logo
L.A. ICE raids leave people 'scared to leave the house' in Hawthorne

L.A. ICE raids leave people 'scared to leave the house' in Hawthorne

Yahoo3 days ago

The truck carrying two men suspected of living in the country illegally was pinned between a white rusty fence and two border patrol vehicles near a busy intersection in Hawthorne.
Standing by the passenger door, two federal agents were handcuffing a pregnant woman, a U.S. citizen, angering the crowd that had gathered there and prompting masked agents to stand guard with less-lethal weapons and batons.
'Let her go, she's pregnant,' a woman screamed out. 'That girl is pregnant, let her go!'
'Get back!' yelled an agent with a steel baton.
'We are back!' a man responded loudly.
The sweep near 120th Street and Hawthorne Boulevard this month was one of several that took place in this working-class city; all part of an immigration enforcement blitz in Southern California that has mostly affected workers living in the country illegally — similar to those that President Trump has employed in the past.
The incident, which was captured on video and shared on social media along with subsequent raids in the city, has sparked outrage, fear and anxiety in a town where half the population is Latino. At least 30% of the total population is also foreign born, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Some businesses said the raids have had an impact on them as well.
Recently elected Mayor Alex Vargas has not spoken about the immigration issues his city is facing. He did not respond to requests for comment.
But two days after the incident at the intersection, a small group of young people gathered to protest the immigration raids. They waved American and Mexican flags as dozens of cars honked in support.
The pregnant woman, Cary López Alvarado, told NBC Los Angeles that the agents had been tailing her husband and co-worker when they pulled into the parking lot of a building where they were doing maintenance. She said she opened the gate for her husband to drive in when the agents pulled up. She said she refused to let the agents into the property.
In a video she recorded and shared with the news station, Alvarado tells the agents to leave and that they were on private property. She said the agents then took her into custody for obstruction but later released her. Soon after that, she began experiencing pain in her belly and went to the hospital.
Alvarado could not be reached for comment. The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to questions about the operation.
The white Toyota Tundra that had been stopped that day remains in the small parking lot of the building that is home to a Live Scan business. The driver side window was broken and shattered glass lay nearby.
It's been a week of upheaval in Hawthorne, the South Bay suburb where the Beach Boys got their start in the 1960s and came to epitomize the postwar beach culture of Southern California.
Over the last 50 years, the city of nearly 90,000 has become much more diverse, with a sizable Latino immigrant community.
Standing outside her apartment complex at the corner of Acacia Avenue and 120th Street, just across from where the truck had been stopped, Maria Perez, 68, a Cuban and American citizen, smoked a cigarette with a neighbor. She expressed anger over the incident and the raids that have been taking place in the city and Greater Los Angeles.
'I cried when I saw what happened here,' she said. 'I was hurting like everybody else and now there's fear not just here but all over the city.'
Her neighbor Ruben Esquivel, 43, said the raids have caused some people to go into hiding.
'I don't see anyone,' he said. 'People who are trying to make a living are scared to leave the house. It's horrible.'
Jimmy Butler, 59, was home when he started to hear honking. By the time he traced the noise to the intersection, he saw Border Patrol agents taking the two men into custody as well as the pregnant woman.
'I was upset about what happened that day,' he said. 'How do you take someone who hasn't committed a crime?'
Since then he said he has been more alert in an effort to protect his neighborhood, a street lined with apartment buildings where Samoans, Africans, Latinos and Black Americans live.
When he heard honking again recently, he feared federal agents had returned but he was relieved when he learned it was related to the group of young demonstrators.
'People are living in anxiety,' he said.
At the corner of 119th Street and Acacia Avenue, where Spanish Mass at St. Joseph Catholic Church can pull in about 1,000 parishioners, Father Arturo Velascos said it was unclear what effect the June 1 incident, and other immigration raids, will have on attendance.
'The fact that they were here has us asking ourselves: How is this Sunday going to be?' he said. 'I know people are scared. Anyone who is undocumented has that basic fear that if they go to church or leave their home they'll be captured by ICE and get deported.'
Velascos said the church has told people to remain vigilant and has held know-your-rights workshops to inform parishioners and the community. He said some people have expressed to him that they're afraid that immigration agents will enter the church to grab people.
'If they ever tried to come into our church packed with parishioners it will go bad for them because people will not tolerate that,' he said. 'You don't want 1,000 people angry at you.'
Elsewhere in the city, the raids seem to be keeping people away. On Hawthorne Boulevard, some businesses said there are fewer shoppers.
At 132nd Street, Gilberto Alvarez, 32, general manager at Denny's, said he was expecting a boost in sales recently after another diner in the area burned down.
'Right away we saw a bump in sales,' he said.
But after Sunday's incident, he saw the number dip again.
'I was expecting to have $13,000 in sales instead I got $9,000,' he said.
He said daily sales have also decreased from 500 to about 300.
Business owners in the area said they too have noticed a decline in sales. They said workers have called in sick, fearing they will be detained by federal agents. However, some smaller stores said they haven't noticed a difference yet.
On a recent Wednesday afternoon, Sergio Hernandez, 49, stood at the mouth of his driveway, contemplating life.
For more than 30 years, Hernandez has been living illegally in the country. But now, amid the immigration raids, he's considering self-deporting to Mexico.
He said the raids have left him in a constant state of fear and anxiety. They've also placed an economic burden on him.
Four years ago, he said, he suffered a stroke and lost the movement of his right arm and therefore his job as a polisher at a metal shop. Since then, he's been selling used items at a local swap meet.
But the presence of Border Patrol vehicles has forced him to stay home. They've scared customers away as well and the few times he's taken the risk to sell items at the swap meet, he's noticed half the stalls are empty.
Unable to work, he's had to dip into his savings and is afraid he'll run out of money soon. He said if he's unable to pay the $1,300 in rent and bills, he'll return home.
Hernandez paused for a moment, spotting a white Chevy Escalade with tinted windows at the intersection nearby.
'See, that's the second time that vehicle has passed by here, it's immigration, you can see the lights,' he said.
He said it's moments like those that cause him to be on high alert whenever he has to go to the store.
'Before you could go out and be out and about, you know — living life,' he said. 'But now people are always telling you when they spot immigration and whether it's true or not, you'd rather not find out.'
Hernandez said he doesn't know when he'll return to Mexico. What's delaying his decision is the simple fact that he's become accustomed to living his life in the U.S.
'I don't understand,' he said. 'There are people living in the streets, getting drugged up and I'm here trying to work. Why are they coming after me?'
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 Detroit home of Rosa Parks in line for historic district designation
Former Detroit home of Rosa Parks in line for historic district designation

