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EXCLUSIVE Is Trump's ‘personal Gestapo' turning America into a police state? US president's heavily armed shock troops behind raids on illegal migrants will soon outnumber the FBI
EXCLUSIVE Is Trump's ‘personal Gestapo' turning America into a police state? US president's heavily armed shock troops behind raids on illegal migrants will soon outnumber the FBI

Daily Mail​

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Is Trump's ‘personal Gestapo' turning America into a police state? US president's heavily armed shock troops behind raids on illegal migrants will soon outnumber the FBI

Clad head to toe in combat gear, including body armour, helmets and face masks, and backed by armoured personnel carriers, a helicopter, 90 National Guard soldiers and a line of horsemen, dozens of heavily armed federal immigration agents descended on Los Angeles last week in an intimidating show of force. The military cavalcade advanced menacingly through the city's MacArthur Park – dubbed the 'Ellis Island of the West Coast' after New York's historic migrant processing centre – on Monday, in a so-called 'immigration enforcement operation' codenamed Operation Excalibur.

What To Do When You See ICE in Your Neighborhood
What To Do When You See ICE in Your Neighborhood

The Intercept

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • The Intercept

What To Do When You See ICE in Your Neighborhood

Federal agents near MacArthur Park in the Westlake neighborhood of Los Angeles on July 7, 2025. Photo: Carlin Steihl / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images Justin Caffier is a journalist and occasional artist based out of Los Angeles. His investigative and experiential writing has featured in VICE, New York Magazine, and other outlets. You can find him on most platforms @justin caffier . To commemorate 30 days of its Los Angeles occupation, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and its auxiliary federal forces swarmed the city's MacArthur Park earlier this week with cavalry, gunner-mounted humvees, and lines of agents kitted out for war. Monday's boondoggle, later revealed in a leak as 'Operation Excalibur,' resulted in no known arrests. This slapdash show of force accomplished little more than shutting down a children's summer camp and further pissing off beleaguered Angelenos. It failed, in part, because LA has spent the past month learning how to fight back. Local news reports indicate that activists were ready. They preemptively raised the alarm with multilingual flyers, had lawyers on deck, and shouted warnings through megaphones once federal agents arrived. During the botched raid, U.S. Border Patrol Sector Chief Gregory Bovino made it clear that the occupation is only just beginning. 'Better get used to us now,' Bovino told Fox News at the scene. 'Because this is going to be normal very soon. We will go anywhere, any time we want in Los Angeles.' 'We're peaceful people. But we're not going to allow y'all to kidnap us, to beat us, to brutalize us. ' But in Downtown LA that evening, a coalition of community groups held their own press conference celebrating 30 days of resistance. Well aware of the impotence or unwillingness of elected leaders to meaningfully hinder the federal terrorization of the city and the complicity of local law enforcement, these groups have spent the past month — many much longer than that — organizing collective approaches to protect those without documentation. Fired up by that morning's raid, speakers were clear-eyed about the David-vs.-Goliath fight ahead. But they were more resolved than ever to win it. As everyone there seemed to fully understand, Los Angeles is the test case for what President Donald Trump will try to get away with elsewhere. Fighting back here matters far beyond city limits. Ron Gochez, who founded Unión del Barrio's LA chapter and volunteers patrolling the streets and manning the hotlines for the affiliated Community Self Defense Coalition, closed the rally with an impassioned call to action. 'If they want to keep attacking us, they have to know they're going to suffer losses too,' he shouted to a roaring crowd. 'You can take it how you want. We're peaceful people. But we're not going to allow y'all to kidnap us, to beat us, to brutalize us. We're not going to allow it. We will fight back.' But what can you actually do to effectively resist when, not if, ICE comes to your town? With the One Big Beautiful Bill Act's unprecedented new funding for Trump's detention and deportation machine, it's clear the administration's fascistic operations will only grow bigger and bolder. I've been reporting on and observing anti-ICE agitation around LA nearly every day over the past month. In this time, I spoke with activists leading the fight, including Gochez, and experts from organizations like No Sleep for ICE, the National Immigrant Justice Center, and the National Lawyers Guild of Los Angeles, or NLG-LA. Here are some tips gleaned from those conversations on what to do when the state's masked kidnappers descend upon your town. To gain some on-the-ground advocacy experience while pursuing her law degree, Elizabeth Howell-Egan became a board member at the NLG-LA, which provides pro bono legal support for immigrants and protesters arrested by federal agents. She cautioned that while the First Amendment and other protections should safeguard those recording and reporting on immigration raids, there's often a gulf between the letter and application of the law. NLG-LA takes great pains to underscore this disparity and the unfair but inherent dangers that come with exercising these liberties at their popular 'know your rights' workshops. Know your rights, know your risks, know your reality. 'We say 'know your rights, know your risks, know your reality,'' Howell-Egan explained. 