
California mayor calls for gangs to help protect communities from ICE raids
The vice mayor of a small city in California is under fire after a social media video emerged in which she appears to call on local street gangs to stand up to raids on undocumented migrants by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents.
In a clip posted to Instagram and then swiftly deleted by Cynthia Gonzalez, Vice Mayor of Cudahy – which lies just southeast of Los Angeles – the politician says: 'I want to know where all the cholos are at in Los Angeles – 18th Street, Florencia Where's the leadership at?
'Because you guys are all about territory and, 'This is 18th Street, this is Florencia.' You guys tag everything up, claiming hood and now that your hood's being invaded by the biggest gang there is, there ain't a peep out of you.
'It's everyone else who's not about the gang life that's out there protesting and speaking up. We're out there fighting our turf, protecting our turf, protecting our people and, like, where you at?
She continues: 'Dude they're running amok all up on your streets, on your streets and in your city and, peep, when the big gang guns come in nothing but, like, quiet and we're out here, the regular ones that have never been jumped in out here calling things out and trying to organize. People trying to do the thing.
'So don't be trying to claim no block, no nothing if you're not showing up right now trying to, like, help out and organize. I don't want to hear a peep out of you once they're gone, trying to claim that this is my block. This was not your block. You weren't even here helping out. So whoever is the leadership over there just f***ing get your members in order.'
Gonzalez does not name ICE in the video but it comes after weeks of controversy caused by federal raids on migrants in downtown Los Angeles, which saw local people hit the streets to protest and President Donald Trump call in the National Guard and deploy active-duty Marines to support local law enforcement against the wishes of California Gov. Gavin Newsom and L.A. Mayor Karen Bass.
Two weeks ago, Gonzalez joined other L.A. County mayors at a press conference hosted by Bass at City Hall to address ICE's actions.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has reacted angrily to the video, reposting it on Tuesday evening with the statement: 'The comments made by the Vice Mayor of Cudahy, CA, Cynthia Gonzalez, are despicable. She calls for criminal gangs – including the vicious 18th Street gang – to commit violence against our brave ICE law enforcement.
'This kind of garbage has led to a more than 500 percent increase in assaults against our ICE law enforcement officers. Secretary [Kristi] Noem has been clear: If you assault a federal officer, you will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.'
The Independent has contacted Gonzalez for comment but she has so far refused all media requests pertaining to the video.
The City of Cudahy has issued a brief statement of its own in which it says: 'The comments made by the Vice Mayor reflect her personal views and do not represent the views or official position of the City of Cudahy. The City will not be providing further comment.'
The FBI has said it cannot currently confirm or deny that an investigation into Gonzalez is underway but spokesperson Laura Eimiller noted: 'Generally speaking, of course, the FBI condemns any calls for violence or targeting of law enforcement with violence.'
ABC News legal analyst Josh Ritter said he believed Gonzalez's comments had crossed a line: 'When you're dealing with a political leader calling upon criminal street gangs to take action, that takes on a far more sinister meaning and, perhaps, criminal meaning behind it.
'It is one thing to say local people of the neighborhood stand up for yourselves. It's another thing to actually call out the names of different criminal street gangs and ask them to protect their neighborhood."
The video was also condemned by local residents like Danielle Canales, who told ABC's local affiliate: 'Her talking about gang violence and bringing them to do, you know, stuff like that, I think it's horrible. We're already going through ICE deporting people and people, you know, are feeling insensitive about it. Saying that is just kind of sad.'