CBS News

time8 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Former Detroit home of Rosa Parks in line for historic district designation

A proposal is pending for the former Detroit home of Civil Rights Movement activists Rosa and Raymond Parks to be named a local historic district. The Detroit City Council Planning and Economic Development Standing Committee will hold a public hearing to consider the proposal. The designation is intended to honor the flat in the 3200 block of Virginia Park Street where Civil Rights activists Rosa and Raymond Parks lived for 27 years. "Their activism in Detroit helped shape the Civil Rights Movement," the Detroit Historic Designation Advisory Board said on its social media post. A public hearing, which is part of the designation process, will begin at 10:35 a.m. June 26 at the Coleman A. Young Municipal Center on Woodward Avenue. Detroit's local historic districts are meant to be associated with people or events that are a significant part of Detroit's history, or have artistic or historical significance. Once a local historic district is established for a site, any exterior alterations to the building must go through the Historic District Commission. Rosa Parks, who was already active in the Civil Rights Movement, became known for her refusal to follow the Jim Crow-era laws in Montgomery, Alabama. Specifically, she refused to give up her seat on a bus and move to the back of the vehicle on Dec. 1, 1955. Her arrest in that incident helped spark the Montgomery bus boycott. After the boycott, Rosa and Raymond Parks moved to Hampton, Virginia, and then settled in Detroit. He died in 1977. She died in 2005.

