logo
Eerie silence hangs over Central Coast farm fields in wake of ICE raids

Eerie silence hangs over Central Coast farm fields in wake of ICE raids

OXNARD, Calif. — At 6 a.m. Wednesday, Juvenal Solano drove slowly along the cracked roads that border the fields of strawberry and celery that cloak this fertile expanse of Ventura County, his eyes peeled for signs of trouble.
An eerie silence hung over the morning. The workers who would typically be shuffling up and down the strawberry rows were largely absent. The entry gates to many area farms were shut and locked.
Still, Solano, a director with the Mixteco Indigena Community Organizing Project, felt relieved. Silence was better than the chaos that had broken out Tuesday when immigration agents raided fields in Oxnard and fanned out across communities in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties that grow a considerable portion of the state's strawberries, avocados and celery.
The organization, part of a broader rapid-response network that offers support and counsel for workers targeted by immigration raids, was caught off guard when calls started pouring in from residents reporting federal agents gathering near fields. Group leaders say they have confirmed at least 35 people were detained in the raids, and are still trying to pin down exact numbers.
In the past week, Solano said, the organization had gotten scattered reports of immigration authorities arresting undocumented residents. But Tuesday, he said, marked a new level in approach and scope as federal agents tried to access fields and packinghouses. Solano, like other organizers, are wondering what their next move will be.
'If they didn't show up in the morning, it's possible they'll show up in the afternoon,' Solano said. 'We're going to stay alert to everything that's happening.'
While agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol showed up at food production sites from the Central Coast to the San Joaquin Valley, much of the activity centered on the Oxnard Plain. Maureen McGuire, chief executive of the Ventura County Farm Bureau, said federal agents visited five packing facilities and at least five farms in the region. Agents also stopped people on their way to work, she said.
In many cases, according to McGuire and community leaders, farm owners refused to grant access to the agents, who had no judicial warrants.
California, which grows more than one-third of the nation's vegetables and more than three-quarters of its fruits and nuts, has long been dependent on undocumented labor to tend its crops. Though a growing number of farm laborers are migrants imported on a seasonal basis through the controversial H-2A visa program, at least half the state's 255,700 farmworkers are undocumented immigrants, according to UC Merced research. Many have lived in California for years, and have put down roots and started families.
Until this week, California's agricultural sector had largely escaped the large-scale raids that the Department of Homeland Security has deployed in urban areas, most recently in Los Angeles and Orange counties. California farmers — many of them ardent supporters of Donald Trump — have seemed remarkably calm as the president vowed mass deportations of undocumented workers.
Many expected that Trump would find ways to protect their workforce, noting that without sufficient workers, food would rot in the fields, sending grocery prices skyrocketing.
But this week brought a different message. Asked about enforcement actions in food production regions, Tom Homan, Trump's chief adviser on border policy, said growers should hire a legal workforce.
'There are programs — you can get people to come in and do that job,' he said. 'So work with ICE, work with [U.S. Citizen and Immigration Services], and hire a legal workforce. It's illegal to knowingly hire an illegal alien.'
California's two U.S. senators, both Democrats, issued a joint statement Wednesday decrying the farm raids, saying that targeting farmworkers for deportation would undermine businesses and families.
'Targeting hardworking farmworkers and their families who have been doing the backbreaking work in the fields for decades is unjustified and unconscionable,' Sens. Alex Padilla and Adam Schiff said in their statement.
The California Farm Bureau also issued a statement, warning that continued enforcement would disrupt production.
'We want to be very clear: California agriculture depends on and values its workforce,' said Bryan Little, senior director of policy advocacy at the California Farm Bureau. 'We're still early in the season, with limited harvest activity, but that will soon ramp up. If federal immigration enforcement activities continue in this direction, it will become increasingly difficult to produce food, process it and get it onto grocery store shelves.'
Arcenio Lopez, executive director of MICOP, said he is especially concerned about the prospect of Indigenous workers being detained, because many cannot read or write in English or Spanish, and speak only their Indigenous languages. The organization's leaders suspect that many of those detained Tuesday are Indigenous, and are rushing to find them before they sign documents for voluntary deportation that they don't understand. They're urging that anyone who gets arrested call their hotline, where they offer legal assistance.
Rob Roy, president of the Ventura County Agricultural Association, said he has been warning growers since November that this time would come and providing training on their legal rights. Many know to ask for search warrants, he said. But that still leaves undocumented workers vulnerable on their way to and from work.
'I think overall here, they're fairly safe on the farms or the building,' Roy said. 'But when they leave work, they're very concerned.'
Elaine Yompian, an organizer with VC Defensa, said she is urging families to stay home, if possible, to avoid exposure.
'We actually told a lot of the families who contacted us, if you can potentially not work today, don't go,' Yompian said, adding that they are able to provide limited support to families through donations they receive.
Families whose loved ones have been detained are struggling to understand what comes next, she said.
'People are terrified; they don't know at what point they're going to be targeted,' Yompian said. 'The narrative that they're taking criminals or taking bad people off the streets is completely false. They're taking the working-class people that are just trying to get by.'
This article is part of The Times' equity reporting initiative, funded by the James Irvine Foundation, exploring the challenges facing low-income workers and the efforts being made to address California's economic divide.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wasn't the president supposed to be deporting criminals?
Wasn't the president supposed to be deporting criminals?

