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‘I'm speaking for those who can't': A daughter marches to honor her father

‘I'm speaking for those who can't': A daughter marches to honor her father

Los Angeles Times11 hours ago

She was attending her first protest, driven to be seen with thousands of others at a 'No Kings' demonstration Saturday morning in El Segundo, eager to make a statement.
But she was there for her father, as well.
The sign she held aloft as car horns honked in support said: 'I'm speaking for those who can't.'
Her father would have loved to join her, Jennifer told me. But with ICE raids in Los Angeles and arrests by the hundreds in recent days, her 55-year-old undocumented dad couldn't afford to take the risk.
Jennifer is 29. I hadn't seen her in nearly 20 years, when I wrote about her father and visited her home in Inglewood to deliver $2,000 donated by readers who read his story.
Here's the back story:
In December of 2005 I got a tip about a shooting in the front yard of an Inglewood home. Two men approached a landscaper and demanded money. He resisted, and in the tussle that ensued, a shot was fired.
Paramedics rushed the man to the emergency room at UCLA, where doctors determined that a bullet had just missed his heart and was lodged in his chest. Although doctors recommended he stay at least overnight for observation, he insisted he felt fine and needed to get back to work.
The landscaper, whom I referred to as Ray, insisted on leaving immediately. As he later explained to me, the Inglewood job was for a client who hired him to re-landscape the yard as a Christmas gift to his wife.
Ray was shot on Dec. 23.
He finished the job by Christmas.
I've been thinking about Ray since ICE agents began the crackdown ordered by President Trump, whose administration said its goal was to deport 3,000 people a day. Hundreds have been arrested in the Fashion District, at car washes and at building supply stores across Los Angeles.
That's led to clashes between law enforcement and demonstrators, and to peaceful protests like the one along Imperial Highway and Main Street on Saturday in El Segundo.
I thought of Ray because Trump generally speaks of undocumented immigrants as monsters, and no doubt there are criminals among them.
But over the years, nearly all my encounters have been with the likes of Ray, who are an essential part of the workforce.
Yes, there are costs associated with undocumented immigrants, but benefits as well — they've been an essential part of the California economy for years. And among those eager to hire them — in the fields, in the hospitality industry, in slaughterhouses, in healthcare — are avid Trump supporters.
On Friday, I called Ray to see how he was doing.
'I'm worried about it,' he said, even though he has some protection.
Several years ago, an immigration attorney helped him get a permit to work, but the Trump administration has vowed to end temporary protected legal status for certain groups of immigrants.
'I see and hear about a lot of cases where they're not respecting documents. People look Latino, and they get arrested,' said Ray, who is in the midst of a years-long process to upgrade his status.
Ray is still loading tools onto his truck and driving to landscaping, tree-trimming and irrigation jobs across L.A., as he's done for more than 30 years. But he said he's being extra careful.
'You know, like keeping an eye out everywhere and checking my telephone to see where checkpoints are,' he said.
Ray's ex-wife has legal status, and all three of their children were born here and are U.S. citizens. The marriage ended and Ray has remarried, but he remains close to the three kids I met in the spring of 2006, when they were 9, 10 and 11.
The younger son, who is disabled, lives with Ray. His older son, a graphic designer, lives nearby. Jennifer, a job recruiter, lives next door and has been on edge in recent days.
'Even though he has permission to be here … it's scary, and I wasn't even letting him go to work,' Jennifer said. 'On Monday I was getting into the shower and heard him loading up the truck.'
She ran outside to stop him, but he was already gone, so she called him and said, 'Oh my God, you shouldn't be going to work right now. It's not safe.'
Jennifer works from home but couldn't concentrate that day. She used an app to track her father's location and checked the latest information on ICE raids. So far, Ray has made it home safely each day, although Jennifer is hoping he slows down for a while.
Twenty years ago, when I wrote about Ray getting shot and his insistence on going back to work immediately, one of the readers who donated money — $1,000 — to him was one of his landscaping clients, Rohelle Erde. When I checked in with her this week to update her on Ray's situation, she said her entire family came to the U.S. as immigrants to work hard and build a better life, and Ray did the same.
'He has been working and making money and helping people beautify their homes, creating beauty and order, and this must be so distressing,' Erde said. 'The ugliness and disorder are exactly the opposite of what he represents.'
The evening before Saturday's rally in El Segundo, Jennifer told me why she wanted to demonstrate:
'To show my face for those who can't speak and to say we're not all criminals, we're all sticking together, we have each other's backs,' she said. 'The girl who takes care of my kids is undocumented and she's scared to leave the house. I have a lot of friends and family in the same boat.'
Jennifer attended with her son, who's 9 and told me he's afraid his grandfather will be arrested and sent back to Mexico.
'He's the age I was when you met me,' Jennifer said of her son.
Mother and son stood together, flashing their signs for passing motorists.
His said, 'Families belong together.'
Jennifer told me that her father still has the bullet in his chest.
steve.lopez@latimes.com

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