'Saying 'I don't consent to this search' probably won't stop the police from searching you. But that could make it so, in theory, they have to throw out whatever [charge] they find from that illegal search.' Like others I spoke to, Howell-Egan encouraged activists to do their utmost to avoid the expensive, time-consuming, and physically perilous prospect of arrest. Calling resistance efforts 'a marathon, not a sprint,' she stated a preference for collective, mass-defense approaches that endanger as few individual protesters as possible. Out running errands and see a cluster of weirdos kitted out for war, milling about like they're stuck in a Call of Duty matchmaking lobby? Grab some pics and vids to raise the alarm. Keep in mind that specificity is paramount when logging these sightings, both to increase efficacy and avoid panic. Fortunately, one of master's own tools has proven itself an invaluable counterintelligence asset. Plucked straight from U.S. military field books, the acronym S.A.L.U.T.E. can help you gather the most pertinent details. It's also the practice almost universally recommended by the groups I spoke to. Size: How many people and/or vehicles do you see? Activity: What, specifically, are they doing that's suspicious? Location: What address, cross streets, or landmark are they at (the more specific the better)? Uniform: What are they wearing, whether it's fatigues, nondescript civilian clothes, or something else entirely? Time: What date and time did you observe them? Equipment: What guns, weapons, or devices do they appear to be carrying? Follow and Repost With Discretion Thanks for taking such comprehensive notes. Now where do you send them? There's no evidence the feds are conducting 'how do you do, fellow antifa' honeypot busts. But anyone attempting to post alerts about the activities of federal agents would be wise to operate as if they were. The groups I spoke to remain concerned about infiltrators stymying their efforts. Even at the press conference, activists clocked and called out a suspected undercover among the crowd. Unfortunately, there's no one-size-fits-all approach for this element of activism. To safely discover and interact with the patchwork of anti-ICE activities around LA, I relied on trusted individuals from my personal network of journalists and activists, as well as community groups and organizers leading local efforts. But if you're just getting started, the accounts mentioned in this article, any of the more than 65 groups that have joined LA's Community Self Defense Coalition, or the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights are solid sources of information. And if you're ever unsure about an entity's bona fides, sites like can help determine if an outfit is legit or carpetbagging. After sharing your hot ICE tip, there's another key step. Call your area's Rapid Response Network, a multi-organizational, community-based coalition that helps mobilize to protect vulnerable immigrant groups in real time. These groups can take your tip and turn it into action. Take, for instance, No Sleep for ICE. The group's Instagram account provides daily lists of hotels lodging federal agents — resulting in noisy protests designed to make the occupation inhospitable for the occupiers. No Sleep for ICE also does the critical job of issuing on-the-fly corrections and victory posts once a location is confirmed agent-free. A No Sleep for ICE representative, who spoke with me on the condition of anonymity out of concerns for their safety, said the account functions thanks to a network of volunteers who turn tips into a robust database of vehicles, license plates, individuals, and locations believed to be associated with the federal forces. This critical information is relevant for just a short moment, making the group's work feel almost Sisyphean. 'Nothing is consistent. Everything changes every day,' the representative said. 'We can produce photos today and, by tomorrow, none of it will matter.' No Sleep for ICE relies almost entirely on community tipsters to piece together enough of the puzzle to build a working theory of which hotels are hosting agents, before the group begins the corroboration process. The last thing the group wants, according to the source, is to act on a false positive. The overarching fear brought about by the raids has engendered a 'better safe than sorry' reporting strategy among citizen spotters, where anything that could be ICE-related is passed along. But tipsters could considerably lighten the load by spending a few extra seconds confirming their information before contacting tip lines. We may never know how much worse the false sighting problem has been made by deeply ingrained and addictive social incentives of the online platforms used to share warnings. Nonetheless, every tip sent to No Sleep for ICE and other community watchdogs has to be investigated — often sending volunteers scrambling to check false alarms, such as Recreation and Parks Department employees, Forest Rangers, and film crews. Taking an additional beat to check a suspicious car for tinted windows, hidden grille lights, or a backseat cage can mean the difference between sending volunteers on a goose chase or confirming a true threat. Though Snapchat and Instagram stories condition us to believe our online ephemera expires after a 24-hour life cycle, counterintelligence warnings warrant more active digital stewardship. Don't forget to take your post down (and ideally replace it with an update or retraction) should the situation change. This practice may seem like overkill, but there can be real consequences. Outdated or unsubstantiated warnings don't just merely send latecomers into harm's way. They also keep people from their jobs, customers from businesses, and exacerbate the culture of fear these raids seek to foment. Nobody's perfect or keeping a record of you here. Consider this the digital activism equivalent of returning your shopping cart. Do the small but right thing. Organizers have so far used