Los Angeles Times

timean hour ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Wasn't the president supposed to be deporting criminals?

This will strike the literal-minded as illogical, but I think Huntington Park Mayor Arturo Flores, a Marine veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan, had a righteous point when he declared at a news conference with Southern California mayors that immigrants being rounded up by Immigration and Customs Enforcement in communities like his 'are Americans, whether they have a document or they don't.' 'The president keeps talking about a foreign invasion,' Flores told me Thursday. 'He keeps trying to paint us as the other. I say, 'No, you are dealing with Americans.'' California's estimated 1.8 million undocumented immigrants who have lived among us for years, for decades, who work and pay taxes here, who have sent their American-born children to schools here, have all the responsibilities of citizens minus many of the rights. Yes, technically, they have broken the law. (For that matter, so has President Trump, a felon, and he continues to violate the Constitution day after day, as his mounting court losses attest.) But our region's undocumented Mexican and Central American immigrants are inextricably embedded in our lives. They care for our children, build our homes, dig our ditches, trim our trees, clean our homes, hotels and businesses, wash our dishes, pick our crops, sew our clothes. Lots own small businesses, are paying mortgages, attend universities, rise in their professions. In 2013, I wrote about Sergio Garcia, the first undocumented immigrant admitted to the California Bar. Since then, he has become a U.S. citizen and owns a personal injury law firm. These Californians are far less likely to break the law than native-born Americans, and they do not deserve the reign of terror being inflicted on them by the Trump administration, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who has pointlessly but theatrically called in the Marines. 'So we started off by hearing the administration wanted to go after violent felons gang members, drug dealers,' said Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, who organized the mayors' news conference last week, 'but when you raid Home Depot and workplaces, when you tear parents and children apart, and when you run armored caravans through our streets, you're not trying to keep anyone safe. You're trying to cause fear and panic.' And please, let's not forget that when Congress came together and hammered out a bipartisan immigration reform bill under President Biden, Trump demanded Republicans kill it because he did not want a rational policy, he wanted to be able to keep hammering Democrats on the issue. But it seems there is more going on here than rounding up undocumented immigrants and terrorizing their families. We seem to have entered the 'punish California' phase of Trump 2.0. 'Trump has a hyperfocus on California, on how to hurt the economy and cause chaos, and he is really doubling down on that campaign,' Flores told me. He has a point. 'We are staying here to liberate the city from the socialist and the burdensome leadership that this governor and this mayor placed on this country,' Noem told reporters Thursday at a news conference in the Westwood federal building, during which California Sen. Alex Padilla was wrestled to the ground and handcuffed face down for daring to ask her a question. 'We are not going away.' So now we're talking about regime change? (As former Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe put it on Bluesky, the use of military force aimed at displacing democratically elected leaders 'is the very definition of a coup.') Noem's noxious mix of willful ignorance and inflammatory rhetoric is almost too ludicrous to mock. It goes hand in hand with Trump's silly declaration that our city has been set aflame by rioters, that without the military patrolling our streets, Los Angeles 'would be a crime scene like we haven't seen in years,' and that 'paid insurrectionists' have fueled the anti-ICE protests. What we are seeing play out in the news and in our neighborhoods is the willful infliction of fear, trauma and intimidation designed to spark a violent response, and the warping of reality to soften the ground for further Trump administration incursions into blue states, America's bulwark against his autocratic aspirations. For weeks, Trump has been scheming to deprive California — probably illegally — of federal funding for public schools and universities, citing resistance to his executive orders on diversity, equity and inclusion programs, on immigration, on environmental regulations, etc. And yet, because he is perhaps the world's most ignorant head of state, he seems to have suddenly realized that crippling the California economy might be bad politics for him. On Thursday, he suggested in his own jumbled way that perhaps deporting thousands of the state's farm and hospitality workers might cause pain to his friends, their employers. (Central Valley growers and agribusiness PACs, for example, overwhelmingly supported Trump in 2024.) 'Our farmers are being hurt badly by, you know, they have very good workers. They've worked for them for 20 years,' Trump said. '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.' Like a lot of Californians, I feel helpless in the face of this assault on immigrants. I thought about a Guatemalan, a father of three young American-born children, who has a thriving business hauling junk. I met him a couple of years ago at my local Home Depot, and have hired him a few times to haul away household detritus. Once, after I couldn't get the city to help, he hauled off a small dune's worth of sand at the end of my street that had become the local dogs' pee pad. I called him this week — I have more stuff that I need to get rid of, and I was pretty sure he could use the work. Early Friday morning, he arrived on time with two workers. He said hadn't been able to work in two weeks but was hopeful he'd be able to return to Home Depot soon. 'How are your kids doing?' I asked. 'They worry,' he said. 'They ask, 'What will we do if you're deported?'' He tells them not to fret, that things will soon be back to normal. After he drove off, he texted: 'Thank you so much for helping me today. God bless you.' No, God bless him. For working hard. For being a good dad. And for still believing, against the odds, in the American dream. @ @rabcarian

