Todd Lyons, the head of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), on Monday defended the harsh tactics his agents employ in raids against immigrants across the country. Whether these raids take place in broad daylight on the streets of a sanctuary city, inside a state prison, or in an immigration court, far from the public eye, hundreds of agents from various federal agencies are carrying out what Donald Trump has called the largest deportation operation in the country’s history.
Lyons has advocated for the agents, who operate in plain clothes with their faces covered and, often, in unmarked cars. “I’m sorry if people are offended by them wearing masks, but I’m not going to let my officers and agents go out there and put their lives on the line, their family on the line because people don’t like what immigration enforcement is,” the official stated at a news conference in Boston, Massachusetts.
The ICE official claimed that activists against Trump’s immigration policies in Los Angeles filmed and posted on social media the faces of ICE agents who carried out a series of arrests of undocumented immigrants in the California city. “They and their families have received death threats on social media,” Lyons said.
The discomfort surrounding these operations is becoming increasingly evident. Todd Gloria, the mayor of San Diego, said he was “deeply upset” by a raid that ICE agents carried out Friday afternoon at Buona Forchetta, a popular Italian restaurant in the city. The actions by ICE officers, who allegedly arrived with an arrest warrant, became a viral scene that made the rounds on social media.
This is how it’s done!
FRIDAY: South Park, San Diego, neighbors weren’t having it. When ICE rolled up on an Italian restaurant in unmarked cars and started grabbing workers, the community hit the streets. (Sound up) pic.twitter.com/HYMnoiD5Z2
Diners and residents surrounded the unmarked ICE vehicles and shouted in protest at the officers who carried out the raid, which resulted in the temporary detention of a dozen kitchen employees and the establishment’s manager, Renato Ametrano. The officers were forced to use flash-bang devices to disperse the protesters. The owners of the restaurant chain, which has seven establishments, ordered them closed until Wednesday in protest.
“Federal actions like these are billed as a public safety measure, but it had the complete opposite effect. What we saw undermines trust and creates fear in our community,” Mayor Gloria said in a statement released Saturday.
Lyons did not directly address the events in San Diego. Instead, he boasted about the numbers from the raids that ICE conducted in May in several Massachusetts cities, in which nearly 1,500 people were apprehended. The agency reports that approximately 790 are facing criminal charges, representing 54% of those detained. “A significant number of the foreign nationals detained had committed offenses such as drunk driving or sexual offenses, were suspected of homicide, or were fugitives from other countries trying to evade justice,” he announced.
Protected by Justice Department officials, Lyons criticized sanctuary cities for turning their backs on raids that detain undocumented immigrants. “It would be easier for them to cooperate in getting their most dangerous criminals handed over to federal authorities instead of releasing them. That way, we wouldn’t have to go into the cities looking for them,” he declared.
The official made it clear that ICE will continue to act as it has in recent weeks. “This operation has proven that we need to do more,” he argued. And they will do so with the support of other federal agencies such as Customs and Border Protection (CBP), the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF), the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), diplomatic security agents, and U.S. Marshals.
The case of Marcelo Gomes
During the news conference, authorities justified the arrest of Marcelo Gomes Da Silva, an 18-year-old high school student. This young man’s arrest, which occurred this weekend, has caused a stir in the town of Milford, southwest of Boston. He is not a criminal, but rather an exceptionally bright student with a good grade point average and a talent for sports and music, and he was in a band that was scheduled to play at the school’s graduation ceremony.
“We went looking for someone else, and unfortunately, we detained him,” Lyons admitted. The ICE official emphasized that, despite Gomes Da Silva’s talents, “he is in the country illegally.” According to his account, federal authorities stopped a vehicle registered to Marcelo’s father, the real target of immigration authorities. Inside the vehicle was not Marcelo’s father, but his son, who is now in a detention center awaiting deportation back to Brazil despite having been in the United States since he was six years old.
Leah Foley, the federal district attorney for Boston, who took office upon Trump’s return to the presidency, has taken a harsh stance against immigrants despite the fact that just over half of the 1,500 detainees had criminal records. “These are individuals who didn’t simply cross the border, but rather crossed a line, endangering the safety of a community. They are not immigrants, they are criminals,” she stated. But names like Marcelo Gomes Da Silva’s continue to underscore the excesses of the administration’s immigration policies.
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Thousands of people took to the streets of New York City this Tuesday in solidarity with the demonstrations against the Trump administration’s immigration raids, which began in Los Angeles last week. Chanting “ICE, out!” or “Fuck immigration,” and waving Mexican, Puerto Rican, Peruvian, Colombian, Cuban, and Palestinian flags, New Yorkers joined a protest movement that, after erupting in California over the weekend, has now spread to the rest of the United States. Rallies have been held in almost every major city throughout the week.