the big social media platforms to great effect to protect their local immigrant communities. But these tech platforms are nonetheless inherently compromised by the oligarchs who own them. There's not yet concrete proof these services are feeding relevant intel to an administration they are courting during this renaissance of pay-to-play politics, but it's prudent to act as if they are. Enter Signal, the imperfect but still exceedingly secure messaging app historically favored by journalists, whistleblowers, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. For many activists, this end-to-end encryption app became standard operating procedure long before ICE's 2025 onslaught. But as more first-timers are joining the cause, it's useful to follow these guidelines: If it's sent to you on Signal (particularly images and videos), don't take that content off the app, at least without permission. Set a timer so your messages and images automatically expire after a while. Don't use your legal name or phone number as your user name. If you must screenshot, cropping out all avatars and initials is just the start. Also scour the text or image for any potentially identifying features. Signal even has a tool for blurring critical information. If an event organizer has already posted about an activity on a social media platform, it's likely fine to reshare it there. But if you want to share with someone who is not a mutual on said platform, sending that link or image via Signal is more secure than doing so over iMessage or WhatsApp. Those abstracted philosophical hypotheticals, trolley problems, and obviously satirical jokes you share with your pals that touch upon topics like violence, sedition, and treason are a healthy reaction to processing the horrors of the world around us. But don't you ever put that in any text box outside of Signal. It doesn't always matter if you never hit 'send.' A recurring tactic of this administration and its online minions — bots and boot-lickers alike — has been to weaponize pedantry. The tactic is to discredit or simply waste the time of well-intentioned people by challenging anyone who mixes up any inconsequential detail while chronicling the chaos unfolding around them. Such was the case when the Department of Homeland Security deployed a historically grim 'um, actually' on June 19 after the Los Angeles Dodgers claimed to turn away ICE agents attempting to use their stadium for raid staging. 'This had nothing to do with the Dodgers,' DHS' quote tweet challenged. 'CBP vehicles were in the stadium parking lot very briefly, unrelated to any operation or enforcement.' Aw, geez. Turns out they were Customs and Border Patrol, not ICE. Who gives a shit? Especially when they're all working toward the same evil ends while purposefully obfuscating their identities. Don't sweat if you can't figure out which federal agency a group of Special Ops cosplayers belong to, but don't chum in the water either. When in doubt, a simple 'feds' will suffice. Many of the immigrants targeted by feds make their living selling food as street vendors. The looming threat of raids has made it near impossible for them to do their public-facing jobs, so activists have begun organizing 'cart buy-outs,' to purchase and redistribute their product for them. If you've been meaning to get more fresh fruit in your diet, there's never been a better time or method to do so than with one of these. If you have a few dollars more to spare, consider donating directly to the organizations active in your community. Even the ones not asking for donations would almost certainly accept a few bucks to help with all the out-of-pocket expenses incurred by their volunteers. Though this guide is primarily advising on 'observe and report'-style resistance efforts, there's certainly more you can do if posting ICE sightings and attending protests doesn't feel like enough. There are free street medic training classes, car caravan blockades, and even community watches to join. But you should keep in mind that such interventionist approaches come with higher degrees of risk and warrant more in-depth training than just reading an article. The many organizations making up LA's Community Self Defense Coalition conduct the boots-on-the-ground work protecting residents of this 'sanctuary city' that its elected officials and law enforcement officers refuse. Community Self Defense Coalition volunteers like Gochez often wind up playing the role of scouts. Once ICE agents are spotted, volunteers follow them to their target location and get on megaphones, warning members of the community to stay indoors or, as Gochez described a recent victory in the Highland Park neighborhood, encouraging everyone with documentation to come outside and scare the outnumbered agents into retreat. Gochez, a high school history teacher of 20 years, starts his prowl for ICE at 5:30 a.m. He told me that there's always a need for more volunteers, though he'd prefer would-be patrollers get properly educated first. 'We've trained thousands of people to do [community patrols] in different parts of the country and here in LA locally,' he said. 'But we're also getting a ton of people patrolling on their own … and following [agents] too close or too fast, and that can get ugly very quickly.' 'We can visibly tell that the agents are really, really frustrated. Public opinion is absolutely turning against them.' While Gochez laments that anyone has been captured in government operations at all, he thinks the figure would be much worse if people were not so aware of their rights or stepping up to protect each other. 'We know that a lot of people have been taken in LA,' said Gochez, 'but we know that this would be 10 times worse if it wasn't for the organized resistance that we've been putting up against these people. And we can visibly tell that the agents are really, really frustrated. Public opinion is absolutely turning against them.'

