logo
'Who are these people?' Masked immigration agents challenge local police, sow fear in L.A.

'Who are these people?' Masked immigration agents challenge local police, sow fear in L.A.

Yahoo24-06-2025
Increasingly aggressive immigration raids carried out by masked federal agents, sometimes using unmarked vehicles, are creating problems for local law enforcement agencies.
Police have little or no insight into where the federal enforcement actions are taking place but often have to deal with the aftermath, including protests and questions from residents about what exactly happened. In some cases, local cops have been mistaken for federal agents, eroding years of work to have immigrant communities trust the police.
In Bell, chaos erupted when masked men arrived at a car wash and began detaining its workers, sparking a confrontation with residents and immigration rights advocates before they were forced to hastily drive over curbs and street islands to escape.
In Pasadena last week, a man stepped out of his unmarked vehicle at an intersection, unholstered his pistol and aimed it at a group of pedestrians before returning to his car, turning on its red and blue emergency lights and speeding off. Video of the incident went viral.
That incident left the police chief of Pasadena resigned to figure out whether it was a crime or part of a federal raid.
"There's no way for us to verify," Police Chief Gene Harris said.
The department reviewed surveillance footage and other video and saw the credentials on the man's uniform, according to the chief.
"We were able to determine that to the best of our estimation he was an ICE agent. ... We will not look into it any deeper than that," he said.
Read more: Feds vow to continue immigration enforcement 'every day in L.A.' Here are your rights
At Dodger Stadium last week, immigration agents staged outside the parking lot prompted protests and questions that local officials had to address.
"They show up without uniforms. They show up completely masked. They refuse to give ID," Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said during a news briefing after the Dodger Stadium incident. "Who are these people? And frankly, the vests that they have on look like they ordered them from Amazon. Are they bounty hunters? Are they vigilantes? If they're federal officials, why is it that they do not identify themselves?"
Ed Obayashi, a Northern California deputy and use-of-force expert, said federal agents enjoy great autonomy and "can do what they want in their official capacity."
"If they point a gun or take someone in, local police cannot step in and interfere regardless of the circumstances," Obayashi said.
He said that federal agencies have extensive use-of-force policies on drawing weapons but that, ultimately, if the overall directive is to take this action, then the guidelines don't matter.
"If Homeland Security says this is what we want, the policy guidelines when it comes to gun and force doesn't matter," he added. "There is little redress against federal law enforcement in the civil courts compared to local police."
Federal agents are not subject to the same statues as local police, namely Section 1983 claims that allow people to sue certain government agencies and employees for violating their civil rights.
"The U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly shielded federal agents from legal repercussions," Obayashi said.
The incidents at Dodger Stadium, in Bell and in Pasadena unfolded more than two weeks after masked immigration agents descended on the region carrying out a wave of immigration sweeps in predominately Latino communities. Residents are on edge as masked men are appearing and detaining their friends, relatives and neighbors without any clear sign they are part of federal immigration enforcement and refuse to show identification or a warrant.
The Pasadena incident showed how social media can amplify an incident and highlight the lack of response from local officials.
In a video posted to Instagram from Pasadena, a suspected federal agent is seen exiting a Dodge Charger at an intersection and pointing his gun at members of the public.
In the video, a person walks up to the back of the Dodge Charger and appears to take a photo of the license plate. That's when the driver gets out of the vehicle and points a gun at the person who was behind the vehicle, then toward another person outside of the video frame. The word "Police" is visible on the driver's vest, along with a badge on his hip. After a few seconds, the man puts the gun away and gets back into the car as bystanders shout at him. The man then activates the vehicle's red and blue lights common to law enforcement vehicles and drives away.
Citizens shared the vehicle's license plate on social media, which led to more questions than answers.
According to Pasadena officials, the vehicle's license plate is a "cold plate," or untraceable, which is typically used by law enforcement in undercover criminal operations.
"One question is this a law enforcement agent or someone pretending to be a law enforcement agent, and there is no good answer here," Pasadena Mayor Victor Gordo told The Times. "[To] have a law enforcement agent draw his weapon and point it toward someone using their iPhone, and a crowd, is showing a lack of training and a lack of temperance in the use of force."
He's still hopeful that the federal government will acknowledge the incident and provide some clarity. As more immigration sweeps happen, Gordo is worried that there could be an accidental shooting or that police could end up caught in the middle if unidentified federal agents are pulling out their guns in public.
Previous administrations informed the city of enforcement actions to avoid accidental confrontations between law enforcement, according to Gordo.
"Our police need to be aware of undercover or unmarked law enforcement operations. These operations are endangering everyone in our neighborhoods," he said.
If citizens do encounter a matter where it appears that someone is impersonating law enforcement, they should call 911, Harris said.
But local police will not interfere with federal activities, he said.
"I understand the lingering fear in the community," Harris said. "I would tell [citizens] to defer to their own feelings, understand what's going on around them."
He added that federal immigration activities in Pasadena have not impeded local police efforts or response times. There have been no arrests, property damage or violence related to protests against the immigration sweeps in Pasadena, officials said.
About an hour's drive inland in Fontana, the lack of clarity is making work harder for local police who have been mistaken for federal immigration agents.
Officers investigating a recent burglary were mistaken for federal immigration agents over social media, Fontana Police Sgt. Nathan Weiske said.
In another instance, undercover officers were confronted by protesters who thought they were conducting surveillance for an immigration sweep.
"It is not safe for our officers, or for others involved in any active police operations if misrepresentations or misunderstandings lead to inappropriate engagement," Fontana Police Chief Michael Dorsey said in a Facebook post.
In some parts of the Southland, the response to the immigration raids can be swift and fierce.
In Bell, masked men in fatigues detained at least three people at a car wash, drawing a large protest.
Dozens of people swarmed the area and shouted at the agents, 'Are you a bounty hunter? How much is the bounty for an illegal right now?' questioning their identities.
Video showed the men, wearing fatigues and balaclavas and carrying long weapons, fire tear gas to disperse the crowd so they could leave. The Department of Homeland Security said Border Patrol vehicles were damaged during the incident.
Huntington Park Mayor Arturo Flores calls the federal government's presence in the region "political theater" meant to antagonize the Latino population.
Flores plans to introduce a motion to the City Council that will direct local police to ask federal agents to identify themselves if they attempt to carry out an immigration operation in the city.
"What happens if you have bad actors who decide to throw on an olive drab outfit and go around abducting people?" Flores told The Times. "I would not ask our officers to interfere with federal matters. But we have to be prepared to hold these agencies accountable for their actions. There's a tragedy waiting to happen."
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.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Former Walmart worker indicted after trying to intervene in immigration arrest
Former Walmart worker indicted after trying to intervene in immigration arrest

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Former Walmart worker indicted after trying to intervene in immigration arrest

A former Walmart employee who tried to intervene as Border Patrol agents arrested an undocumented custodial worker in Pico Rivera in June was indicted by a federal grand jury Wednesday. Adrian Martinez, 20, was indicted by a Santa Ana jury on the charge of conspiracy to impede a federal officer tied to the events of June 17, which unfolded at the height of the Trump administration's immigration raids in the Los Angeles area. Martinez's violent arrest was caught on video and quickly went viral. According to the three-page indictment, Martinez confronted Border Patrol agents as they tried to arrest the custodial worker in the parking lot of a shopping center and blocked the agents' vehicle with his own. Prosecutors allege that he positioned himself with a growing crowd to surround the agents' vehicle and prevent it from leaving the area. Martinez then allegedly grabbed a large trash can and moved it in front of the agents' vehicle, blocking them from being able to pass. According to the U.S. attorney's office in L.A., Martinez faces up to six years in prison if convicted. He is set to be arraigned in downtown L.A. on Thursday. "Make no mistake: There are serious, life-altering consequences for impeding law enforcement," acting U.S. Atty. Bill Essayli said in a news release Wednesday. Martinez's lawyers released a statement noting that "just as in other cases arising out of recent illegal and inhumane ICE raids, the U.S. Attorney's Office had to travel out of Los Angeles county to secure this indictment." The Times previously reported on Essayli's struggles to secure indictments in protest cases. Read more: Trump's top federal prosecutor in L.A. struggles to secure indictments in protest cases "Although we are disappointed that Adrian's case has not been dismissed, we always anticipated being required to litigate this case post-indictment," the Miller Law Group, which represents Martinez, said in its statement. The lawyers also criticized Essayli for posting on X, "before we had even officially been notified of the outcome of the indictment" and using it "to maliciously spread falsehoods and fearmonger at our client's expense." In a June interview with the Times, Martinez said he was on break when he spotted the custodial worker, 'getting grabbed very aggressively, getting manhandled,' by the agents. Martinez said he drove over, told the agents that their actions weren't right and they should leave the worker alone. Surveillance and spectator video captured at the scene and looped in social media feeds show an agent rushing Martinez and shoving him to the ground. Martinez gets back up, there is more shoving, and he exchanges angry words with a masked officer carrying a rifle. Then other agents swarmed him, pushed him back down and dragged him to their truck. Agents ultimately arrested both the custodial worker and Martinez. In the June interview with the Times, Martinez said after his arrest he was taken to a parking structure, where he was told he'd been arrested for assaulting a federal officer by striking an agent in the face and breaking his glasses. Martinez, who weighs around 150 pounds, said the agents arresting him pointed to the colleague he was being accused of attacking, who looked 'like a grizzly bear.' 'I don't even remember you,' Martinez recalled saying. 'It just seemed like they were trying to get me to say like, 'yes, you assaulted him,' but I knew I didn't.' The next day, Essayli posted a photo on X of Martinez, still in his blue Walmart vest. Martinez, he wrote, had been arrested 'for an allegation of punching a border patrol agent in the face.' Martinez was charged in a June 19 criminal complaint with conspiracy to impede a federal officer. The complaint makes no reference to a punch and neither does Wednesday's indictment. Bloomberg Law previously reported that Essayli had rejected office supervisors' advice not to charge Martinez for assaulting a federal officer and that an an FBI agent felt there was insufficient evidence and declined to sign a complaint attesting probable cause to a judge. Within a day, the outlet reported, another agent signed off on the charge of conspiracy to impede. In an interview a week after his arrest, Martinez wore a brace on his right leg, where he'd suffered a contusion, and said he'd been bruised and scratched all over his body. Walmart later terminated Martinez, citing 'gross misconduct," according to a separation notice reviewed by the Times. "I was just speaking up for a man," Martinez said. "How can I go from that to this?" "People have the right to speak up for themselves and for someone else," he added. "You don't have to get treated like this, thrown on the floor and manhandled because of that." 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.

US-Mexico border wall to be painted black to stop climbers
US-Mexico border wall to be painted black to stop climbers

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

US-Mexico border wall to be painted black to stop climbers

The entire US-Mexico border wall will be painted black to make it hotter and harder to climb, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has said, crediting the idea to President Donald Trump. While domestic detentions and deportations have been the primary focus of the current immigration crackdown, Trump's policy bill passed earlier this summer also allocated $46m (£34m) for additional wall construction. About a half mile (0.8km) of wall is going up each day along the nearly 2,000 mile (3,218km) border, according to Noem. The number of border crossings has plummeted in recent months, and the Trump administration says sweeping arrests and detentions are acting as a deterrent to illegal migration. Speaking to reporters along a section of the border in New Mexico, Noem said on Tuesday that the black paint was "specifically at the request of the president". "[He] understands that in the hot temperatures down here, when something is painted black it gets even warmer and it will make it even harder for people to climb," she added. Border Patrol officials also say that black paint will help prevent the wall from rusting. Additionally, Noem said the administration is planning to install more "waterborne infrastructure" along the Rio Grande, which makes up more than half of the border between the two countries. While Noem did not provide any more details on those projects, Texas authorities have previously installed floating barriers - large orange buoys - and fortified riverbank fencing guarded by state troopers, local police officers and the Texas National Guard along parts of the river. Crossings and detentions of undocumented immigrants have plummeted since Trump returned to the office, with record lows of approximately 4,600 in July and 6,000 in June - a 92% year-on-year reduction. During the Biden administration, detentions sometimes spiked to averages of 6,000 per day. Earlier in August, Noem said that a total of 1.6m undocumented immigrants have left the US during the first 200 days of the Trump administration, although she did not specify how many have been deported and how many left on their own. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said earlier in August that a total of 300,000 undocumented immigrants had been detained in the interior of the US since January. While the administration continues to say it is prioritising those with criminal histories, immigration advocates have warned that many with no criminal charges or only minor infractions have been caught up in the sweeps. White House officials also contend that increased border security and mass deportations have been deterrents, saying they are the primary reason for plummeting figures at the US-Mexico border. US strikes deportation deals with Honduras and Uganda US offers up to $50k bonus for would-be ICE deportation officers Watch: US builds new wall at Mexico border

Trump's ‘Law and Order' Push in D.C. Looks a Lot Like an Immigration Raid
Trump's ‘Law and Order' Push in D.C. Looks a Lot Like an Immigration Raid

Wall Street Journal

time27 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

Trump's ‘Law and Order' Push in D.C. Looks a Lot Like an Immigration Raid

WASHINGTON—In the neighborhood of Mount Pleasant, which has a large Hispanic population, a local plaza has become the center of a standoff between residents and federal immigration officers deployed under President Trump's security crackdown in the capital. Since the administration's law-enforcement surge in Washington began last week, federal agents have swarmed the surrounding streets. More than a half-dozen Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in masks and sunglasses were at the plaza this past Friday, posing for a videographer before tearing down an anti-ICE banner.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store