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Gov Newsom ‘handcuffed' police as LA riots expose ‘reactionary' leadership failure: former sheriff' s deputy

Gov Newsom ‘handcuffed' police as LA riots expose ‘reactionary' leadership failure: former sheriff' s deputy

Yahoo19 hours ago

As violent protests erupted in Los Angeles, Calif., L.A. County GOP Vice Chair and former L.A. County sheriff's deputy Patrick Gipson issued a scathing rebuke of state and local leadership, accusing officials of negligence and political opportunism.
"These riots, they're completely unnecessary," Gipson told Fox News Digital. "We didn't have to go to this length to see cars burning, businesses looted, livelihoods destroyed. It could've all been avoided."
Gipson pointed the finger squarely at Calif. Gov. Gavin Newsom, blaming him for failing to deploy the National Guard in time to prevent chaos.
"Newsom is reactionary instead of pro-action," he said. "If he had called in the National Guard earlier, we would've saved billions of dollars in insurance claims and protected our small businesses."
California Candidate For Governor Blasts Newsom While Walking Through La Riot Aftermath
The protests, which began as demonstrations against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), escalated into street violence and theft. The protests highlighted, for many conservatives, the consequences of the state's left-leaning approach to progressive criminal justice reform and immigration.
Read On The Fox News App
"ICE is here to enforce federal law. And if we can't enforce federal law in this state, what does that say about us?" he asked.
Gipson also alleged that Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass was unable to act independently, suggesting that she has been taking her queues from Newsom.
"I know Karen Bass did go in and said, 'this is not the way to protest.' They wanted peaceful protest, but that's not what we had," Gipson said. "She's taking her instructions from Sacramento and Gavin Newsom. If she had better leadership from him, I think we would have been off a lot better that we are now."
WATCH: Newsom says people will be prosecuted to fullest extent of law
Newsom attempted to cast blame on President Donald Trump for escalating the protests, claiming that they were peaceful demonstrations before the National Guard and his rhetoric accelerated the conflict.
"Gavin Newsom does not have a handle on California," he said. "If he had said, '[President] Trump, can you come and help us prepare for this? I think he [Trump] would have helped.
"Newsom is obviously setting up for his race in 2028 and he is going to cast the blame on Trump, saying that Trump didn't do his job."
Steve Hilton: How One-party Democratic Rule Led To Riots, Burning American Flags And Attacks On Police In La
The consequences of what Gipson described as "soft-on-crime" policies are, in his view, compounding the unrest. He cited the state's failure to properly fund Proposition 36, which was overwhelmingly passed in 2024 to curb back the radical policies of Proposition 47, as proof of Sacramento's disregard for public safety.
"Gavin Newsom is not funding Prop 36. Store owners can't even go after criminals. Patrons are scared to shop. People won't even get on the freeway toward LA now," Gipson said. "They're afraid a brick's going to come flying through their car window."
Reflecting on his experience as a former sheriff's deputy, Gipson said the state of law enforcement morale in L.A. is dire.
"Law enforcement has not been able to do their job," he said. "Officers are afraid, literally afraid, to do their jobs because they don't want to go to jail for following their training. There's no backing from Newsom, none from Bass."
"They're handcuffed," he added.
"For over 10 years, Gavin Newsom has not protected law enforcement in California. They've been defunded, defamed and demoralized. And now they wait. They hesitate. And when you hesitate in this line of work, people get hurt."
Gipson also faulted the bureaucratic chain of command for paralyzing law enforcement at critical moments.
"The sheriff answers to the Board of Supervisors. The LAPD chief answers to the mayor. And when they can't arrest people right away, the violence just keeps going," he said.
The solution, Gipson argued, is straightforward: consequences.
In a statement to Fox News Digital, Newsom's office said that the Trump administration "didn't even tap into the additional resources available to clean up their mess."
"Let's be clear: The National Guard wasn't needed in Los Angeles. State and local law enforcement were responding, and federal agencies didn't even tap into the additional resources available to clean up their mess. Calls for troops to handle a protest show a basic misunderstanding of how public safety works — which is rather shocking for someone who used to have a badge."
Fox News Digital reached out to Bass' office for comment.Original article source: Gov Newsom 'handcuffed' police as LA riots expose 'reactionary' leadership failure: former sheriff' s deputy