Some L.A. neighborhoods clear out as immigration raids send people underground
Some L.A. neighborhoods clear out as immigration raids send people underground

Los Angeles Times

timean hour ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Some L.A. neighborhoods clear out as immigration raids send people underground

A week of immigration sweeps across Southern California has left some communities eerily quiet, with some residents saying they are avoiding going out and attending to routine business out of fear of being stopped. Among the places where residents and merchants say foot traffic is way down include the normally bustling MacArthur Park area, downtown Downey and the Fashion District, which saw a large immigration raid June 6. Some car washes, which were a frequent target of agents last week, have also temporarily closed. Here is a sampling of how life is changing: These were the sounds you didn't hear coming from a school in South Los Angeles on Saturday — children laughing with their friends, parents whooping for their kids' first guitar solos and teachers burbling about the piano pupil who exceeded all expectations. The music went silent this Father's Day weekend at the Young Musicians Foundation. The venerable school for working-class students canceled its traditional semester-ending concert and celebration because many of its students and parents were afraid that gathering would make them vulnerable to the Trump administration's immigration raids. After a week of Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests around Southern California, many parents in the working class neighborhood east of USC pulled their kids from classes last week. Even more families, including those legally in the U.S., said they wouldn't attend Saturday's now-cancelled concert, out of an abundance of caution that they could be sent arrested and have to spend weeks proving their legal status. 'One by one, they were calling this week, saying 'It breaks our heart, but we are scared to death to come out,'' said Walter Zooi, executive director of the Young Musicians Foundation. 'Folks are being disconnected from their families, from their communities, from these kinds of opportunities, which they love.' Instead of the traditional party — and an accompanying feast of pizza, papusas and other Mexican and Central American delicacies — students handed in their borrowed instruments Friday and quietly said their farewells. One mother said she was saddened but felt she had no choice but to pull her 12-year-old daughter out of classes at YMF. 'She misses being with her friends and she is missing out on being inspired by the other students,' said the woman, who gave only her middle name, Esther, because she said she was concerned about being targeted. 'And as parents we are missing seeing that happiness when they are done performing and the satisfaction they get from the applause and encouragement.' Esther's U.S.-born girl, who first struggled to plunk out 'Mary Had a Little Lamb' on piano, now sends her fingers flying over the keyboard, delivering American pop classics and tunes from her parent's native Mexico. 'She sees this place like an oasis,' said Esther, a computer tech, who says her daughter has sometimes struggled with anxiety. 'This program is like therapy. It's something that helps her, that makes her better.' One of the YMF teachers is Andy Abad. Himself the L.A.-born son of immigrants, the guitarist went on to perform with Jennifer Lopez and the Backstreet Boys, among others, and to record with Lady Gaga and Bonnie Raitt. He now teaches at USC and a couple days a week at the YMF school, tucked into the ground floor of a subsidized housing complex. He started teaching at the school to give a role model to students, many of whom have never had access to instruments or music lessons. 'These immigrants work hard. They pay Social Security and other taxes. They just want to live,' said Abad. 'That's something some current political leaders don't want you to realize. They want to demonize them and to scapegoat them.' 'It's affecting everyone,' said Abad, 'and especially these kids, who just want to learn and who just want to do more.' On Friday morning, the area around MacArthur Park, a longtime immigrant hub west of downtown, was noticeably quieter than usual. Gone were many of the vendors who once lined South Alvarado Street at all times of day, selling everything from baby formula to Lionel Messi jerseys. 'There's like sadness, maybe grief. I think a lot of fear, a lot of fear is going around these communities. And yeah, people are walking around just very cautious, very cautious,' said Cristina Serrano, 37, as she was doing mitt work at Panda Boxing Gym, near the corner of Westlake Avenue and 8th Street. At Panda Boxing, the gym's owner now regularly walks up and down the block looking for signs of trouble and to make sure that people in the gym feel safe, said Serrano. 'I mean, most of us are U.S. citizens, but again, if there's someone that we may know in the gym [who isn't], we're gonna make sure we protect them and keep them safe,' she said. 'In general, that's where we stand as far as this gym.' Even though she is a citizen by birth, she says that she's taken to carrying a copy of her birth certificate with her everywhere she goes as a precaution. She also has a lawyer on speed dial. 'I don't know who they want to stop, who they're targeting, to be honest, because they're targeting people that look like me,' she said. She also said the Mexican restaurant next door abruptly closed its doors for two days, without explanation. Over at Tony's Barber Shop on the next block over, one of the barbers dusted hair off her chair as her customer got up to leave. The barber, who declined to give her name, explained in Spanish that business had almost disappeared. Asked why, she exchanged an exasperated look with the customer, before saying that 'la migra' — slang for ICE — was popping up everywhere in the area, scaring off her customers. On Friday morning, Julia Meltzer was on her way to work and had just turned left on Virgil Avenue from 6th Street when she saw a number of men in bulletproof vests. There was at least one vehicle, a silver Ford SUV with an Arizona licence plate, parked on the driveway of an apartment complex. As she pulled up closer to the vehicle, she said she saw men handcuffing a man wearing an orange shirt and white shorts. Meltzer said she pulled over and began taking photos and videos after realizing she had just stumbled upon a federal immigration operation. As she and other residents continued documenting, Meltzer came across a distraught woman who was the wife of the man the federal agents had just arrested. On Thursday, federal agents stormed a Huntington Park home and were accompanied by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. Sabrina Medina, 28, was cleaning her patio Wednesday night when she saw a silver minivan slow down in front of her home in Huntington Park. She said she saw the driver recording her and her brother-in-law at the home. 'I screamed at them: 'Why are you recording me?'' she said. 'I started screaming because I thought, you know, something bad was going to happen to me.' She said the people in the van didn't respond. Scared for her four children, Medina went inside the house and called her husband, Jorge Saldana, 30, who was at a nearby laundromat washing clothes. She told him what happened and that he needed to come home. She and her husband got into an argument about his immigration status, she said. Medina worried immigration officials were now targeting him and their house. At one point, she told her husband she didn't want him attending his 10-year-old daughter's graduation. She said the argument ended with her husband storming out of the house. 'He was upset,' she said. 'He wanted to go to the graduation but I told him no and that I was going to take my sister.' Medina's husband, Saldana, was wanted for being in the country following his deportation. Eight years ago, Saldana was arrested for a violent crime, but the criminal charges were dropped and he was subsequently deported, Medina said. Early Thursday morning, Medina was rattled by several loud knocks on the front door. When she looked through the window she saw men in fatigues carrying assault rifles. One of them was pointing his weapon at her and ordered her to come out of the house, she said. She explained she had just finished showering and needed to get dressed, as well as wake up her kids. Medina asked the soldiers to put down their guns and they did, she said. Eventually, the family walked out and stood in the driveway as the men in fatigues searched the house for her husband, Medina said. He was not home at the time. As she, her brother-in-law and her kids waited in the driveway, Medina said she spotted Noem watching the operation. She said she also spotted a video crew and someone she believed to be Dr. Phil McGraw — the TV personality — sitting in an SUV. The site of Noem in a baseball hat and ballistic vest was startling, and Medina said she began to record her with her phone. 'I got scared. I did recognize her. I was like, 'What is she doing in my house?' So I started recording her,' Medina said. The pregnant mother said Noem was laughing and appeared as if she was 'waiting for something to happen.' Cameras inside and outside the home captured the men in fatigues walking around and searching the house. The men left shortly after, Medina said. There were at least a dozen men in fatigues, according to Medina and videos reviewed by The Times. She hasn't spoken to her husband since the raid on their home and is now worried how she will be able to pay this month's $3,000 rent. Her husband was the main breadwinner. The incident has traumatized her four kids whose ages range from 2 to 10, according to Medina. She said she is four months pregnant with twin boys. 'My daughter is very sad, she wanted to go to her graduation,' she said. ' My 7-year-old has been asking where her father is, they're very close to one another.' 'This is no way of living,' she added.

