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Suspect arrested in connection with explosion near Southeast Baltimore Home Depot

Suspect arrested in connection with explosion near Southeast Baltimore Home Depot

CBS News30-04-2025

A man has been arrested in connection with an explosion that happened in Southeast Baltimore over the weekend near a Home Depot.
The explosion happened Sunday near the Wendy's and the Eastern Avenue entrance to The Home Depot.
On Monday, bomb squad and arson investigators said they had identified a person of interest.
Detectives said they reviewed surveillance footage showing a Toyota Camry pull up to the shopping center parking lot where a group of individuals were gathered.
The vehicle was still for some time, before moving towards the Wendy's, according to court documents.
As the vehicle turned right toward Eastern Avenue, a commotion appeared among the people gathered in the parking lot.
Around 1:20 p.m., the sedan approached the group, and a man later identified as 23-year-old Brent Goetz, threw what detectives suspect was a hand grenade at the individuals, before speeding off toward Eastern Avenue.
After reviewing the video footage, police used Camry's license plate to link the vehicle to Goetz.
Goetz was arrested on Monday and is charged with possessing a destructive device, and second-degree assault.

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An ICE raid at a Home Depot in Hollywood shatters an immigrant refuge
An ICE raid at a Home Depot in Hollywood shatters an immigrant refuge

