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The messy aftermath of an immigration sweep in Pacoima
The messy aftermath of an immigration sweep in Pacoima

Los Angeles Times

time2 days ago

  • Los Angeles Times

The messy aftermath of an immigration sweep in Pacoima

The 54-year-old woman was splayed on the sidewalk with her shirt half-raised, unconscious. Nearby, federal immigration agents stood guard as people screamed at them. Arturo Hermosillo, a U.S. citizen, was in his work van, recording it all when an agent ordered him to back up to make room for an ambulance that was en route for the woman. As he was reversing, he said, another agent started banging on his window and side view mirror, pushing it in. He couldn't see behind him and felt a bump. Hermosillo opened his door to tell the agents he couldn't move. But not long after, they dragged him out of his van. 'I told them I didn't do anything illegal,' he said. Hermosillo was arrested and sent to the Metropolitan Detention Center in downtown L.A. The woman, who later said she had fainted while an agent bear-hugged her to the point she struggled to breathe, underwent heart surgery at a Providence Holy Cross Medical Center. A doctor told her she had suffered a heart attack. The immigration sweep on June 19, just outside a Lowe's Home Improvement store, is one of many that have taken place in Southern California and encapsulates the chaotic methods employed to detain people over the last month. A federal judge on Friday ruled that there was sufficient evidence that agents were using racial profiling to target people and ordered a halt to the indiscriminate sweeps, saying they violated the 4th Amendment. Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security Tricia McLaughlin said in an email response to The Times that a person 'rammed his vehicle into a law enforcement vehicle' during the June 19 operation. 'CBP Agents were also assaulted during the operation and verbally harassed ... despite this, CBP arrested 30 illegal aliens in Hollywood and 9 illegal aliens in San Fernando and Pacoima,' she wrote. The Times sought clarification as to which operation involved the ramming of the federal vehicle, but neither McLaughlin nor the agency responded to the follow-up question. Eyewitness videos, as well as interviews with Hermosillo and the 54-year-old woman, tell a different story and underscore the public's outrage and criticism of the immigration sweeps. Matilde, who declined to give her last name because of her immigration status, said she was selling tamales by the entrance of the parking lot shared by Lowe's and other businesses when the 54-year-old got word that federal immigration agents were in the area. Matilde got nervous and began taking down her stand. She was about to put her umbrella away when a white car with tinted windows pulled up. 'I saw two agents get out,' she said in a phone interview. 'I didn't run.' She said the agent that ran to her never identified himself, provided a warrant or requested documentation of her immigration status. Instead, she said, he grabbed her from behind. 'I could feel his vest against my ear,' said Matilde, who is about 5 feet tall. 'I told him I couldn't breathe.' A second agent showed up to grab her hands to handcuff her. She said as they tried to do that one of the agents unintentionally lifted her shirt, exposing her bra. She reached to pull her shirt down and the agents used more force as if she were resisting. What happened next is something Matilde can't fully recall. 'I don't know if I fainted or if they threw me down,' she said. But she woke up on the ground and started to plea with agents. 'I told them: I can't breathe, I can't breathe and that my chest hurts,' she said. 'But they didn't listen. They ignored me.' She said she looked up at the tree where she had a framed picture of the Virgin Mary and began to pray: 'Virgin Mary, please help me, don't abandon me. I don't want to die.' She said a third agent came and told her he was a paramedic, asking her if she had any medical conditions. She told him she suffered from high blood pressure and diabetes and that her chest was hurting. He took her pulse before the agents dialed 911. She said the agents left her on the ground. Videos taken by people at the scene and shared on social media show Matilde on the ground, unconscious and surrounded by agents. In another video, firefighters are caring for her while a small crowd shame the agents for hurting the woman, especially those agents who appear to be Latinos. 