agents searching 'detention cell to detention cell', officials said.
Following attention from the media, the family then created a GoFundMe page (pictured) – which has since been deleted – where they asked for $4,500
Ultimately, agents said they found Calderon in a shopping plaza parking lot in Bakersfield on July 5. She allegedly continued to insist that she had been kidnapped and held 'with others'.
Video footage of the Jack in the Box parking lot Calderon claimed to be taken from showed her leaving the lot and getting into a sedan, according to the Department of Justice (DOJ). Phone records also show the abduction to be a hoax, according to officials.
Calderon's family has allegedly tried to keep up the ruse even after she was discovered. They allegedly fabricated pictures of her 'rescue' to make it seem as though ICE agents abused her, according to officials.
On July 6, the family planned to host another press conference and increase the donation request, but then their plan was foiled by the DHS.
'Yuriana Julia Pelaez Calderon was never arrested or kidnapped by ICE or bounty hunters — this criminal illegal alien scammed innocent Americans for money and diverted limited DHS resources from removing the worst of the worst from Los Angeles communities,' the DHS said.
'Calderon will now face justice and the media and politicians who swallowed and pushed this garbage should be embarrassed,' the agency added.
US Attorney Bill Essayli also released a statement on the matter, saying: 'Dangerous rhetoric that ICE agents are "kidnapping" illegal immigrants is being recklessly peddled by politicians and echoed in the media to inflame the public and discredit our courageous federal agents.'
Calderon now faces a maximum sentence of five years in federal prison if convicted for each charge.
The DOJ indicated that additional individuals involved could also face charges.
According to a statement provided by GoFundMe to KTLA, the organizers of the campaign will not have access to the $80 their page raised in donations.
'GoFundMe has zero tolerance for the misuse of our platform, or any attempt to exploit the generosity of others, and cooperates with law enforcement investigations of those accused of wrongdoing,' the statement read.
'This fundraiser was removed from the platform and the $80 raised was refunded; at no point did the organizer have access to any of the funds.'
The Daily Mail has reached out to DHS and ICE, as well as Calderon's family and attorney for comment.
Calderon's kidnapping claims come at a contentious time for migrants in the US, as President Donald Trump continues to ramp up his tough-on-immigration policies.
Recent ICE raids have seen mass deportations, and the White House claims that Trump has deported more than 100,000 illegal migrants since returning to office in January 2025.
Last Thursday, a raid of a cannabis farm in Camarillo - a city in Southern California - saw 200 migrant workers being detained.
Chaos ensued at the raid, with protestors violently clashing with ice agents. Trump directed federal law enforcement officials to use 'whatever means necessary' to arrest anyone who throws rocks or other projectiles at ICE agents during immigration raids.
Hashtags

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


The Independent
13 minutes ago
- The Independent
Rubio revokes visa for Brazilian judge who went after Trump's buddy Bolsonaro
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has reportedly revoked the visa of a Brazilian Supreme Court judge who oversaw the prosecution of former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro — a man who President Donald Trump views as an ally. Bolsonaro is currently facing trial for his involvement in an alleged attempted coup to steal Brazil's 2022 election. Trump has likened the former president's attempted coup trial to his own Stormy Daniels hush-money trial, and called Bolsonaro's prosecution "unjust," according to the Daily Beast. 'I have seen the terrible treatment you are receiving at the hands of an unjust system turned against you,' Trump wrote in a letter he sent to Bolsonaro. 'This should end immediately!' This week, Rubio revoked the visa for Brazilian Supreme Federal Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes. He also targeted the judge's allies in the court and their family members, revoking their visas "effective immediately." Rubio justified the move in a post on social media, accusing those targeted of censoring "protected expression." '@POTUS made clear that his administration will hold accountable foreign nationals who are responsible for censorship of protected expression in the United States,' Rubio wrote on social media. Trump and his social media company, The Trump Media & Technology Group, sued de Moraes in February, accusing him of censoring conservatives on social media. Rubio's announcement came shortly after authorities in Brazil raided Bolsonaro's house and outfitted him with an ankle monitor. He has also been banned from contacting foreign officials. Rubio made clear his actions were in response to Brazil's moves to hold Bolsonaro accountable. 'Brazilian Supreme Federal Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes's political witch hunt against Jair Bolsonaro created a persecution and censorship complex so sweeping that it not only violates basic rights of Brazilians, but also extends beyond Brazil's shores to target Americans,' Rubio said. Bolsonaro himself has echoed Trump's favorite line when defending himself; he called his trial a "witch hunt." Trump has gone so far as to threaten anti-Bolsonaro Brazilians by threatening to levy a 50 percent tariff against the nation. Brazil's president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva — a leftist who defeated Bolsonaro in 2022 — condemned the Trump administration's targeting of Brazilian judges. "My solidarity and support to the ministers of the Supreme Federal Court affected by yet another arbitrary and completely baseless measure by the United States government," the Brazilian president wrote in a translated social media post. He further condemned the "interference by one country in another's justice system" as "unacceptable" and in violation of "the basic principles of respect and sovereignty between nations."


