
Texas county that swung to Trump grapples with immigration crackdown after bakery is targeted
When Homeland Security Investigations agents showed up at Abby's Bakery in February and arrested the owners and eight employees, residents of Los Fresnos were shocked. Abby's Bakery doesn't employ violent criminals and Baez and Avila-Guel are not the people who border czar Tom Homan calls the 'worst of the worst' and says are the priority for mass deportations.
'I was surprised because I know that they're not taking advantage of the people,' Esteban Rodriguez, 43, said after pulling into the bakery's parking lot to discover it was closed. 'It was more like helping out people. They didn't have nowhere to go, instead of them being on the streets.'
The reaction in the town of 8,500 residents may show the limits of support for President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown in a majority Hispanic region dotted with fields of cotton, sugarcane and red grapefruit where Republicans made gains in last year's elections. Cameron County voted for a GOP president for the first time since 2004. For neighboring Starr County, it was the first time since 1896 .
Now, Baez and Avila-Guel, a Mexican couple who are legal U.S. permanent residents, could lose everything after being accused of concealing and harboring immigrants who were in the U.S. illegally. It's a rare case in which business owners face criminal charges rather than just a fine.
Los Fresnos, which is 90% Latino and counts the school district as its largest employer, is about a half-hour drive from the U.S.-Mexico border. Hundreds of school bus drivers, painters, retirees and parishioners from the nearby Catholic church come into Abby's Bakery each day. Customers with silver trays and tongs select pastries from glass-door cabinets.
Six of Abby's eight employees were in the U.S. on visitor visas but none had work permits when Homeland Security Investigations agents came to the business Feb. 12. The owners acknowledged they knew that, according to a federal complaint.
Employees lived in a room with six beds and shared two bathrooms in the same building as the bakery, according to an agent's affidavit.
Baez, 55, and Avila-Guel, 46, have pleaded not guilty. They referred questions to their attorneys, who noted the workers were not held against their will and there was no attempt to hide their presence, as a smuggler would.
As green card holders, the couple could be deported if they are convicted. They have five children who are U.S. citizens.
The bakery closed for several days after their arrest, drawing about 20 people to protest on an uncharacteristically chilly evening.
Monsignor Pedro Briseño of St. Cecilia Church often visited before early morning Mass for the campechana, a flaky, crunchy pastry dough layered with caramelized sugar. His routine was interrupted when plainclothes immigration agents arrived in unmarked vehicles.
'A woman came here crying. She said, 'Father, Father, they're taking my brother,'' Briseño said. The priest walked over and saw agents use zip ties to bind employees' hands.
There is overwhelming bipartisan support to deport people who are in the U.S. illegally and have been convicted of a violent crime, with 82% in favor, according to an Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll in January. Support softens considerably for deportations of all people in the country illegally, with 43% in favor and 37% opposed.
Trump and top aides repeatedly emphasize they are deporting criminals. But, as Homan often says, others in the country illegally who are there when officers arrest criminals also will be deported , a departure from the Biden administration's practices.
So far, Trump has avoided the large-scale factory and office raids that characterized his first term and that of Republican President George W. Bush. Scattered reports of smaller operations included the recent arrests of 37 people at a roofing business in northern Washington state .
ICE says it made 32,809 arrests in Trump's first 50 days in office, or a daily average of 656, which compared with a daily average of 311 during a 12-month period ending Sept. 30. ICE said nearly half (14,111) were convicted criminals and nearly one-third (9,980) had pending criminal charges but did not specify the charges.
People with deep ties in their communities and no criminal records tend to generate more sympathy.
Abby's reopened after the owners were released on bond.
Chela and Alicia Vega, two sisters in their 60s who retired from the school district and have known the bakery owners for years, were among the customers filling trays with pastries. Chela Vega said the couple once took a week off from work to drive them to San Luis Potosi in Mexico after their sister died. When a hurricane struck, Leonardo Baez cut down their damaged trees without charge.
For Terri Sponsler, 61, shopping at Abby's is now a political statement . 'With everything going on right now in our country, we need to find ways to protest,' she said.
Mark W. Milum, the Los Fresnos city manager, said Abby's is an important business that contributes property and sales tax revenue to the $13 million annual municipal budget.
Some customers just love the products.