'You have Latino blood,' one woman yelled at the agents in Spanish. 'Does it feel good doing this?' another woman screamed out. As paramedics arrived to transport Matilde to the hospital, three federal agents were trying to drag Hermosillo out of his van. A video shows an agent pulling on Hermosillo's leg to drag him out. A second agent tries to do the same before trying to snatch Hermosillo's arm but loses his grip and falls down. A third agent with a vest that reads 'medic' joins in shortly after. 'Dude, let him go!' a woman screams in the background. 'Oh my God, why [do] you guys act like animals?' the woman recording the video says. 'What has he done?' a man screams out at agents trying to keep people back. The video shows the three agents struggling to pull Hermosillo out. Once he's out of the van, he is shoeless on one foot and is pushed down to the hot ground so they can handcuff him. 'What's your name?' the woman recording yells out to Hermosillo, who responds with his name. 'Tell us where you're from so we can get you out of jail. Where are you from? What's your address? We want to call your family,' people call out. In another video, Hermosillo is seen being placed in the back of a white van, screaming: 'Fight back, fight back.' 'We're going to fight for you!' a woman shouts back to him. Once in custody, he said agents accused him of obstruction and took him to the Metropolitan Detention Center in downtown L.A. There, he said, the agents mocked him. 'They were saying things like I was never going to get out and that I better lawyer up,' he said. When one agent told him he didn't understand why the public was making a big deal of the immigration sweeps, he got angry. 'It's because you guys are Nazis,' Hermosillo said he told the agent. He said they continued to tell him he would be in prison for nearly a decade. Hermosillo told the agents he was fine with that. 'I was like, they're not going to break me,' he said. 'I'm going to continue my education in here; I'm going to continue organizing in here.' He said that after some time, Homeland Security agents showed up to speak to him. 'They told me, 'You were never arrested. You're just being detained, but you can't leave L.A. County for six months to a year,' and that they were going to proceed with the offense but that they were letting me go.' He said he signed release documents. 'They let me out in the street with no shoe, no phone,' he said. 'I had nothing with me because it was in the vehicle.' Hermosillo said he recorded the incident but declined to provide it to The Times as part of his defense against the federal government. 'You know the difference between them and us,' he said. 'It's that our struggle comes from love, and all they have is hate. 'My struggle is for the love of my people.' Once Matilde was placed on a gurney and moved into an ambulance, she was taken three miles to Providence Holy Cross Medical Center. There, she said, doctors treated her partially blocked arteries in the heart, telling her she had suffered a minor heart attack. 'The doctor said I was lucky they weren't too clogged up or else they would have needed to do open heart surgery,' she said. She stayed in the hospital for five days and was prescribed heart medication as well as medication for anxiety, which she developed after the June 19 incident. 'At night I can't sleep because I have nightmares,' she said. The anxiety creeps up on her. Sometimes, she said, she can feel the agent's breath when he held her tightly. She said she has bruises on her legs, arms and belly and has been unable to do much, even cook. It's not the America Matilde envisioned when she came to the U.S. 29 years ago. She and her husband came for work and a steady income. They wanted to send money back home so her husband's parents, who were bouncing from one relative's home to another, could have their own place. They also wanted to raise a family, but in a country that provided better opportunities. She said her 28-year-old daughter is a nurse assistant, and her 15-year-old son wants to go to college to become a structural engineer. 'We both suffered from our sacrifice,' she said. 'But we wanted a better future for our kids. 'We wanted things just to be better.'