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Vigil held in Chelsea in honor of high school student and recent grad detained by immigration agents
Vigil held in Chelsea in honor of high school student and recent grad detained by immigration agents

Boston Globe

timean hour ago

  • Boston Globe

Vigil held in Chelsea in honor of high school student and recent grad detained by immigration agents

Immigration agents stopped De La Cruz, 20, as he was leaving his house on Wednesday, his parents said. De La Cruz, who graduated Chelsea High School just days before, was just a few doors away from his house when he was stopped. The next day, 19-year-old high school student Belizario Benito Vasquez went to Burlington for a meeting he thought was a normal part of his ongoing asylum application process. Instead, he was detained and transferred to a holding facility in Plymouth. Neither of the two young men had any criminal record, family members said Saturday. Advertisement On Saturday evening, demonstrators held devotional candles and signs reading 'Keep Families Together' and 'Chelsea is My Home.' The crowd of more than 100 stood among several American flags, as well as a pair of red-white-and-blue bouquets still up from Memorial Day weekend. De La Cruz's father, Giovanni De La Cruz, addressed the crowd in Spanish, wearing a white T-shirt with his son's graduation photo printed on the front. 'I don't wish this moment on anyone,' he said, his voice breaking. 'I haven't been able to sleep, thinking of what's happening to my son.' Marta Vasquez, Benito Vasquez's mother, said she fled Guatemala with her two sons due to an abusive family situation, as well as threats from local gangs. She said she hadn't been able to eat or sleep since she last saw her son, now in detention. Advertisement 'As a mother, when your children are torn from you, you're left with your heart shattered,' she said in Spanish, fighting back tears. 'You don't know if your children are doing okay in there, if they've eaten, if they can sleep.' Marta Vasquez said she'd spoken to her son on Friday. She described him as a studious learner of English, who was adamant about not dropping out of school and continuing to study — something he didn't have the chance to do in Guatemala. 'I have to be strong to hear his voice,' she said. 'He tells me, 'Mom, I need you to be strong,' and I tell him, 'Son, I'm here for you.' ... The only thing I can do for my son is give him strength. But a mother's heart hurts deeply.' Mayra Balderas, a 'If we don't bring our voices, these things are going to happen again,' she said. 'It's going to keep happening, and it's going to keep happening. So the more people that know what's going on and what it is they're doing ... we can fight this battle.' Geovani De La Cruz's high school diploma and cap-and-gown were displayed at a vigil held in his honor outside Chelsea City Hall on Saturday. De La Cruz was detained by immigration agents on Wednesday, days after graduating from Chelsea High School. Camilo Fonseca Camilo Fonseca can be reached at

Will mom get detained? Is dad going to work? Answering kids' big questions amid ICE raids
Will mom get detained? Is dad going to work? Answering kids' big questions amid ICE raids

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Will mom get detained? Is dad going to work? Answering kids' big questions amid ICE raids

