California, ICE and Raid
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The man called family to say he was hiding and possibly was fleeing agents before he fell about 30 feet from the roof and broke his neck, according to information from family, hospital and government sources.
A federal judge’s ruling ordering a pause on ICE raids in Southern California had its genesis outside a Pasadena donut shop, where on a June morning, masked and armed agents converged.
Claims are spreading on social media that Los Angeles' notorious congestion had eased because of immigration enforcement. Here's what we know.
Hesperia, praised conditions at the immigration detention facility, Ruiz, D-Palm Desert, and Torres, D-Ontario, denounced what they said were unlawful actions by U.S.
ICE agents raided cannabis nurseries in Camarillo, California, and Carpinteria, California, on Thursday. Both cannabis facilities are owned by Glass House Brands Inc., which bills itself as one of the largest cannabis flower brands in the world.
Jaime Alanis, 57, worked on a farm in Camarillo for 10 years before Thursday’s ICE raid, according to his family.
“While (Homeland Security Investigations) respects the public’s right to peacefully express disagreement with immigration enforcement, physical assaults on federal officers and interference with lawful operations will not be tolerated,” ICE said a day after the arrests.
Immigrant workers are central to recovery efforts in neighborhoods burned in the January wildfires, but recent raids have led some to stay home.