Trump's immigration raids have gone too far
Trump's immigration raids have gone too far

The Hill

time5 days ago

  • Politics
  • The Hill

Trump's immigration raids have gone too far

To the families sent fleeing from MacArthur Park on Monday in California, President Trump's latest ICE raid must have seemed like an invasion. The massive operation involved nine federal agencies, the National Guard, local police and more than a dozen armored military vehicles. It was the kind of shock-and-awe campaign more at home in Fallujah than in a quiet Los Angeles park. The agencies involved sure seemed to think the raid on MacArthur Park was a military campaign. Photos from the scene show federal agents dressed in camouflage combat gear pouring out of armored trucks as stunned civilians look on in disbelief. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement even gave the raid a puffy, military-sounding name: 'Operation Excalibur.' Trump's draconian immigration crackdowns may play well with his MAGA base, but they're alienating nearly everyone else — including the mainstream conservatives Republicans will depend on to protect their fragile congressional majorities next year. The unnerving images from MacArthur Park arrive at a crucial moment for the American public. A growing number of people — including Republican voters — are noticing that while Trump's immigration raids have swelled in size, aggression and taxpayer cost, they haven't generated many actual deportations. Meanwhile, they recoil at the regular drumbeat of news stories showcasing masked ICE agents urinating in school parking lots or illegally detaining U.S. citizens. Prior to May, most Americans viewed ICE positively. Now the agency evokes images of masked men huddled around blacked-out vans and Alligator Alcatraz. Agents' refusal to identify themselves, and MAGA's celebration of their unaccountability, has led millions of Americans to see the agency as little more than Trump's personal skullcrushers. Now, 54 percent of adults say ICE's actions have gone too far. People also know exactly who to blame for letting ICE run wild. Six recent polls show a collapse in public support for Trump's immigration policies, leaving the GOP 3 points underwater with voters on an issue they've dominated for years. In fact, it's been nearly 20 years since Republicans' immigration policies were this unpopular with voters — a dip Democrats exploited to reclaim both houses of Congress in 2006. Trump's stumbles are setting the stage for history to repeat itself next year. Like any free people, Americans from across the political spectrum are feeling a visceral response to Trump's police state tactics. That's true even of long-time Republican allies like the nation's conservative Catholic bishops, who realized too late that Trump's pledge to only deport 'murderers and rapists' had been a lie. 'A very large number of Catholic bishops, and religious leaders in general, are outraged by the steps which the administration is taking to expel mostly hardworking, good people from the United States,' Robert Cardinal McElroy told The New York Times on June 29. 'The realities are becoming more ominous.' Other conservatives are raising the alarm about the large number of innocent bystanders swept up by immigration raids. The R Street Institute's Steven Greenhut called the inaccuracy of ICE arrests 'deeply troubling to anyone who cares about constitutional government' in an Orange County Register op-ed. Greenhut is right: In its current, MAGA-fied form, ICE is an acute threat to American civil liberties. Republicans worsened that threat by an order of magnitude when they decided, inexplicably, to shower the agency with $75 billion as part of Trump's 'one big beautiful bill.' As conservative pundit Charlie Kirk boasted on July 3, that money was enough to turn ICE into 'a standing army' that was 'court proof.' ICE is now the best-funded law enforcement agency in the nation, boasting a budget on par with the entire Canadian military. Millions of Americans have watched ICE grow into an unaccountable entity that sees no problem deploying military-grade hardware to raid a childrens' summer camp. People are coming to the conclusion that the ends do not justify such brutal means. This was not the immigration reform these voters were promised when Trump pledged to focus his efforts on hardened criminals and gangsters. Instead, they watch as military vehicles and soldiers become a regular presence on the streets of major American cities. They look at the gang of masked ICE agents and feel less safe than they did before the troops arrived. And they keep telling pollsters they will not make this mistake again. Those voters who feel betrayed by Trump's immigration lies should trust the immune response they are feeling. What we saw in MacArthur Park on Monday was not and must never become normal. Now, more than ever, the American people must turn their consciences into political activism and demand ICE be brought under control. If Republicans won't listen, they will hear voters' anger loud and clear at the ballot box in 2026. Max Burns is a veteran Democratic strategist and founder of Third Degree Strategies.