The protest in the Big Apple on Tuesday began at Federal Plaza in Lower Manhattan, where the offices of several federal immigration agencies, including U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and the city’s main immigration court are located, and where other demonstrations have taken place in recent days. The shouts and cheers of thousands of protesters echoed off the facades of the buildings where dozens of immigrants have been detained in recent weeks while attending court dates, as the Trump administration intensifies its detention and deportation campaign.
The protesters were met with a heavy police presence and barricades. While the majority marched north through the streets of Manhattan after 6:00 p.m., a small group remained in the Federal Plaza area, where some scuffles later broke out between protesters and authorities. Several arrests were made — at least 20, according to protest organizers.
Hundreds of people have been arrested at demonstrations across the country, while federal agents have used tear gas, pepper spray, and rubber bullets against protesters. In Los Angeles, nearly 5,000 soldiers have joined the police crackdown on protests that entered their fifth day on Tuesday, having begun last Friday in response to immigration raids carried out in several parts of the city.
In New York, protests began on Saturday, hours after they erupted in the Californian metropolis. That day, around 100 people also gathered in Federal Plaza. Protesters eventually clashed with authorities after blocking a white van leaving a building in the area, which, according to those present, belonged to immigration enforcement. Videos shared on social media show protesters forming a human chain to stop the vehicle. Other images show the ensuing clash, in which authorities arrested 22 people and used pepper spray to disperse the crowd. Several protesters were injured in the altercation and had to be taken to nearby hospitals.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat and Trump ally, has already warned that he will not tolerate the type of clashes that have erupted in Los Angeles, calling them “unacceptable.” “I understand that some New Yorkers may be angry, afraid, and ready to express that. New York City will always be a place to peacefully protest, but we will not allow violence and lawlessness,” he said Monday night. Hours earlier, a group of protesters staged a peaceful sit-in inside the lobby of Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. The action resulted in 24 arrests, according to local police. In addition, others gathered again near Federal Plaza, where at least eight people were detained.
Beyond New York and California, there have been rallies in states such as Illinois, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, Nevada, Florida, Massachusetts, Georgia, Minnesota, Kentucky, and Washington. In total, demonstrations have been reported in more than two dozen cities, and it is possible that these will overlap with the thousands of anti-Trump protests already planned nationwide for next Saturday, the president’s birthday. Most have been peaceful and controlled, outside local ICE offices or in front of city halls. The size of the actions has varied: some have gathered a few dozen participants, while others have drawn thousands of people.
In addition to demanding an end to the ICE raids, protesters have also taken to the streets to show support for David Huerta, a prominent union and civil rights leader who was arrested last Friday in Los Angeles while protesting an immigration raid. Huerta was released on bail Monday but faces a felony charge of conspiracy to obstruct a federal agent. His arrest, captured in videos and images shared on social media, has made him a symbol of the protests.
Texas has also been the scene of confrontations between protesters and law enforcement. In Austin, the state capital, tense clashes with authorities erupted Monday night. The march began at the Capitol and continued to the J.J. Pickle Federal Building, which ICE uses as a detention center. There, some threw paint and rocks at officers and scratched at the building’s windows. Images on social media and in the local press show a large number of people running to escape the pepper spray deployed by guards. Local police chief Lisa Davis said law enforcement used gas, although she declined to call it tear gas. At least two arrests were reported during the day.
For his part, the state’s governor, Greg Abbott, a Republican and staunch ally of President Trump, especially on immigration issues, wrote on his X account on Monday: “Peaceful protesting is legal. But once you cross the line, you will be arrested. FAFO,” using the abbreviation for “fuck around and find out.”
In Dallas, about 400 people gathered on Monday at the Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge near downtown. According to local media, the demonstration began with signs, flags, and slogans supporting immigrant rights. However, around 10 p.m., police threatened the protesters with arrest if they did not leave. Around 11 p.m., officers surrounded a group and arrested at least one person. The pastor of a local church reported being pepper-sprayed by an officer, while, with his hands raised, he told the officer, “I am not a threat.” It was confirmed that officers used the spray against other protesters.
“As ICE agents, police, and the National Guard flood the streets of Los Angeles to brutalize those exercising their right to protest, we remember that all change has been won only through struggle. To win, we must continue to fight,” the Houston branch of the Party for Socialism and Liberation, one of the organizers of the protests in that city over the weekend, said in a statement. Peaceful protests were also held in the Texas city of San Antonio, where hundreds of people marched over the weekend under the slogan “Money for jobs and education, not racist deportations.”
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