Who is Wimbledon star Flavio Cobolli's girlfriend Matilde Galli?
Who is Wimbledon star Flavio Cobolli's girlfriend Matilde Galli?

The Irish Sun

time7 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Irish Sun

Who is Wimbledon star Flavio Cobolli's girlfriend Matilde Galli?

FLAVIO COBOLLI has thrown himself into the spotlight reaching the quarter-finals of the All England Club for the first time. The young talent has shone at Wimbledon 2025 which has also brought attention to his girlfriend Matilde Galli - here we get to know her. Advertisement 4 Cobolli has reached the quarter-finals of Wimbledon for the first time Credit: Getty Images - Getty The Italian starlet knocked out world number 15 Jakub Mensik in straight sets in the third round. At 23-years-old, Cobolli's girlfriend Matilde Galli has been supporting him throughout his time in SW19 - here is everything we know about her. Advertisement Who is Matilde Galli? 4 The couple keep their relationship private but post each other on social media Credit: instagram @ flavio_cobbo Matilde Galli is Flavio's long-term girlfriend with the pair officially announcing their relationship in March 2021. Although much of their relationship remains private, the Tennis star regularly shows off his other half on his Instagram. While there is little information about Matilde, her LinkedIn profile states she works for a law firm. Advertisement She has 4,452 Instagram followers on her private account as of July 9, 2025. Most read in Sport Matilde regularly attends Flavio's matches and has been seen congratulating him on court afterwards. The couple spend quality time together during Cobolli's off-season. They took a relaxing holiday in Tanzania last year which they posted on the social media. Advertisement 4 The couple shared a post of their trip to Tanzania Credit: Instagram We still don't know how the couple met but it is clear they are madly in love. Cobolli took to Instagram with a post which pictured him kissing Matilde in the stands. He captioned it: "THE BEST IS YET TO HAPPY BIRTHDAY MY LIFE". Advertisement 4 Matilde works for a law firm Credit: instagram @ flavio_cobbo The Italian will be hoping for a better showing against Djokovic this time around after losing to him at the Shanghai Masters in 2024. The Serbian defeated Cobolli 6-1, 6-2, in convincing fashion. Entering Wimbledon as the 22nd seed and with Matilde by his side, Cobolli will be hoping to cause an upset and reach the semi-finals. Advertisement

Meet José Mourinho's glam jewellery designer daughter Matilde: the 28-year-old's pieces are worn by Priyanka Chopra and Kylie Minogue, she parties with Niall Horan, and recently married in Portugal
Meet José Mourinho's glam jewellery designer daughter Matilde: the 28-year-old's pieces are worn by Priyanka Chopra and Kylie Minogue, she parties with Niall Horan, and recently married in Portugal

South China Morning Post

time18-03-2025

  • Sport
  • South China Morning Post

Meet José Mourinho's glam jewellery designer daughter Matilde: the 28-year-old's pieces are worn by Priyanka Chopra and Kylie Minogue, she parties with Niall Horan, and recently married in Portugal

Portuguese football coach José Mourinho has come under attack for accusing his team's opponents of 'jumping around like monkeys' trying to get one of his players sent off in a recent match. The club in question, Turkish team Galatasaray, then initiated criminal proceedings against him for his 'racist statements', per The Guardian. But legendary Ivorian striker Didier Drogba – who played under Mourinho at Chelsea – quickly jumped to his defence on social media: 'I've seen the recent comments about José Mourinho. Trust me when I tell you I have known José for 25 years and he is not a racist, and history (past and recent) is there to prove it.' 'How can my 'Dad' be a racist?' he added. 'Come on guys.' Advertisement José Mourinho and Didier Drogba back in their Chelsea FC days. Photo: @fabriziorom/Instagram Mourinho is known for the affinity he shares with players, and Drogba told The Guardian in 2013 that many of the team called him 'daddy'. 'I don't know about all of us, but he did a lot of things for me during [a] moment where I had a lot of critics,' he told the newspaper. But who are José's actual children? The 62-year-old has a son, José Mário Jr, and a daughter, Matilde, who recently married her fiancé Danny Graham – and who is making a name for herself in a very different industry ... Here's what you need to know about her. What is Matilde Mourinho's background? Matilde Mourinho is the daughter of football manager José Mourinho and his wife Matilde Faria. Photo: @matildefmf/Instagram Matilde is the daughter of José Mourinho and his long-time wife, Matilde Faria. 'My name is Matilde, my mother's name is Matilde, and my grandmother's name is Matilde. It's a name that will continue to be passed down to generations to come,' she told Forbes last year.

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