Bloomberg Surveillance: Israel, Markets, Supply Chains
Bloomberg Surveillance: Israel, Markets, Supply Chains

Bloomberg

time15 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Bloomberg Surveillance: Israel, Markets, Supply Chains

Watch Tom and Paul LIVE every day on YouTube: Bloomberg Surveillance hosted by Tom Keene & Paul Sweeney June 20th, 2025 Featuring: 1) Dan Williams, Bloomberg News reporter, on President Donald Trump signaling he would give diplomacy a chance before deciding whether to strike Iran, dialing back on recent comments that suggested military action could be imminent. 2) David Katz, President and CIO of Matrix Asset Advisors, on why he is hopeful there will be some clarity in the current conflict in the upcoming months. After that, however, we will then return to the week to week and month to month uncertainties with Tariff and the current tax and spending bill that's making its way through congress. 3) Alisa Rusanoff, CEO at Eltech, on what risks lender are currently facing in the shipping space. 4) Lisa Mateo joins with the latest headlines in newspapers across the US, including a WSJ story on how side hustles nowadays are more about necessity than a passion. Plus, a Bloomberg report about Capital One's New JFK Lounge Makes a Play for Premium Travelers

Chuck Todd claims Biden's team set him up on purpose to fail at debate
Chuck Todd claims Biden's team set him up on purpose to fail at debate

Fox News

time17 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Chuck Todd claims Biden's team set him up on purpose to fail at debate

Chuck Todd says he'll never be able to shake the belief that former President Joe Biden's team purposefully set him up to fail against Donald Trump during last summer's campaign-altering presidential debate. During the latest episode of "The Chuck Toddcast," the ex-NBC anchor told The Atlantic's Mark Leibovich that he's sure that Biden's inner circle scheduled the first presidential debate last year in June so that the former president would look bad and the party would ditch him in time to run his replacement. "Look, I will go to my grave believing that the debate was intentional for that," the host said. Biden's disastrous performance in last summer's presidential debate is widely seen as the death knell for the former president's re-election campaign. Less than a month after the spectacle, where Biden looked weak and cognitively challenged, he announced his withdrawal from the campaign and endorsed then-Vice President Kamala Harris to replace him as the nominee. Biden's cognitive decline has been under more scrutiny in recent months as CNN anchor Jake Tapper and Axios reporter Alex Thompson's newly published book, "Original Sin", alleged that members of Biden's White House engaged in a cover-up of the president's condition. In the clip flagged by The Daily Caller, Leibovich prompted Todd's declaration by bringing up a previous conversation they had about some members of Biden's inner circle using the debate as an opportunity to punch through the cover-up and show the world that Biden was unfit for office. The journalist mentioned "the idea that there were actually people within the White House, within the Biden campaign who thought it would be a good thing to create some kind of daylight for the world to see what they were dealing with on a day-to-day basis." Todd followed up by saying that no matter what Biden's former senior adviser Anita Dunn and campaign co-chair Jen O'Malley Dillon say, he thinks they were trying to expose his frailties. "Anita Dunn and Jen O'Malley Dillon will deny it till they're blue in the face, and if I were in their shoes and I did it, I'd deny it until I was blue in my face, OK?" Todd said. "Of course, you'd deny that," Leibovich agreed. Todd added, "It's like whoever the hell helped Reagan delay the hostage release, OK? It's never going to be admitted. It's too convenient," referring to the January 1981 release of American hostages held by Iran, after Jimmy Carter had already lost his re-election effort to Reagan. Going back to the alleged plot to expose Biden, Todd continued, "There was no other reason. This idea, 'Well, we needed to shake up the race.' In late June? Who shakes up a race in late June?" "They knew when the nomination was going to be and they knew they needed to deal with this with an opportunity to make a change if it was necessary," Todd added. "I will always believe this." Reps for the former president did not immediately reply to Fox News Digital's request for comment.

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