By the time Josefina and her husband sat down to talk, the immigration raids had been going on for days, and protests over the federal actions had turned violent in parts of downtown Los Angeles. At night, they could hear the helicopters from their Boyle Heights home. The couple couldn't afford to put off the conversation any longer — fear was mounting over the potential separation of their family. Josefina's husband, a garment worker, is an undocumented immigrant from Mexico. When U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers raided the Ambiance Apparel garment factory June 6, the couple's 15- and 19-year-old children had texted their father in a panic. He, too, works at a garment factory. Should he go to work? That's what they had to hash out Tuesday night. The couple was seated in the dining room. Their children were engrossed in a movie in the living room. The parents had not wanted their kids to hear the conversation — and figured they were out of earshot. They weren't. 'Dad should just stay home,' the teenagers insisted. And with that, the whole family was part of a difficult conversation. It was not how the couple had scripted it, but Josefina came to terms with keeping the kids in the know. 'I've done my best to shield them, but they have a lot of questions,' said Josefina, who like others in this report asked that she and her family not be fully identified over safety concerns. 'They're trying to understand what happens after this. So what I've been offering them is that this isn't how things are going to be forever, that there's power in community.' Conversations like the one in Josefina's dining room are unfolding across the Los Angeles region, as families with undocumented members grapple with fraught questions pushed to the fore by the Trump administration's chaotic crackdown on what he has called a "Migrant Invasion." Could mom be arrested? What happens if dad can't go to work? These and other queries are sparking excruciating — and potentially life-altering — discussions centered on planning for the possible deportation of a family member. Parents are often conflicted about how much to tell their children — even when dealing with ordinary issues. But the intense anguish some feel at this moment has exacerbated the dilemma. Child psychologists and counselors said children should be brought into the fold for these crucial conversations in age-appropriate ways. Doing so, said licensed clinical social worker Yessenia O. Aguirre, will help kids reckon with a moment suffused with anxiety. "I would counsel people to have the conversations from early on," said Aguirre, who is co-developing a coloring book for parents to help them navigate fears and anxieties related to immigration. "Kids can know about real dangers and still have a joyous childhood. We don't have to protect our kids from things they are already going to hear from the news, social media, and from just going to school." If there was ever a week in which children might have heard about issues related to immigration, it was this past one in L.A. Aggressive sweeps by ICE were met with fierce resistance by protesters and others beginning June 6. A Home Depot in Paramount became a flash point after border patrol agents began massing there early on June 7. Eventually, the scene erupted, with demonstrators clashing with authorities, leading to multiple arrests. The episode was one of the triggers that led the Trump administration to deploy National Guard troops to L.A. over the objections of Gov. Gavin Newsom. ICE forays deep into neighborhoods have continued, sparking new outrage. On Wednesday, The Times reported that a 9-year-old Torrance Elementary School student and his father were deported to Honduras. The cascading events have made it a profoundly uncertain time for immigrant families. And that can spawn anxiety, said psychologist Melissa Brymer, a director at the UCLA-Duke National Center for Child Traumatic Stress. But there are, she said, simple actions parents can take to help children, such as organizing a comforting family meal or arranging for other relatives to check in on a youngster to increase their sense of security. Even asking kids if they are getting a good night's sleep can spark a wider discussion about how they are faring. "Kids are usually willing to talk about it from a sleep perspective," Brymer said. Crowded around the dining room table, Josefina and her husband told their children that they would decide whether he'd return to work by Friday. Even though the kids were now part of the conversation, it was still going to be the adults' decision. They had to weigh the risk of a workplace raid and the husband's possible arrest against the financial implications of losing a vital source of income. The family was trying to save money to pay for a legal defense, Josefina said, should her husband be detained. 'We don't have the money to be like, 'Oh yeah, quit your job,'" Josefina said. Until the teenagers overheard their conversation, Josefina hoped they knew enough to draw comfort from the family's plans. She said, for example, that the kids know what to do if ICE officers come to their house and which lawyers to call if their father is detained. That, experts said, is the right instinct. Aguirre said that preteens and teenagers "pick up on our moods," and may understand more than parents realize. "They are sensing our anxiety, they are looking at our behaviors," she said. "They may want to listen in and see what's underneath if we aren't speaking up." When broaching a tough topic, older kids should be given "space to vent," Aguirre said, and parents should resist the urge to immediately tell their children not to be scared or worry. Instead, they can empathize, telling them, "It makes sense — we are all so scared." Parents can also convey that they have a plan, and clue the kids in on it. "At that age," Aguirre said of teenagers, "it is more of a family dynamic — where they are included." Some scenarios — such as detainment of a parent — are dark. But kids should be made aware of them, Brymer said. "I think it's truly important that we talk to kids about potential separation," she said. "Kids are worried about that, and so let's make sure we talk it over with them. How may a potential separation impact them?" As for Josefina's family, they decided that her husband — who immigrated from Mexico when he was in elementary school about 40 years ago — would return to work. "He decided, 'I still have a responsibility, and I still want to help provide,'" she said. For their 15-year-old daughter, having a plan has made her feel safer. 'I feel like out of my whole family, I'm the least afraid of the stuff that's happening," she said. "I think it's because I have hope in our people in L.A.' Read more: Fears of ICE raids upend life in L.A. County, from schools to Home Depot parking lots Ana's son was set to graduate from eighth grade on Tuesday, and amid the ongoing ICE sweeps, her family had wrestled with whether to attend the celebration at his Mid-Wilshire area school. Her husband is an undocumented immigrant from Mexico. And she is a recipient of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, the 2012 policy that provides protection from deportation to immigrants without lawful status who came to the U.S. as children. The program has been the focus of a lengthy legal challenge and could eventually be ruled illegal. Their 14-year-old son knew the stakes. 'He understands what's happening — that there are arrests,' Ana said. Still, the family decided to attend the graduation. Even so, on the morning of the event, their son wanted to revisit the decision, asking his parents if they were comfortable with it. He even suggested they could watch the ceremony from home on a livestream the school had arranged. 'I told him, 'No, we're going to accompany you,'' Ana said. 'And we did. In the end it was worth it to be with him and applaud his successes.' Read more: Graduation day at Maywood Academy High, where students are 98% Latino, 100% all-American Experts could understand her decision. Maintaining a sense of normalcy — when it is safe to do so — helps kids stay on an even keel. Brymer recommends encouraging them to continue to go to school and summer activities if possible, and to participate in their typical social events. 'Kids do better with routines,' she said. "They should be allowed to play and interact.' Aguirre, however, noted that children crave "a sense of safety and connection with loved ones" more than they desire a "sense of normalcy." She added: "It might not be the best time to keep that normalcy — that puts a lot of pressure on parents." If attending a public event or milestone celebration presents a big risk, Aguirre said, parents might consider opting out, and making plans to ensure their presence is felt from afar. "Prep the child ahead of time and say, 'We are not able to physically be there, but we are so proud of this accomplishment,'" Aguirre said. She said parents might tell their child, "We are going to ask [a friend at the event] to blow this whistle, and when they blow it, know that we are there." "For eighth-graders, there would be heartache around not having parents there, but I can also imagine if anything were to happen, they would feel a lot of guilt," Aguirre said. On the day of Ana's son's graduation, the school auditorium opened hours early, so that families did not have to wait on the sidewalk. But the celebration was bittersweet, she said. Fear was palpable among both the students and the crowd. And familiar faces were absent. 'It's a little hard to face sometimes,' Ana said. 'But at the same time we have to be with them in these important moments in life.' Paige and her 8- and 11-year-old daughters stood in front of Long Beach Civic Center on Tuesday evening, alongside roughly 400 other protesters. They chanted slogans near the Port Headquarters building amid signs and swirling American and Mexican flags. 'Seeking safety is NOT a crime,' one sign read. 'Humans are not illegal,' said another. Read more: Immigration raids have shaken communities across Los Angeles County. How can you help? The family isn't new to protesting. Paige and both daughters took to the streets in 2020 after George Floyd's murder sparked outrage. But this time the issue is personal: The girls' father is an undocumented Mexican immigrant. 'Now that it's impacting our family significantly, it's a bit harder for her,' Paige said of her younger daughter. 'She's fighting for her family.' Paige is separated from the girls' father, and he lives elsewhere. It's been difficult for the kids to spend nights apart from him, she said. To allay their worries, he's stayed over a couple of nights. And attending the protest provided additional comfort, because it showed the children that they were part of a supportive community. In times of crisis, giving kids the chance to express themselves by participating in the moment helps them process their feelings, Brymer said. "People are out protesting because they love their culture, and they're trying to advocate for their rights and for rights of" others, she said. But participating doesn't necessarily have to mean protesting, which may not feel appropriate for some, Aguirre said. Instead, children can help in other ways, such as helping to deliver groceries for a vulnerable neighbor, she said. It's important, Brymer said, to acknowledge that children "really want to be those agents of change." Sequeira reports for The Times' early childhood education initiative, focusing on the learning and development of California children from birth to age 5. For more information about the initiative and its philanthropic funders, go to Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Clarence Page: When the president's peacemaking efforts invite more chaos
Clarence Page: When the president's peacemaking efforts invite more chaos