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The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
California vice mayor calls for gangs to help protect communities from ICE raids
The vice mayor of a small city in California is under fire after a social media video emerged in which she appears to call on local street gangs to stand up to raids on undocumented migrants by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents. Defence In a clip posted to Instagram and then swiftly deleted by Cynthia Gonzalez, Vice Mayor of Cudahy – which lies just southeast of Los Angeles – the politician says: 'I want to know where all the cholos are at in Los Angeles – 18th Street, Florencia Where's the leadership at? 'Because you guys are all about territory and, 'This is 18th Street, this is Florencia.' You guys tag everything up, claiming hood and now that your hood's being invaded by the biggest gang there is, there ain't a peep out of you. 'It's everyone else who's not about the gang life that's out there protesting and speaking up. We're out there fighting our turf, protecting our turf, protecting our people, and, like, where you at? The video Gonzalez posted to Instagram that was subsequently denounced by the Department of Homeland Security (X/Department of Homeland Security) She continues: 'Dude they're running amok all up on your streets, on your streets and in your city and, peep, when the big gang guns come in nothing but, like, quiet and we're out here, the regular ones that have never been jumped in out here calling things out and trying to organize. People trying to do the thing. 'So don't be trying to claim no block, no nothing if you're not showing up right now trying to, like, help out and organize. I don't want to hear a peep out of you once they're gone, trying to claim that this is my block. This was not your block. You weren't even here helping out. So whoever is the leadership over there just f***ing get your members in order.' Gonzalez does not name ICE in the video. However, it comes after weeks of controversy caused by federal raids on migrants in downtown Los Angeles, which saw local people hit the streets to protest and President Donald Trump call in the National Guard and deploy active-duty Marines to support local law enforcement against the wishes of California Gov. Gavin Newsom and L.A. Mayor Karen Bass. Two weeks ago, Gonzalez joined other L.A. County mayors at a press conference hosted by Bass at City Hall to address ICE's actions. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has reacted angrily to the video, reposting it on Tuesday evening with the statement: 'The comments made by the Vice Mayor of Cudahy, CA, Cynthia Gonzalez, are despicable. She calls for criminal gangs – including the vicious 18th Street gang – to commit violence against our brave ICE law enforcement. 'This kind of garbage has led to a more than 500 percent increase in assaults against our ICE law enforcement officers. Secretary [Kristi] Noem has been clear: If you assault a federal officer, you will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.' The Independent has contacted Gonzalez for comment but she has so far refused all media requests pertaining to the video. Cynthia Gonzalez, Vice Mayor of Cudahy, California (City of Cudahy) The City of Cudahy has issued a brief statement of its own in which it says: 'The comments made by the Vice Mayor reflect her personal views and do not represent the views or official position of the City of Cudahy. The City will not be providing further comment.' The FBI has stated that it cannot currently confirm or deny whether an investigation into Gonzalez is underway. Still, spokesperson Laura Eimiller noted: 'Generally speaking, of course, the FBI condemns any calls for violence or targeting of law enforcement with violence.' ABC News legal analyst Josh Ritter said he believed Gonzalez's comments had crossed a line: 'When you're dealing with a political leader calling upon criminal street gangs to take action, that takes on a far more sinister meaning and, perhaps, criminal meaning behind it. 'It is one thing to say local people of the neighborhood stand up for yourselves. It's another thing to actually call out the names of different criminal street gangs and ask them to protect their neighborhood." The video was also condemned by local residents like Danielle Canales, who told ABC's local affiliate: 'Her talking about gang violence and bringing them to do, you know, stuff like that, I think it's horrible. We're already going through ICE deporting people and people, you know, are feeling insensitive about it. Saying that is just kind of sad.'