Fears of racial profiling rise as Border Patrol conducts ‘roving patrols,' detains U.S. citizens
Fears of racial profiling rise as Border Patrol conducts ‘roving patrols,' detains U.S. citizens

Los Angeles Times

timean hour ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Fears of racial profiling rise as Border Patrol conducts ‘roving patrols,' detains U.S. citizens

Brian Gavidia had stepped out from working on a car at a tow yard in a Los Angeles suburb Thursday, when armed, masked men — wearing vests with 'Border Patrol' on them — pushed him up against a metal gate and demanded to know where he was born. 'I'm American, bro!' 29-year-old Gavidia pleaded, in video taken by a friend. 'What hospital were you born?' the agent barked. 'I don't know, dawg!' he said. 'East L.A., bro! I can show you: I have my f—ing Real ID.' His friend, whom Gavidia did not name, narrated the video: 'These guys, literally based off of skin color! My homie was born here!' The friend said Gavidia was being questioned 'just because of the way he looks.' In a statement Saturday, Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said U.S. citizens were arrested 'because they ASSAULTED U.S. Border Patrol Agents.' (McLaughlin's statement emphasized the word 'assaulted' in all-capital and boldfaced letters.) When told by a reporter that Gavidia had not been arrested, McLaughlin clarified that Gavidia had been questioned by Border Patrol agents but there 'is no arrest record.' She said a friend of Gavidia's was arrested for assault of an officer. As immigration operations have unfolded across Southern California in the last week, lawyers and advocates say people are being targeted because of their skin color. The encounter with Gavidia and others they are tracking have raised legal questions about enforcement efforts that have swept up hundreds of immigrants and shot fear into the deeply intertwined communities they call home. Agents picking up street vendors without warrants. American citizens being grilled. Home Depot lots swept. Car washes raided. The wide-scale arrests and detainments — often in the region's largely Latino neighborhoods — contain hallmarks of racial profiling and other due process violations. 'We are seeing ICE come into our communities to do indiscriminate mass arrests of immigrants or people who appear to them to be immigrant, largely based on racial profiling,' said Eva Bitran, a lawyer at ACLU of Southern California. When asked about the accusations of racial profiling, the White House deflected. Calling the questions 'shameful regurgitations of Democrat propaganda by activists — not journalists,' White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson chided The Times reporters Saturday for not reporting the 'real story — the American victims of illegal alien crime and radical Democrat rioters willing to do anything to keep dangerous illegal aliens in American communities.' She did not answer the question. McLaughlin said in a statement, 'Any claims that individuals have been 'targeted' by law enforcement because of their skin color are disgusting and categorically FALSE.' She said the suggestion fans the flames and puts agents in peril. 'DHS enforcement operations are highly targeted, and officers do their due diligence,' she said. 'We know who we are targeting ahead of time. If and when we do encounter individuals subject to arrest, our law enforcement is trained to ask a series of well-determined questions to determine status and removability. 