Drugs inside prison; Shooting arrest; Storm chance
SIOUX FALLS S.D. (KELO) — Here are this morning's top stories with KELOLAND On the Go.
The South Dakota Department of Corrections has confirmed three inmate deaths tied to drug overdoses in 2025 in Sioux Falls: one at the state penitentiary and two at the Jameson Annex next door.
Jackley: Meth, fentanyl, cocaine behind SD prison walls
A man was arrested in connection with a shooting six days ago. Two men and a woman were in an alleyway on 2nd Street on June 4 when an argument broke out around 9:30 a.m. The man shot the other man in the leg. The victim, 39, was taken to the hospital for his injuries.
1 arrested in connection with last week's shooting
Even though flowers may not be the most popular gift for Father's Day, there are still plenty of gardening supplies for Dad. It's been said that most men don't receive flowers until their funeral. But with options, like this one complete with a fishing pole – florist Stacy Schapp hopes to change that.
Flowers for Fathers Day
Several rounds of showers and thunderstorms have moved across KELOLAND the past 24 hours. It looks like another warm day for Sioux Falls with highs in the lower to middle 80s. There is a 20% chance of a thunderstorm this afternoon.
More scattered storms ahead this weekend in KELOLAND
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Los Angeles Times
a day 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.


Boston Globe
2 days ago
- Boston Globe
Today in History: June 19, Union troops arrive in Galveston on ‘Juneteenth'
In 1865, Union troops arrived in Galveston, Texas, with news that the Civil War was over and that all remaining enslaved people in Texas were free — an event now celebrated nationwide as Juneteenth. Advertisement In 1910, the first-ever Father's Day in the United States was celebrated in Spokane, Wash. (President Richard Nixon would make Father's Day a federally recognized annual observation through a proclamation in 1972.) In 1953, Julius Rosenberg, 35, and his wife, Ethel, 37, convicted of conspiring to pass US atomic secrets to the Soviet Union, were executed at Sing Sing Prison in Ossining, N.Y. They were the first American civilians to be executed for espionage. Advertisement In 1963, Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova completed her historic flight as the first woman in space, landing safely by parachute to conclude the Vostok 6 mission. In 1964, the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964 was approved by the US Senate, 73-27, after surviving a lengthy filibuster. In 1975, former Chicago organized crime boss Sam Giancana was shot to death in the basement of his home in Oak Park, Ill. The killing has never been solved. In 1986, University of Maryland basketball star Len Bias, the first draft pick of the Boston Celtics two days earlier, suffered a fatal cocaine-induced seizure. In 1987, the US Supreme Court, in the case Edwards v. Aguillard, struck down a Louisiana law requiring any public school teaching the theory of evolution to teach creation science as well.


Eater
2 days ago
- Eater
LA's Mexican and Central American Street Food Vendors Go Into Hiding as ICE Raids Continue
On Father's Day, June 15, Tacos de Cabrito y Machito El Lagunero, a street food operation serving traditional spit-roasted kid from Mexico's Comarca Lagunera region, was forced to close despite plans to celebrate its third anniversary. The streets of Muscoy were empty due to ongoing, unprecedented mass deportation raids enacted by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), centered in Los Angeles, a sanctuary city, and surrounding communities that are likewise a protected jurisdiction in the sanctuary state of California. Muscoy is a semi-rural community located about 60 miles east of Downtown Los Angeles with 88 percent Latino residents, according to the 2022 census. Many of the homes offer ample space, some featuring small farms and horse stables. The roadsides, lots, and private residences host a variety of Mexican food specialists in a sleepy rancho that looks like it was carved out a Mexican countryside, but instead in San Bernardino County. ICE's immigration sweep operation in Southern California, which began on June 6, included a $134 million price tag to fund a federalized California National Guard that Trump ordered into Los Angeles on June 7, despite strong objection from Gov. Gavin Newsom, as well as the deployment of 700 California-based Marines, who Trump ordered into Los Angeles to quell mounting protests. The Los Angeles Times reports that, as of June 11, an estimated 330 people have been arrested and detained as a result of these sweeps. A report by the Bay Area Council Economic Institute estimates that mass deportations could impact the state's GDP by $278 billion. In the balance is the fate of Los Angeles street food vendors still reeling from the impacts of a global pandemic and the Los Angeles wildfires in January 2025. Due to the raids, Tacos de Cabrito y Machito El Lagunero's owners Francisco Salinas and Vanessa Sánchez tell Eater the business had a lower-than-expected turnout on Sunday, June 8, so they decided to close on Father's Day until things cooled down. 'We see them [ICE] here every day, and people are afraid to go outside,' says Salinas. That same day, another Muscoy vendor, Juan Flores of Ceviche Hot Spot, known locally for ceviche-topped michelada cups and aguachiles of shrimp, was allegedly detained and deported. 