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Even Joe Rogan thinks Trump's ICE raids are ‘f***ing nuts'
Joe Rogan has criticized President Donald Trump 's mass deportation policies during a recent podcast episode, calling raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents 'f***ing nuts.' While the Trump administration said the focus of its deportation plan would be on criminals in the U.S. illegally, there have been raids on construction sites, big-box store parking lots, and garment factories, leading to soaring numbers of detainees, only a third of whom are convicted criminals. Such raids in Los Angeles earlier this month sparked demonstrations across the city's downtown, leading to unrest, looting, confrontations with police, and the deployment of the National Guard and a battalion of Marines by the federal government. In a podcast episode that aired late last week, Rogan slammed the raids and wondered whether Trump would have won the election if he had said this is how his administration would carry out deportations. 'Bro, these ICE raids are f***ing nuts, man,' Rogan told guests Luis J. Gomez and Big Jay Oakerson. He continued: 'The Trump administration, if they're running and they said, 'We're going to go to Home Depot and we're going to arrest all the people at Home Depot. We're going to go to construction sites, and we're going to just like, tackle people at construction sites…' I don't think anybody would've signed up for that.' Rogan added: 'They said we're going to get rid of the criminals and the gang members first, right? And now we're seeing, like, Home Depots get raided. Like, that's crazy.' The podcaster endorsed Trump in the 2024 election, although he has been critical of some of his policies since the beginning of his second term. He has also pushed back on other aspects of the administration's immigration policies, saying previously that deporting migrants to a megaprison in El Salvador was 'horrific.' Rogan also criticized a law enforcement officer for shooting an Australian reporter with a rubber bullet as she covered the protests in LA, calling the incident 'insane.' The trigger event for the week of unrest in downtown Los Angeles was an ICE raid at a Home Depot aimed at detaining people who would congregate there to pick up casual labor — the vast majority with no criminal record. 'They're not going after drug kingpins, they're chasing hardworking people through swap meets and Home Depot parking lots,' Mayor Karen Bass told The Los Angeles Times. 'You can see the impact of these random raids everywhere in our city — families are scared to go eat at restaurants, kids are scared their parents aren't going to return from the store — the fear is there because they've seen videos of people being shoved into unmarked vans by masked men refusing to identify themselves,' she said. The Trump administration's immigration enforcement has led to an 800 percent increase in the number of people without a criminal record being arrested by ICE since January. This surge has resulted in over 50,000 individuals being held in ICE detention centers, marking the first time this number has been reached. Less than one-third of current ICE detainees are convicted criminals, with most arrested for non-criminal immigration violations or having pending charges. Internal documents reveal that only about one in ten ICE detainees from October to May were convicted of serious crimes like murder or rape. Enforcement officials are reportedly under pressure to meet daily arrest targets and to expand efforts to detain and deport individuals in Democratic-run cities. Rogan's criticism of the way the Trump administration is handling its mass deportation plans naturally sparked its own reaction on social media. California Democrat Rep. Eric Swalwell wrote: 'Correct. @joerogan is absolutely right. No one signed up for ICE raiding Home Depot.' 'When you lose Joe Rogan...', the 'Republicans Against Trump' account posted on X. Former Illinois Republican Rep. Joe Walsh was blunter, writing in a post: 'Hey @joerogan, he ran on 'mass deportations.' What did you think mass deportations meant?' Similarly, the Tennessee Holler account posted: 'PSA: You were warned, Joe. Yet you signed up for it.'


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
California official criticized for appearing to call on gangs to intervene in immigration raids
The vice mayor of a tiny Southern California city is under fire after appearing to call on street gangs to organize in the face of immigration sweeps by federal agents in Los Angeles. In a video post on social media that's since been deleted, Cynthia Gonzalez, vice mayor of Cudahy, said she wanted to know where all of the gang members were 'at in Los Angeles.' 'You guys are always tagging everything up, claiming hood, and now that your hood's being invaded by the biggest gang there is, there ain't a peep out of you,' Gonzalez said, using a disparaging term often aimed at Mexican men who are members of street gangs. She further referenced '18th Street' and ' Florence,' two infamous street gangs, and questioned why gang members were not protesting or speaking up about the immigration raids. 'We're out there fighting our turf, protecting our turf, protecting our people and, like, where you at?' she said. The video seemed to suggest Gonzalez was calling on gang leaders to 'help out and organize' as U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other federal agencies participate in the Trump administration's stepped-up enforcement of immigration laws. The Department of Homeland Security called Gonzalez's comments 'despicable.' 'She calls for criminal gangs — including the vicious 18th street gang — to commit violence against our brave U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement law enforcement,' the department said in a post on X that included Gonzalez's video. 'This kind of garbage has led to a more than 500% increase in assaults against our U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement law enforcement officers. Secretary Noem has been clear: If you assault a federal officer, you will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.' Gonzalez did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The city of Cudahy said in a statement Tuesday it was aware of the video. 'The comments made by the Vice Mayor reflect her personal views and do not represent the views or official position of the City of Cudahy,' the statement read. 'The City will not be providing further comment.'