'Other bakeries, they pop up, right?' said Ruth Zamora, 65. 'But when you go there, it's not the same.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

USA Today
26 minutes ago
- USA Today
Trump, Putin rewrite history in Alaska as Republicans stay obediently silent
An obedient silence from Republicans about the 2016 election was really the only win Trump logged last week while meeting with Putin about Russia's unjust invasion of Ukraine. The news out of Alaska on Aug. 15 focused understandably on how President Donald Trump was once again completely and predictably played on the world stage by Russian President Vladimir Putin. But one element of Trump's international embarrassment drew little notice, as he stood with Putin and again took his side, crying "hoax" while rejecting the bipartisan conclusion supported by America's intelligence agencies that Russia interfered with our 2016 presidential election. We can't grow numb to the notion that Trump consistently picks Putin over America. That long-standing resentment of his about accurate intelligence on his presidential election has mutated into a source of looming injustice as Trump's top aides eagerly seek to help him distort that history to comply with Russia's corrupt narrative. It's not enough anymore for Trump to just deny reality. Now he wants to rewrite it so that officials from then-President Barack Obama's administration who correctly identified the 2016 Russian interference are pursued in criminal investigations just for doing their duties. This inversion of justice and intelligence acts as some kind of balm for Trump's constant state of irritated grievance. And it presents an obligatory abdication of truth for Republicans in Congress who now swallow and regurgitate his lies about 2016. Opinion: Midterms are more than a year away, but Trump is already challenging them Trump's only win around Russia is obedient silence That obedient silence about 2016 from Republicans was really the only win Trump logged in Alaska while meeting with Putin about Russia's unjust invasion of Ukraine. Just consider how Republicans in Congress have contorted on this. Trump, standing next to Putin at a news conference in Helsinki in 2018, embraced the Russian president's denials about the 2016 election meddling and rejected the assessment from America's intelligence agencies. It was a strikingly shameful moment from his first term, which had no shortage of shameful moments. Republicans swiftly rebuked Trump, including Marco Rubio, then a senator from Florida, for siding with Putin over America. A bipartisan backlash prompted a rare walk-back from Trump, who, a day later, was forced to say: "I accept our intelligence community's conclusion that Russia's meddling in the 2016 election took place." That was Trump, seven years ago, grudgingly accepting what was obviously true. But now he wants you to forget what he claimed to accept and see it all not just as a "hoax" but as a criminal conspiracy against him. We have to take that sort of nonsense seriously because, unlike Trump's first term, his second administration is politically populated with people who would never dissuade him from his worst impulses. This time around, they're jostling to be first in line to amplify those impulses. Trump and Putin are old hands at rewriting history Rubio, now Trump's secretary of State, was in the front row for the Trump-Putin news conference on Friday, Aug. 15. He clearly no longer has a problem with Trump lying about Russia and 2016. Congressional Republicans kept quiet about it this time, too. In Trump's twisted history, his first term was unfairly hobbled by the investigations of election interference, which he again called "the Russia, Russia, Russia hoax" during the Alaska meeting with Putin. "He knew it was a hoax, and I knew it was a hoax," Trump said as Putin beamed beside him. "But what was done was very criminal, but it made it harder for us to deal as a country, in terms of the business, and all of the things that we'd like to have dealt with, but we'll have a good chance when this is over." Hear the shift there? Trump is saying that attention paid to what Russia did in 2016, when Putin clearly favored him over Hillary Clinton as America's next president, is an abuse aimed at him that needs to be prosecuted. That is the shoddy foundation for Tulsi Gabbard, Trump's director of national intelligence, making the easily debunked claim in July that Obama's administration "manufactured" intelligence about the 2016 election interference, which she handed off to Attorney General Pam Bondi in a criminal referral. Opinion: Gabbard yells 'Russia hoax' to distract MAGA from Epstein for Trump. It won't last. Bondi has set a grand jury in motion on that, not because it serves justice but because it complies with the false narrative Trump and Putin are still pushing. Rubio may be on board with Trump's push for senseless prosecutions to rewrite our history. But his own Senate history is still around for us to read. His party controlled the Senate in 2020 and he was acting chairman of the Select Committee on Intelligence, issuing a report in August of that year that cited "irrefutable evidence of Russian meddling" in the 2016 election. Special counsel Robert Mueller, appointed by Trump's first attorney general, issued a 2019 report that confirmed the Russian election interference was driven by Putin's desire for Trump to beat Clinton in 2016. Putin declared that in public in 2018, standing next to Trump in Helsinki, saying he thought a Trump presidency would be better for Russia. That turned out to be true. And it might be the only time we hear Putin speak truth, as Trump tries to erase the history of 2016 and replace it with a fabrication that he and Putin prefer. Follow USA TODAY columnist Chris Brennan on X, formerly known as Twitter: @ByChrisBrennan. Sign up for his weekly newsletter, Translating Politics, here.