'Last Monday, they grabbed him coming out of his house, and he was deported to Tijuana that same day,' says Salinas, who received a message from Flores on WhatsApp asking for support for his family who remain in California. Across social media, videos show families separated and neighbors screaming and crying as ICE officers arrest undocumented immigrants throughout Los Angeles. These scenes have filled the Latino community with terror, helplessness, and despair. Over Father's Day weekend, the streets and avenues flanking the 110 Freeway in South Central that are typically vibrant with brightly wrapped food trucks and hanging lights strewn above sizzling planchas have been emptied out. Tacos Los Güichos, Eater LA's pick for best al pastor spot and a mainstay on Slauson Avenue since 1974, has vanished. This part of the city simply doesn't look the same without its street food vendors. With raids targeting swap meets, taco trucks, food stands, and Home Depot parking lots, the enforcement is seemingly targeting Latino majority communities. Instagram user Arnie Abramyan, @arnieabramyan, posted a video on June 11 of an abandoned taco stand on Foothill Boulevard in Tujunga, across the street from the In-N-Out Burger. In the video, Abramyan alleges that ICE had raided the stand and that its workers had been detained. Eater has not been able to independently confirm his account. The video shows a deserted stand; a fully loaded trompo; and condiments like salsa, chopped cilantro, and onions left uncovered in plastic containers. On June 12, Jason's Tacos owner, Jason Devora, posted on his food truck's Instagram that his workers had been taken by ICE, leaving his truck unmanned. L.A. Taco reported that customers were also allegedly detained as collateral arrests, arrests of otherwise law-abiding immigrants with varying degrees of legal status, which has emerged as a common tactic as part of President Donald Trump's mass deportation of up to 3,000 people per day that has specifically targeted Democratic-run cities. 'I'm sure they are racially profiling us; look at the neighborhoods they are going to and [ask] why aren't they in Beverly Hills and those places?' says Rocio Ortega, the daughter of founder Raul Ortega of Boyle Heights seafood truck Mariscos Jalisco. Michelin Bib Gourmand Mariscos Jaliscos, celebrated for its crispy taco de camarón bathed in a tangy tomato salsa, has made adjustments to protect its staff and customers. 'We are doing the best we can with limited staff because we've asked some of them to stay home,' says owner Raul Ortega, 'The dining room is closed, too, because ICE can just go wherever they please without asking.' Restaurants can designate private spaces to keep ICE from detaining employees, nevertheless, opening the dining room at Mariscos Jalisco compromises the safety of customers who may be undocumented. The Mariscos Jalisco truck in Downtown LA's Fashion District that Rocio Ortega and one other cook operate remains closed for the time being. Ortega arrived at the truck around 10 a.m. on June 6 and saw a crowd gathering around FBI agents. Ambiance Apparel, where the ICE raids began in Los Angeles, is right around the corner from the truck. 'I didn't know what was going on so I started to record video, and then the employee working with me saw a group of people with Police HSI on their [bulletproof] vests,' says Rocio. Mariscos Jalisco now operates its Boyle Heights and Mid-City trucks with a skeleton crew, while the brick-and-mortar location in Pomona opens or closes depending on if they have enough staff to work a particular shift, which has not been a certain process. 'For now we are just taking it day by day to see which locations we can open, but it's exhausting running our business without [enough] staff,' says Rocio. Many vendors have opted to close to keep workers and customers safe. On Instagram, Los Sabrosos Al Horno owner David Delfin wrote that the stand would close until further notice. Delfin specializes in whole suckling roasted in a caja china that is carved up for Acaponeta-style tacos de lechón, spiced by salsa of yellow mustard and chiles guëros. Popular birria vendor Birria El Jaliciense posted on June 13 that they would be closing until further notice, thanking their customers for their understanding and reminding them to take care. 'We are doing private events, and served tacos last Saturday, but other than that there's no point in setting up, because there are no customers. Everyone is staying home,' says Delfín. Preparing a whole suckling pig is costly, and Delfín counts on selling out in order to make the operation worth his time. All of the enforcement activity has resulted in a significant economic and emotional toll on taqueros, their employees, and customers. 'I'm sad, I'm scared, and it's just been a rollercoaster seeing all these videos of kidnappings; it's breaking my heart,' says Rocio. And with no end in sight to the ICE raids, there is no telling how long this will impact the terrified Latino community. 'I have enough money to maybe last three or four months, and that's it,' says Salinas. 'Then we will have to see what happens. Muscoy was a safe place for us. But now, with all this, maybe it's not worth it to be in America anymore.' See More: