ICE, Trump and immigration raids
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ICE to ramp up deportations in 3 cities
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Todd Lyons, the head of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, defended his tactics last week week against criticism that authorities are being too heavy-handed. He has said ICE is averaging about 1,600 arrests per day and that the agency has arrested “dangerous criminals.” It is an assertion many lawmakers and city leaders decry.
Highly publicized raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) sparks reaction from agriculture industry associations and more.
FOX 11 Los Angeles on MSN4d
ICE raids impact businesses in Latino communitiesICE raids in Los Angeles are leaving people afraid. Some businesses in Latino communities say they've seen massive drops in business since the raids started.
While protesters grabbed headlines in LA, many immigrants stayed home. Fear and outrage gripped the city, costing businesses customers and workers their wages.
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LAist on MSNICE raids are keeping shoppers away from Eastside businessesSalon chairs sit empty, vendors kill time and business owners prepare for worst-case scenarios as fear grips Boyle Heights.
Though the White House framed Trump’s intervention as responsive leadership, the decision to scale back enforcement came only after mounting complaints from agriculture and hospitality executives, many of them Trump’s financial backers, who warned of production losses, staffing shortages, and the potential collapse of key supply chains.
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ABC7 KABC on MSNMasked ICE agents let man go after community members intervene during raid in DowneyMasked ICE agents attempted to arrest a man in Downey during one of three reported raids Wednesday morning, but they let him go after community members intervened.
In an unexpected twist, a Trump supporter in Florida has voiced his confusion and frustration following an ICE raid that disrupted his local roofing