Agents Use Military-Style Force Against Protesters at L.A. Immigration Raid
newsletter via Feeds on Inoreader 2025-06-06
Summary:
Federal agents in tactical gear armed with military-style rifles threw flash-bang grenades to disperse an angry crowd near downtown Los Angeles on Friday as they conducted an immigration raid on a clothing wholesaler, the latest sign of tensions between protesters and law enforcement over raids carried out at stores, restaurants and court buildings.
The operation was one of at least three immigration sweeps conducted in Los Angeles on Friday. In the other one, federal agents converged at a Home Depot where day laborers regularly gather in search of work.
The raid at the clothing wholesaler began about 9:15 a.m. in the Fashion District, less than two miles from Los Angeles City Hall.
It was an extraordinary show of force. Dozens of federal agents wearing helmets and green camouflage arrived in two hulking armored trucks and other unmarked vehicles, and were soon approached by a crowd of immigrant activists and supporters. Some agents carried riot shields and others held rifles, as well as shotguns that appeared to be loaded with less-than-lethal ammunition.
Agents cleared a path for two white passenger vans that exited the area. A short time later, as officers boarded their vehicles to leave, a few agents lobbed flash-bang grenades at groups of people who chased alongside the slow-moving convoy. Some protesters had thrown eggs and other objects at the vehicles. At one point, the vehicles snagged and crushed at least two electric scooters that protesters had used.
The operation drew immediate criticism from officials in Los Angeles, a Democratic-led city in a county where more than 30 percent of residents are immigrants.
“As Mayor of a proud city of immigrants, who contribute to our city in so many ways, I am deeply angered by what has taken place,” Mayor Karen Bass of Los Angeles said in a statement, adding: “My Office is in close coordination with immigrant rights community organizations. We will not stand for this.”
Hours after the raid, a second clash between protesters and federal agents broke out outside a federal detention center in downtown Los Angeles, where those who were detained were taken. At one of the entrances, protesters chanted and approached the building as officers fired less-than-lethal projectiles and squirted what appeared to be pepper spray. Some protesters threw a chair and other objects.
By 7 p.m., the Los Angeles Police Department declared an unlawful assembly, ordered demonstrators to disperse and a line of police in riot gear started to clear the area.
The morning raid took place at a business called Ambiance Apparel.
Omar Diaz, 26, was working inside when several agents entered the building and corralled the roughly 20 to 30 workers inside and lined them up against a wall.
“They interviewed us one by one,” Mr. Diaz said. “They would take us separately, ask us where we were born, and then they wanted our ID and our information.”
After being detained for about an hour, Mr. Diaz, who said he is a U.S. citizen, and a few others were let go. But some of his co-workers, who are mostly immigrants from Mexico and South Korea, remained with the authorities, Mr. Diaz said.
“My friend is still in there, too, so I’m worried about him,” Mr. Diaz said outside the front entrance of the building.

A group of activists aboard a truck repeated a list of rights over a loudspeaker, hoping those detained inside could hear them.
Gloria Miguel, an organizer with a local workers group, said she saw two women crying as the raid unfolded.
“The woman was crying: ‘My husband is in there. I need help,’” Ms. Miguel said in Spanish, adding that there was another woman who was crying because her father was inside.
Agents at the scene were wearing patches on their unifo