Los Angeles Times

time3 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

An ICE raid at a Home Depot in Hollywood shatters an immigrant refuge

Emma De Paz woke up at 2 every morning for 25 years to make soup, roasted chicken and tamales to sell to work crews picking up their day's supplies at the Home Depot. She joined other immigrant vendors lining the side streets under tents and over grills in a makeshift community that was something of a refuge for Latino immigrants in the Hollywood area. Abelino Perez Alvarez and his wife sold orange juice, soda and water. Day laborers scrolled through their phones as they waited outside the parking lot in hopes of getting work. Around 7:30 a.m. Thursday, the refuge was shattered. Dozens of armed agents, many in masks, converged on the parking lot, blocking gates and surrounding the lots normally lined by day laborers and street vendors. 'Migración! Migración!' people shouted — and scattered. They jumped in cars, ran down streets. They hid in stores and construction sites and behind bags of soil in the Home Depot gardening section. Alvarez's wife opened the door of a passing car and jumped in. 'They came in on all sides,' said Diego Rueda Hernandez. Fearful, even as a resident with legal status, he ran behind bags of dirt in the parking lot with others. 'Agarraron los indios,' he said. They took the dark-skinned people. The immigration raids in Los Angeles over the last two weeks have captured the world's attention — for the protests, the sporadic violence, the peacetime deployment of the National Guard and U.S. Marines. But each roundup has inflicted very personal trauma to the people dragged into them, tearing families apart, inciting fear, taking away means to feed children and pay rent. In a flash, all of this happened Thursday morning in Hollywood — at the neighborhood Home Depot, the lifeblood of economic stability for many working-class immigrants nationwide, which the Trump administration is zeroing in on. Witnesses and organizers who helped gather information from family members after the sweep said agents picked up more than a dozen vendors, day laborers and customers — including a U.S. citizen. In a statement Thursday afternoon, Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said Customs and Border Protection 'arrested 30 illegal aliens in Hollywood, California, and 9 illegal aliens in San Fernando and Pacoima.' She said that during the day's operations, someone rammed his vehicle into a law enforcement vehicle. 'CBP Agents were also assaulted during the operation and verbally harassed,' McLaughlin said. Witnesses in Hollywood described the agents fanning out in the lot, apprehending people quickly and leaving within roughly half an hour. There was no clear target. But there were unconfirmed reports of agents breaking a car window to grab someone. 'Here, we are a united community, all the workers that come to this corner,' said Carlos Barrera De Paz, whose sister was taken. 'They took us and they took our community.' In the aftermath, tearful family members gathered with broken glass littering the parking lot. The usually bustling stands where they sell tamales, juice and coffee for workers starting their day were abandoned. Eggshells lay cracked, orange peels strewn, tortillas left on grills. Knowing Home Depots have been prime targets, Silvia Menendez had come to the area early to give out 'know your rights' cards. When the agents showed up, she began filming as people ran. She saw six agents tackle one person to the ground. Officers with assault rifles and faces covered pulled those arrested into vans and trucks. One of the masked agents began filming her. 'It was really unsettling and scary,' she said. In one video, an armed Border Patrol agent screamed at people who were recording to 'get back on the sidewalk!' Another agent told spectators they could record, but to 'just let 'em work.' A person shouted at them to 'die.' Job Garcia, a 33-year-old doctoral student at Claremont College, was picking up an order at Home Depot for a customer. He texted his brother Elias Garcia around 7:59 a.m.: 'Hey Elias me agarro ICE,' it read. ICE got me. Elias said he has not been able to talk to his brother to find out why he was arrested and booked into a federal detention facility downtown. 'Is it racial profiling that occurred or was he trying to help out a fellow undocumented person? I don't know what it could be,' he said. Veronica Perez stood sobbing along St. Andrews Place, on the sidewalk outside the Home Depot where her dad, Abelino Perez Alvarez, 58, has sold orange juice for seven years. Her mother, who is in her 50s and did not want to be named, also worked on this street. The family usually has two stands, but with all the raids they decided to pare it down to one. When immigration agents swarmed the area, Perez's mother ran toward the street after she heard shouts of 'Migracion!' A driver pulled over when they spotted everyone running. 'Ayudanos, ayudanos,' someone pleaded with the driver, a stranger. Help us. Perez's mother didn't wait. She opened the car door and got in. Another female vendor wasn't able to jump in fast enough and was grabbed by agents, Perez said. The couple had run in opposite directions. Perez's mother got away, but her father was arrested. For many, their hearts still pounded as they tried to sort out what happened and where their family members were. Maegan Ortiz, the executive director of the nonprofit group Instituto de Educación Popular del Sur de California, known as IDEPSCA, hugged Perez tight as she cried. She had gathered Perez's father's name and date of birth and wrote it into a notebook in which she was compiling the names of all those taken. 'Lo siento. We're going to do our best to find him,' Ortiz reassured Perez. Perez pulled up her phone log, which showed that her first call to her mother — listed as 'madresita' — went out at 7:35 a.m. Perez said she doesn't have siblings, only a daughter and her parents. 'They're all I have. It's the three of us,' Perez said. The family had been applying for a U visa — a type granted to certain crime victims — after her mom became the victim of a violent attack. 'We have that hope,' Perez said. Many of the workers were registered with IDEPSCA's day laborer program. Their families trickled in after the sweep looking for them, picking up cars and talking to others who already felt a void. 'Lourdes also got taken,' one person told another. Emma De Paz, 58, was nowhere to be found when her brother arrived at her stand. Barrera De Paz, who wore paint-splattered blue jeans, works as a handyman and had rushed over from Long Beach after seeing a live video on TikTok of arrests unfolding. 'If anything happens to her, it will be the responsibility of the authorities that took my sister,' he said. Emma, who lost her husband after his heart transplant last year, has suffered from depression ever since and faces several medical issues. 'My sister needs her medicine. She has diabetes. She needs medicine for her blood pressure and her heart,' he said. By Thursday afternoon, they were able to drop off her medication. 'I think of Germany, Hitler and the persecutions there, I thought that was just history,' he said. Now, it felt like history repeating. With the stands empty, many were enraged. 'Despicable doesn't even begin to describe what this is,' said Hugo Soto-Martinez, a Los Angeles City Council member who represents the area. 'You hear about this happening in military dictatorships and totalitarian governments. To happen here in the second-largest city in America is — I don't have words, just outrage. ' Organizers are working to find legal representation for some, but Soto-Martinez said the response should be nonviolent protest. 'Nonviolent, direct action broke Jim Crow. It brought down apartheid. We are experiencing that at a national level. We know what works, we have to commit ourselves to that type of movement,' he said. Federal officials insist they are focusing mainly on criminals. Border Patrol Sector Chief Greg Bovino posted a video this week on his Instagram page featuring Assistant Chief Patrol Agent David Kim. 'Roving patrols in an urban environment like Los Angeles County presents a lot of challenges for us. It's not as easy as people think it is,' Kim said. 'But there is that narrative out there where people think that just because you're at a Home Depot that you're a hard worker and that's all you've ever done.' He pointed out that they'd picked up a Mexican national at a Cerritos Home Depot on Tuesday who'd been convicted of sex with a minor younger than 16. 'We have a lot of people hiding in the country that should not be here. It takes us getting out on the ground, looking for these folks and it's just a lot of hard work that goes into it. We'll continue doing it.' In May, White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller reportedly directed top Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials to go beyond target lists and have agents make arrests at Home Depot or 7-Eleven convenience stores as they sought to crank up their daily arrest numbers to 3,000. Federal agents raided another Home Depot on Thursday in San Fernando. The city's vice mayor, Maria Elena Solorio, said on an Instagram post that she was looking for answers and had only the first names of those taken. She pleaded for help, alongside Los Angeles City Councilwoman Monica Rodriguez. 'We need to protect one another in these very scary times,' Rodriguez said. She urged people to report immigration agent sightings to a rapid response line and cautioned those to remain peaceful and not interfere. 'This is a systematic attack against the most vulnerable members of the migrant community,' said Pablo Alvarado, co-executive director of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network. 'It is the working poor. That's who they are going after. These are the spaces where they feel they can do this. They don't even have legal parameters.' Edwin Guevara says the people taken are those building Los Angeles. He runs a construction crew and got a call from one of his workers around 7:20 a.m. The man was buying lumber for a hotel job when immigration arrived. He told the man to hide inside Home Depot. 'Us here at the Home Depot, we build this community, we build society to what it is. We're the ones who build the economy to where it's at,' Guevara said. 'Without us building buildings, without us building homes, without us building restaurants for people to go eat, shops to shop at, Target, there would be no money in those places. '