'We will follow the President's direction and continue to work to get the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens off of America's streets,' she said. The unprecedented show of force by federal agents follows orders from White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, the architect of Trump's immigration plan and a Santa Monica native, to execute 3,000 arrests a day. In May, Miller reportedly directed top ICE officials to go beyond target lists and have agents make arrests at Home Depot or 7-Eleven convenience stores. U.S. Customs and Border Protection did not answer specific questions about the encounter with Gavidia and said that immigration enforcement has been 'targeted.' The agency did not explain what is meant by targeted enforcement. But a federal criminal complaint against Javier Ramirez, another of Gavidia's friends, said Border Patrol agents were conducting a 'roving patrol' in Montebello around 4:30 p.m. when they 'engaged a subject in a consensual encounter' in a parking lot on West Olympic Boulevard. The complaint noted that the parking lot is fenced and gated, but that, at the time of the interaction, the gate to the parking lot was open. The enforcement was part of a roving patrol in what John B. Mennell, a spokesman for Customs and Border Protection, said was a 'lawful immigration enforcement operation' in which agents also arrested 'without incident' an immigrant without legal status. Gavidia said he and Ramirez both rent space at the tow yard to fix cars. On video captured by a security camera at the scene, the agents pull up at the open gate in a white SUV and three agents exit the car. At least one covers his face with a mask as they walk into the property and begin looking around. Shortly after, an agent can be seen with one man in handcuffs calmly standing against the fence, while Ramirez can be heard shouting and being wrestled to the ground. Gavidia walks up on the scene from the sidewalk outside the business where agents are parked. Seeing the commotion, he turns around. An agent outside the business follows him and then another does. Gavidia, whom Mennell identified as a third person, was detained 'for investigation for interference (in an enforcement operation) and released after being confirmed to be a U.S. citizen with no outstanding warrants.' 'Video didn't show the full story,' he said in a statement. But it is unclear from the video exactly what that interference is. And Gavidia denies interfering with any operations. CBP, the agency that has played a prominent role in the recent sweeps, is also under a federal injunction in Central California after a judge found it had engaged in 'a pattern and practice' of violating people's constitutional rights in raids earlier this year. U.S. Border Patrol Sector Chief Greg Bovino, who oversaw raids that included picking people up at Home Depot and stopping them on the highway, has emerged as a key figure in L.A. He stood alongside Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on Thursday at a news conference where Sen. Alex Padilla — the state's first Latino U.S. senator — was handcuffed, forced to the ground and briefly held after interrupting Noem with a question. 'A lot of bad people, a lot of bad things are in our country now,' Bovino said. 'That's why we're here right now, is to remove those bad people and bad things, whether illegal aliens, drugs or otherwise, we're here. We're not going away.' Bovino said hundreds of Border Patrol agents have fanned out and are on the ground in L.A. carrying out enforcement. A federal judge for the Eastern District of California ordered Bovino's agency to halt illegal stops and warrantless arrests in the district after agents detained and arrested dozens of farmworkers and laborers — including a U.S. citizen — in the Central Valley shortly before President Trump took office. The lawsuit, brought by the United Farm Workers and Central Valley residents, accused the agency of brazenly racial profiling people in a days-long enforcement. It roiled the largely agricultural area, after video circulated of agents slashing the tires of a gardener who was a citizen on his way to work, and it raised fears that those tactics could become the new norm there. The effort was 'proof of concept,' David Kim, assistant chief patrol agent under Bovino, told the San Diego investigative outfit Inewsource in March. 'Testing our capabilities, and very successful. We know we can push beyond that limit now as far as distance goes.' Bovino said at the news conference that his agents were 'not going anywhere soon.' 