Chicago Tribune

timean hour ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Clarence Page: When the president's peacemaking efforts invite more chaos

While the nation braced to see what would happen next in Los Angeles on Thursday, a surprising message appeared on President Donald Trump's Truth Social account. A day after videos emerged of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents chasing after terrified farmworkers trying to hide in California fields, the president suggested in his post that he might not fully pursue his core policy proposal of mass deportation after all. Or so it seemed. A closer reading revealed his sympathy was directed not so much toward the workers as toward the agricultural industry and his fellow members of the managerial and ownership class — the bosses who need the labor that undocumented workers disproportionately provide. 'Our great Farmers and people in the Hotel and Leisure business have been stating that our very aggressive policy on immigration is taking very good, long time workers away from them, with those jobs being almost impossible to replace,' he posted. To underscore how much of a change of tone this represents, recall the language he used in 2015 at Trump Tower in New York to announce his first campaign to spin up fear, loathing and resentment as if he was ready to invade Mexico. 'When do we beat Mexico at the border? They're laughing at us, at our stupidity,' he said. 'And now they are beating us economically. They are not our friend, believe me. But they're killing us economically.' If you're inclined to shrug this off with something like, 'Oh, that's just Trump being Trump,' perhaps repeated exposure to his rhetorical excesses has caused you, like many of the rest of us, to normalize his charged rhetoric. So now the president is concerned that ICE raids are hurting American farming. Right, as Seth Meyers, host of NBC's 'Late Night,' quipped. 'I hope he finds who is responsible for that policy.' Indeed. It's not like Trump is unaware that farmers form a key MAGA voting bloc. It's not like he's never heard of the hospitality industry. He is intimately aware of its enormous immigrant labor force that goes back decades. Trump turned his fire on a familiar foe, former President Joe Biden. As if his reelection campaign never ended, Trump blamed Biden for allowing 'criminals' to apply for jobs on farms. 'We must protect our Farmers, but get the CRIMINALS OUT OF THE USA.' I think we can surmise that Trump has heard from unhappy farmers, a core MAGA constituency, and from unhappy members of the CEO class, and he wants to keep these people on his side. Instead of acknowledging any negative outcomes to his own decisions, Trump did what politicians often do in a pinch: He made promises that, if necessary, can easily be forgotten or denied. In a news conference later Thursday, Trump had this to say: 'Our farmers are being hurt badly by, you know, they have very good workers, they have worked for them for 20 years. They're not citizens, but they've turned out to be, you know, great. And we're going to have to do something about that. We can't take farmers and take all their people and send them back because they don't have maybe what they're supposed to have, maybe not.' I'm sure Trump thought this would sound to some like a genuine peacemaking gesture. But by now we all ought to recognize the transactional subtext of such statements. I might have my agents fan out through the country, breaking up families and destroying lives and businesses, or maybe not! It depends on how much their employers mean to me. But before his faint praise for hardworking migrants had a chance to soften the appalling face of his deportation policy, Trump was upstaged at another event. Federal agents manhandled U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla, a California Democrat, out of the room in Los Angeles where Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem was speaking to reporters and as military troops were patrolling downtown LA streets in response to unrest fomented by Noem's department's policies. Padilla interrupted the event to ask her a policy question regarding the sweeps of allegedly undocumented workers, but before he could ask it, he was shoved down onto his knees and handcuffed. As an old political expression goes, it was not a good look — and Noem did not sound very congenial. 'We are not going away,' she said, referring to the National Guard and DHS presence in Los Angeles amid protests against Trump's sweeping and drastic deportation mission in the city. 'We are staying here to liberate the city from the socialists and the burdensome leadership that this governor and that this mayor have placed on this country and what they have tried to insert into the city.' Was this a Homeland Security speech or a political speech? And what 'burdensome leadership' did she have in mind? Los Angeles and the rest of us don't need more burdens. We need to give peace a chance. But peace is not what Trump and Noem have in mind for the blue states and blue cities of America. I think Sen. Padilla could confirm that.

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