The Independent
13 minutes ago
- The Independent
Epstein accuser claims she met Trump in disgraced financier's office in ‘troubling encounter'
One of Jeffrey Epstein's accusers claimed she met Donald Trump in the convicted pedophile 's New York office in what was described as a 'troubling encounter,' according to a report. Artist Maria Farmer said she urged the FBI to look into people in the disgraced financier's social circle, including the president, after the alleged encounter in the 90s, she told The New York Times. Farmer and her younger sister Annie, who testified at Ghislaine Maxwell's 2021 sex trafficking trial, have spoken publicly about their ordeal with Epstein before. But her account now sheds light on how the Epstein files could contain material that is 'embarrassing or politically problematic' to the president, the Times reports. Farmer's account is among 'the clearest indications yet' of how Trump may appear in the Epstein files, the Times notes, though the White House disputed the alleged encounter. 'The president was never in [Epstein's] office,' said White House communications director Steven Cheung. 'The fact is that the president kicked him out of his club for being a creep.' It follows a turbulent few weeks for the Trump administration after MAGA outrage over the Epstein files boiled over last week. Despite campaigning on a promise to release the files, Trump's Justice Department announced in July that no further evidence in the case would be released, unleashing turmoil among the president's MAGA supporter base. The president last week agreed to release select grand jury testimony of the case, which experts say is unlikely to produce much, if anything, to satisfy the public's appetite for new information about Epstein's crimes. Epstein died by suicide in a New York jail awaiting a sex trafficking trial in August 2019. Farmer was in her mid-twenties when she claimed she met Trump in 1995, shortly after Epstein hired her to do artwork. One night, she received an unexpected call from Epstein, who requested she come by his offices in Manhattan. According to Farmer's account to the Times, Trump was there and 'started to hover over her.' Farmer said that 'she recalled feeling scared as Mr. Trump stared at her bare legs,' the newspaper reported. 'Then Mr. Epstein entered the room, and she recalled him saying to Mr. Trump: 'No, no. She's not here for you.'' Epstein and Trump then left the room, according to Farmer, and she claimed she heard Trump comment that he thought she was 16 years old. The White House disputed Farmer's account. After the encounter, Farmer said she had no other 'alarming' interactions with Trump, nor did she witness him engage in inappropriate conduct with any other girls or women. Farmer filed a lawsuit at the end of May alleging that the federal government failed to protect her and other victims of the convicted pedophile and his madam, Ghislaine Maxwell. Farmer told the Times that she has long wondered how her complaints about Epstein between 1996 and 2006 were handled by law enforcement agencies. She told the newspaper that she raised Trump's name with authorities on two occasions because of the alleged encounter and 'because he seemed so close' to Epstein. Trump has never been accused of any wrongdoing in the Epstein case. Farmer, who did not testify at Maxwell's trial, was sexually assaulted by Epstein and his madam at his Ohio estate in 1996. Farmer later learned that her younger sister Annie, then 16, was molested by Maxwell and Epstein at his New Mexico ranch that same year. When Farmer discovered her sister had also been assaulted by Epstein and Maxwell, she reported the sex offender to the FBI. 'There is certainly more to know,' Annie Farmer told The Independent in an interview last year. 'I don't know whether we will ever learn more about that but I don't think we know everything.' The president has sought to distance himself from the sex offender, with whom he had a friendship from the late 80s until the early 2000s. Last week, the Wall Street Journal published the text of a note that was allegedly penned by Trump to Epstein as part of a 50th birthday card. The note itself was framed with the silhouette of a naked woman, with the contents alluding to a 'secret' that Trump wrote the two men shared.


Daily Mail
14 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
BREAKING NEWS Brother of late NFL star and US Army Ranger Pat Tillman arrested in California for 'driving into post office'
Police in San Jose, California have arrested the brother of late NFL star and U.S. Army Ranger Pat Tillman after a vehicle crashed into a local post office. Richard Tillman was booked Sunday and is being held without bail, according to the Santa Clara jail website. However, no specific charge is listed. NBC Bay Area is reporting that Richard, the brother of Pat, is accused of driving his car into a local post office while live streaming the entire collision. MORE TO FOLLOW...