Crackdown finds child sexual abuse images on two thirds of devices searched at border
Crackdown finds child sexual abuse images on two thirds of devices searched at border

The Sun

time24-05-2025

  • The Sun

Crackdown finds child sexual abuse images on two thirds of devices searched at border

EVIDENCE of child sex abuse images was found on two thirds of electronic devices searched at the border in a trial scheme. Border Force officials have been scanning phones and laptops of suspected paedos under Operation Excalibur at four UK airports. And 65 per cent of the devices had evidence of child abuse images. On a visit to see Heathrow's scheme, Safeguarding Minister Jess Phillips told the Sun on Sunday: 'It keeps me awake at night. 'That's how worried I am about the growing availability and access that people have to child sexual abuse material, both real and synthetic - so AI deep fakes. 'We have to do as much as we can as legislators within our own country to make sure that our laws are keeping pace with that technology, and our law enforcement is able to keep pace with that technology.' 3 Officials use intelligence to target travellers suspected of having child abuse images. This includes profiling people and working with international police forces. They search their electronic devices for photos already known to law enforcement that have been 'hashed' — which means they have been given an invisible electronic 'watermark'. Victim of online abuse speaks out Marie, now 28, was contacted when she was 17 by a man on a dating app pretending to be somebody else. On a video call, he asked her to do certain things and he screenshot those images. They were used to blackmail her into meeting "his friend" who was actually him. During that meeting, the "friend" committed a sexual offence against Marie. "The friend" went on to cultivate a year-long relationship with Marie which was emotionally and physically abusive. She told the Sun on Sunday: 'Once the relationship ended. My mental health really got so bad that I had put a deadline on my life. 'I said I wasn't going to make it past 20. Obviously, I'm still here today. So through therapy, I was able to get to a stage that I am today. 'However, it's not something that ever goes away. You wake up every single day, pick up the pieces, get through the day." She said to anyone going through similar: "You are not alone. I really want to eradicate that thought, because that is how I felt. 'But you really aren't. There's people out there. You've got people in your life. There is no shame, there is no fear. You just have to reach out and ask any questions, even if it hasn't happened yet. No question is silly enough.' Border Force does this by connecting a cable to the suspect's phone or laptop and scanning it at Customs. Currently, they cannot force people to give up their phone for inspection. But new laws will hand officials powers to make suspects unlock their devices to be scanned. 3 Tim Kingsberry, Head of Safeguarding and Modern Slavery for Border Force, said: 'We're trying to make the border an unsafe place for those who seek to abuse children, whether that be our children in the United Kingdom or children overseas. 'We have found evidence of the most extreme images which have led to arrests from the police.'

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