Boston Globe
26 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
At Boston's Dominican parade and festival, fear lingers but joy wins
Advertisement Young dancers from the 'Fuerza Internacional' dance group in the Dominican parade on Aug. 17 in Jamaica Plain. Marcela García/Globe Staff That ambivalence was on the minds of young people in attendance. Nevaeh Camacho, a 15-year-old student at Boston Collegiate Charter School, joined the parade with a group of friends from the Hyde Square Task Force, a Jamaica Plain nonprofit that serves local youth. The Puerto Rican teen told me she knows people who didn't want to go to the parade and festival because they were afraid. 'I see the fear in my community,' Camacho said. 'They snatch people and it's scary,' she said referring to Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents conducting raids and arrests. Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up Older newcomers echoed the same concern. Flerida García, a recent immigrant from the Dominican Republic, told me that many people she knows are terrified of going out because of ICE activity. 'At least we haven't seen any [immigration arrests] around here lately,' García, who lives in Jamaica Plain, told me. It's her first time attending the parade, she said. 'I wanted to bring my daughter because I am trying to teach her Dominican values and pride.' Advertisement Still, there was plenty of that Dominican pride on display. Lawrence Mayor Brian DePeña, a Dominican immigrant, said in an interview as he prepared to participate in the parade as a guest that ICE has authority to conduct raids and arrests anywhere and at any time. 'However, we keep telling our communities to not be afraid.' He pointed to the public in attendance. 'Today we're showing Dominicans' determination. When it comes to music, rhythm, food, and culture, you get a mix where Dominicans feel no fear. Instead, Dominicans defy even gravity.' Dominican performers participated in the Dominican parade on Aug. 17 in Jamaica Plain. Marcela García/Globe Staff Boston City Councilor At-Large Julia Mejía, also a Dominican immigrant, agreed about the determination to celebrate but noted the costs. 'We have seen the impact [of heightened ICE activity] on Latino businesses,' Mejía said. 'The majority of their clients don't want to risk going out to get their hair done or to eat out. And then there's the staff; many are afraid to go to work.' That economic toll is visible along Centre Street, the heart of Boston's Latin Quarter. While Miami Restaurant, a Dominican food establishment, was bustling with activity as the parade was underway, owners Leandro and Eddy Tejeda told me that they've seen a 40 percent drop in sales since January. 'We had a lot of immigrant customers who used to come regularly and they're not showing up at all now,' Leandro said. 'I worry about those with fear, how are they getting fed if they're terrified to go out? That worries me even more than my business. I also get scared on the rare days that we have a good amount of people dining here. What if ICE shows up for a visit?' Advertisement Yet even with that backdrop, the festival turnout surprised organizers. 'We estimate that between 15,000 to 20,000 people came to the parade,' Luis Matos, president of the Casa de la Cultura Dominicana, which organizes the Dominican festival and parade in Boston, said in an interview. 'We never considered canceling the festivities, but we were worried about attendance,' he said. But the festival, held in Franklin Park after the parade on Sunday afternoon, attracted more than 40,000 people, which represents roughly a 30 percent increase from last year's attendance, according to Matos. Leandro and Eddy Tejeda, owners of Miami Restaurant in Jamaica Plain, posed at their restaurant on Aug. 17. Marcela García Those numbers reflect the community's weight in the city. Dominicans represent the largest Latino group in Boston, roughly 38,000 people, For Mayor Michelle Wu, that dual reality of anxiety and pride was inescapable. 'It's a mix of fear and horror at the images we see every day on the news coming out of [Washington,] D.C., and communities around the country,' Wu told me as she walked down Centre Street in the parade. 