ICE raids upend Latino life in Orange County as climate of fear spreads
ICE raids upend Latino life in Orange County as climate of fear spreads

Los Angeles Times

time13 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

ICE raids upend Latino life in Orange County as climate of fear spreads

A handful of shoppers strolled through the sparsely populated aisles of the Anaheim Indoor Marketplace on a recent afternoon, a desolate scene in the wake of ICE raids in Orange County and across Southern California. Having served to illustrate Anaheim's changing demographics in the past, O.C.'s largest indoor swap meet now tells a somber story. Once home to more than 200 businesses under one roof that sold everything from jewelry to clothing, many stands have shuttered in the past week — and aren't coming back, according to shopkeepers that remain. 'Hopefully, things will get better soon,' said one vendor who asked to stay anonymous out of fear, even though they are a U.S. citizen. 'But right now, it seems like [ICE] is approaching anyone who is Latino.' Shopkeepers declined on-the-record interviews, but told the same story of fretting over making rent for their stalls, as business is in a freefall. On Father's Day weekend, the crowds disappeared. Scheduled music and cultural performances at the Anaheim Indoor Marketplace were canceled. Videos of masked federal agents arresting a man on June 12 at Pearson Park in Anaheim went viral on social media and amplified fears racial profiling. Prompted by the images, an Anaheim council member spoke to U.S. citizen who was stopped at the park by the agents who interrogated him about his immigration status. Sensing a climate of fear, Anaheim Mayor Ashleigh Aitken made a personal plea during the Anaheim City Council meeting on June 10. 'If you have a neighbor that is afraid to go to the grocery store to get food or necessities for their families, check in on them,' Aitken said. 'If you have a mother in your community that maybe is afraid to take her kids to camp or drop them off at school, perhaps offer a ride.' 'We need to stick together in these uncertain times,' she added. The raids are not only affecting businesses in Latino neighborhoods in O.C., but workers, too. Five jornaleros, or day laborers, sat in the shade next to a Home Depot in Anaheim as they awaited work. 'Are you la migra,' one asked a TimesOC reporter wearing a press badge, referring to ICE. The men expressed a fatalistic view as the pool of day laborers has dried up since the ICE raids arrived earlier this month, comparing them to death. 'If they take us, ni modo,' one day laborer said. 'Oh well.' He pointed up toward the sky before saying, 'With God, we will fortify ourselves.' Before the raids, dozens of day laborers congregated in different pockets of the vast parking lot, the men said. But that's no longer the case. 'The targeting of the most vulnerable people, either waiting on street corners or outside stores like Home Depot and Lowe's increases fears,' said Palmira Figueroa, a spokesperson for the National Day Laborers Organizing Network. 'People are staying home, even though that is not sustainable.' The five laborers, who had searched for work in Anaheim since 6:30 a.m. without much luck, accounted for about half of those present. 'I have a family, that's why I'm here,' a Mexican immigrant told TimesOC. 'I have to work because there's no other option.' The following morning, video surfaced of federal agents raiding the area. A witness saw day laborers running away before an unknown number of arrests were made. 'We do not have any specific knowledge,' said Mike Lyster, an Anaheim spokesperson, 'but it appears to be consistent with other federal enforcement activity that we've seen in our city.' In downtown Santa Ana, the raids have punched the city's restaurant scene in the gut. Luis Perez, a chef at Lola Gaspar and Chapter One, noted a 40% drop in sales at Lola Gaspar, a Mexico City-inspired gastrobar, even though it doesn't typically serve a working class Latino clientele. Amid a tumultuous week that saw ICE raids, protests and the deployment of the California National Guard in downtown, the back kitchen is where the impact hits hardest. 'My staff has been with me for over 10 years,' said Perez, a son of immigrants. 'It's seeing the fear in their eyes in not wanting to come to work and not wanting to leave their homes.' Two of Perez's Chapter One employees quit out of fear. 'These people are the backbone,' he said. 'I thought I'd never see this happen.' Back in Anaheim, the lunch rush at Tacos Los Güeros No. 2 was no rush at all. With tacos stuffed with choice meats at $1.80 each, the taquería usually attracts a line of patrons that coils out the front door of what once was a Carl's Jr. restaurant. Tacos Los Güeros No. 2 provided affordable meals for working class Latinos during the worst of the pandemic and the high inflation that followed. ICE raids are another matter. Most patrons trickle in and take orders to go. No more than four to six people sat down for a meal at a time in the dining area. The absence of patrons provided a clear view of a telling image through the windows. Rows of tables sat empty while a red 'Take America Back' Trump flag flapped from the backyard of a home that abuts the taquería's parking lot.

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