'You'll see us in Los Angeles. You'll continue to see us in Los Angeles,' he said. Bitran, who is working on the case in the Central Valley, said Miller's orders have 'set loose' agents 'with a mandate to capture as many people as possible,' and that 'leads to them detaining people in a way that violates the Constitution.' In Montebello, a 78% Latino suburb that shares a border with East Los Angeles, Border Patrol agents took Gavidia's identification. Although they eventually let him go, Ramirez, also American and a single father of two, wasn't so lucky. Tomas De Jesus, Ramirez's cousin and his attorney, said authorities are accusing him of 'resisting arrest, assaulting people' after agents barged into a private business, 'without a warrant, without a probable cause.' 'What is the reasonable suspicion for him to be accosted?' De Jesus questioned. 'What is the probable cause for them to be entering into a private business area? ... At this moment, it seems to me like they have a blanket authority almost to do anything.' Ramirez has been charged in a federal criminal complaint with assaulting, resisting or impeding a federal officer. Authorities allege that Ramirez was trying to conceal himself and then ran toward the exit and refused to answer questions about his identity and citizenship. They also allege he pushed and bit an agent. Montebello Mayor Salvador Melendez said he'd watched the video and called the situation 'extremely frustrating.' 'It just seems like there's no due process,' he said. 'They're going for a specific look, which is a look of our Latino community, our immigrant community. They're asking questions after. ... This is not the country that we all know it to be, where folks have individual rights and protections.' A third individual was detained on the street for investigation for interference and released after being confirmed to be a U.S. citizen with no outstanding warrants. Even before the video was looping on social media feeds, Angelica Salas — who heads one of the most well-established immigration advocacy groups in Los Angeles — said she was getting reports of 'indiscriminate' arrests and American citizens being questioned and detained. 'We have U.S. citizens who are being asked for their documents and not believed when they attest to the fact that they are U.S. citizens,' said Salas, executive director of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights. 'They just happen to be Latino.' The Supreme Court has long held that law enforcement officers cannot detain people based on generalizations that would cast a wide net of suspicion on large segments of the law-abiding population. 'Some of the accounts I have heard suggest that they're just stopping a whole bunch of people, and then questioning them all to find out which ones might be unlawfully present,' said Ahilan Arulanantham, co-director of the Center for Immigration Law and Policy at UCLA Law School. An agent can ask a person about 'anything,' he said. But if the person declines to speak, the agent cannot detain them unless they have reasonable suspicion that the individual is unlawfully here. 'The 4th Amendment as well as governing immigration regulations do not permit immigration agents to detain somebody against their will, even for a very brief time, absent reasonable suspicion,' he said. Just being brown doesn't qualify. And being a street vendor or farmworker does not, either. A warrant to search for documents at a work site also is not enough to detain someone there. 'The agents appear to be flagrantly violating these immigration laws,' he said, 'all over Southern California.' Gavidia said the agents who questioned him in Montebello never returned his Real ID. 'I'm legal,' he said. 'I speak perfect English. I also speak perfect Spanish. I'm bilingual, but that doesn't mean that I have to be picked out, like, 'This guys seems Latino; this guy seems a little bit dirty.' 'It was the worst experience I ever felt,' Gavidia said, his voice shaking with anger as he spoke from the business Friday. 'I felt honestly like I was going to die.' On Saturday, Gavidia joined De Jesus in downtown L.A. for his first-ever protest. Now, he said, it felt personal.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store