'At the same time, such intense joy and pride of who we are in Boston and how we continue to come together, we continue to declare that we are moving forward. That's what we can see here today.' That seems to be the new normal for Latino festivals: Fear and joy, side by side. Advertisement Programming note: Dear readers, I am stepping away for a while. Later this month, I'll join , a yearlong program that brings journalists from around the world together to study, reflect, and recharge. It's an extraordinary opportunity, and I'm grateful to be able to step back to dive more deeply into questions I've long wrestled with, particularly around equity and the immigrant experience in America. You won't see my byline in these pages during this time. Instead, I'll be reading and learning in ways I hope will make me a better columnist when I return. When I come back next summer, my goal is to bring sharper insights and a fuller perspective. To everyone who reads, shares, and responds to my work: Thank you. Please stay tuned. In the meantime, feel free to and browse of ¡Mira!, my free weekly newsletter. I'll see you next year! Marcela García is a Globe columnist. She can be reached at


NBC News
28 minutes ago
- NBC News
Iraq and Afghanistan veteran launches Democratic campaign against Sen. Susan Collins in Maine
Graham Platner, a 40-year-old Army and Marine veteran who served four combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, launched his campaign for the Senate in Maine on Tuesday, joining a growing Democratic primary field seeking to take on Republican Sen. Susan Collins. Platner, an oyster farmer who was born and raised in Sullivan, Maine, will run on a platform of universal health care, housing affordability and ending U.S. involvement in foreign wars. 'I feel an obligation to protect this place and protect the people in it,' Platner said in an interview. Platner joins a growing Democratic primary field that features Jordan Wood, a former chief of staff to former Rep. Katie Porter, D-Calif., and David Costello, who challenged independent Sen. Angus King last year. Democratic Gov. Janet Mills has said she is considering getting into the contest, while Rep. Jared Golden, D-Maine, has opted against joining the budding primary in what, on paper, might look like Democrats' best opportunity to flip a Senate seat in 2026. Collins is the only Republican senator who represents a state Kamala Harris carried in the last presidential election. But she has proven a tough opponent in blue Maine. In her last campaign, in 2020, she beat Democratic opponent Sarah Gideon by more than 8 percentage points, even as Donald Trump lost Maine by more than 9 points. Republicans have a 53-47 majority in the Senate, meaning Democrats would need to flip four seats in the 2026 midterms to take the majority. Platner said his experience in the military helped shape his political perspective as he prepared his campaign. 'When I joined the Marine Corps, I joined up because I really, truly believed in the American project,' he said. 'I wanted to fight for something I loved and that I thought was good in Iraq and Afghanistan. I watched both failed policies, failed strategies, failed tactics being used over and over and over again.' 'There's a point where you have to start asking yourself what is the point of this,' he added. 'Why are you doing this? And when I went back as a security contractor in 2018, what I began to realize is that I was just watching vast amounts of taxpayer money getting put into the pockets of defense contractors, of security contractors, of this whole apparatus that almost seemed to exist merely to take taxpayer money and put it into somebody's private bank account. And in seeing that up close for a while, it turned me into a deeply, deeply cynical and angry guy. From that I began to kind of look at our larger political system, our larger economic system, and you just begin to see the same exact thing.' Platner is seeking to connect with working-class voters who've migrated toward the GOP in recent cycles. He pointed to Golden, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., as figures offering hope for the Democratic Party nationally and in his state. 'If we focus primarily on fighting for working-class values, fighting for policies that help working-class people, clawing back a lot of the power that has been consolidated in the kind of higher establishment-class politics, I think if you stick to that stuff, you can win,' Platner said. 'And getting dragged into many of these minor culture war fights is not remotely the answer.' 'I don't just identify with the more of the left parts of the party. People like Jared Golden are doing an excellent job. That's why he's been able to hold on to a Democratic seat in a Trump district,' Platner said. In his launch video, Platner excoriated 'billionaires and corrupt politicians profiting off and destroying our environment, driving our families into poverty and crushing the middle class,' saying his military experience made him unafraid to 'name an enemy, and the enemy is the oligarchy.' 'I'm not fooled by this fake charade of Collins' deliberations and moderation,' he said.