Anaheim warns of 'most significant and disruptive' immigration raids as feds swarm city
Anaheim has seen targeted enforcement and "larger activity" since mid-July, when a federal judge issued a temporary restraining order blocking federal agents from using racial profiling to carry out random immigration arrests across the region, officials said.
Around midday on Saturday, agents in three or four black SUVs and a white van arrived at the Euclid Car Wash, deploying what appeared to be a smoke canister before detaining one person. The individual was a bystander, not an employee at the car wash, according to the city.
Video of the incident posted on social media showed uniformed, masked agents tackling a man to the ground as he tried to flee through the parking lot. The man was later released.
"I think everybody in the community feels targeted," said Anaheim City Councilman Carlos Leon. "There's just a lot of fear and uncertainty, and it's really a very destabilizing thing to go through as a city."
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to a request Monday for more information about the weekend raids.
Read more: 'They run, we chase': Immigration raids test limits of 'probable cause'
Officials say it was the third time the car wash, located on Euclid Street near La Palma Avenue, has seen immigration enforcement activity since early July. Several employees were detained during previous operations.
City officials said approximately five laborers were also detained Saturday outside the Home Depot on Brookhurst Street, another frequent target of immigration enforcement.
"Those concerned need to be aware and alert," the city wrote in a news release.
Anaheim has the second-highest Latino population of any Orange County city, behind only Santa Ana. More than 121,000 people, roughly 35% of Anaheim's population, were born outside the United States, according to census data.
Officials have been quick to condemn how federal actions have played out in the city, saying the enforcement has destabilized families, neighborhoods and the local economy, spreading fear and uncertainty.
"At the end of the day, this isn't about public safety," Leon said. "It doesn't make any of us safer. I was born in this country and I'm scared. A lot of folks are in the same boat — even though they're citizens ... Just based on the color of their skin or how they look or where they are, that makes them susceptible to being detained."
Read more: Home Depots across L.A. become tense battleground in new phase of ICE raids
Isaac Dominguez, the man detained by immigration agents outside the car wash last weekend, told CBS Los Angeles that he was watching the scene unfold and pump-faked throwing a bottle. At that point, agents deployed some type of smoke canister and chased him down, he said.
Read more: L.A. volunteers who document ICE raids are being arrested. How to do it safely
Video shows Dominguez, a U.S. citizen, calling out that he "can't breathe" as an agent pins him down. He told CBS that he was not attacking the agents.
"They're violating all kinds of civil rights," he told the outlet. "Not to sound like a hero, but I've always been one to stand up for the little guy and it being close to home — that being my people — I didn't think, I just had to do something about it."
The City Council last month voted to join the lawsuit challenging the federal actions, citing concerns with how the enforcement activity has affected residents.
When Leon visited the Home Depot in his district following Saturday's raid, he said the people who witnessed the action were scared and angry, but also desperate to find a way to protect their friends and neighbors.
Read more: L.A. Home Depot raided twice in one day. Critics say ICE is violating court order
Immigrants and day laborers often congregate at Home Depot stores to find work — and locations across Southern California have become a frequent target for immigration enforcement.
The location in Anaheim is no exception. There have been about a half-dozen raids at the site since federal authorities ratcheted up operations in Southern California in early June.
Still, workers feel they have little choice but to keep showing up to pay their bills.
"A lot of these folks are contributors to our community and to our neighborhoods, so it's just disheartening," Leon said. "These are human beings who are being targeted."
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