Editorial: Starve the Machine: Why Communities Must Cut Off ICE’s Lifelines

Hands Up – Don’t Shoot!

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) continues to function in cities and towns throughout the United States with blatant contempt for constitutional principles, civil rights, and human dignity. The raids take place during the early hours of the morning. Parents disappear from school drop-offs. Workers are abducted from their workplaces—all without warrants, frequently without justification, and always with the unsettling effectiveness of an organization that believes it is accountable to no one.

However, the reality is that ICE operates on more than just power. It uses gas. Regarding coffee from the corner deli. The serene complicity of local business, parking places, and Wi-Fi are all available at rest stops. That is exactly where communities have the power and obligation to retaliate.

City Officials should be doing this as a Sanctuary City.

The concept is straightforward but has far-reaching consequences:  “If you don’t want ICE in your community, stop supporting it.”

Don’t sell gasoline to ICE vehicles that are marked or unlabeled. bar representatives for restaurants and restrooms. Tell local businesses: no contracts, no services, no silent support for a system that splits families apart and makes due process optional.

This isn’t vigilantism. It’s community self-defense.

Unlawful Actions by DHS and ICE!

Such conduct, according to critics, “impedes federal law enforcement.” However, an agency loses the presumption of legitimacy when it regularly disregards the Fourth Amendment by entering houses without a warrant and the Fifth Amendment by arresting individuals without charges or access to a lawyer. ICE functions in a gray area made possible by indifference rather than legislation. Local companies become accessories to constitutional breaches every time a gas station fills an ICE van with gasoline or a restaurant provides breakfast to officers on their way to a raid, albeit unknowingly.

Although they are a beginning, sanctuary city statements are frequently symbolic. A genuine sanctuary is about the business owner who says, “Not on my property,” not about municipal hall resolutions. It’s about the community that collectively draws a line, saying, “You may have a badge, but you don’t have our consent.”

ICE has become the Enemy of The State as they are Attacking US Senators!

Others will contend that refusing service is un-American. However, it is undeniably un-American to permit a federal agency to arm local infrastructure against vulnerable neighbors while simultaneously asserting impunity. The Constitution does not cease to exist when someone’s immigration status changes, and it most certainly does not cease to exist when someone wears a DHS patch.

Moral resistance has always relied on disrupting the machinery of injustice—**not just condemning it, but starving it**—through the thousands of daily acts of ordinary people withdrawing their cooperation. History shows that oppressive regimes fall as a result of this withdrawal of cooperation, not just through courts or Congress. This withdrawal of cooperation has taken many forms, including divestment campaigns against apartheid and boycotts during the Civil Rights Movement.

ICE is an Occupying Force to Oppress The People.

Therefore, to be clear, if ICE believes that it is above the Constitution, then communities are entitled to treat it as an occupying force, using complete non-cooperation rather than violence. No sustenance. No fuel. There are no restrooms. Not at all cozy. There isn’t a cover.

Make it logistically impossible for ICE to function in your city.

Sanctuary Cities, It’s time to start defending your residents,
YOUR COMMUNITY .

Make your city a genuine haven rather than just a “sanctuary” in name.

Because justice cannot be proclaimed. We are the ones who enforce it.

Editorial: A Cry for Empathy in Santa Ana — Not Control

Protester that lost family in the Military.

Last night, if you caught my Facebook Live broadcast, you witnessed a moment that cut deep into the soul of our community. I found myself stepping into a couple of tense altercations during what was otherwise a peaceful demonstration of solidarity in Downtown Santa Ana.

The first involved a young Latino man, overwhelmed with pain. Another demonstrator tried to de-escalate the situation, but emotions were high, and instead of cooling down, things flared up—especially between the young man, law enforcement, and military personnel on site. I had to step in. What could have turned violent needed a voice of calm. I did my best to be that voice.

Lone Demonstration of Solidarity

This young man—hurting, frustrated, and grieving—had family in the military. The pain he carried exploded into words directed at law enforcement. Again, I stepped in to calm him. But minutes later, after walking away, he returned, now face-to-face with an OCSD deputy. This time, his grief turned to desperation. He pleaded with the officer to shoot him. Said he wanted to die like his brother, who lost his life in service.

He stood just inches from the deputy, who had assumed an aggressive posture. I intervened once again, shielding this broken soul from what could have become another tragic incident on our streets.

Solidarity

Which raises the question: What is it with law enforcement and the lack of empathy? Have badges and state protection numbed their humanity? When did they stop hearing pain and start seeing only threats?

I have family in the military—my brother, my cousins. I understand duty. But duty, whether in uniform or behind a badge, is first and foremost to the Constitution, not to a delusional narcissist like Donald Trump. The U.S. Marine Corps Code of Conduct and the Oath of Enlistment make this clear: uphold the Constitution, not the man who happens to sit in the Oval Office.

Orange County Sheriff Department taking an Aggressive Stance on Peaceful Protest.

The same should be expected of our local police. Their oath is not to power—it’s to principle. Yet increasingly, we’re seeing the military and law enforcement used not as protectors of the people, but as enforcers of a nationalist, fascist agenda driven by fear and division.

We are not the enemy. That young man was not the enemy. He was a citizen in pain. And what he needed was compassion—not confrontation.

Editorial: Las fuerzas del orden atacan a los periodistas del sur de California.

Guardias Nacionales de California en alerta en las calles de Santa Ana, California. Foto: The Orange County Reporter

En los condados de Orange y Los Ángeles, las fuerzas del orden parecen haber pasado de los manifestantes a quienes informan la verdad, en lo que solo puede considerarse una grave crisis para la democracia. Según informes, las agencias policiales locales han recurrido a la violencia, arrestos ilegales y amenazas públicas contra reporteros, fotógrafos y periodistas que cubren redadas de ICE y protestas civiles.

Esto está respaldado por testimonios de testigos presenciales, relatos de testigos presenciales y videos, no por hipótesis. Se han disparado balas de goma contra periodistas, se les ha encarcelado sin motivo y se les ha prohibido explícitamente cubrir irregularidades policiales. Este comportamiento no solo es ilegal, sino también totalitario, y por lo tanto destruye la base de la libertad mediática de toda democracia funcional.

Manifestación pacífica frente al Palacio de Justicia Federal en Santa Ana, California. Foto: The Orange County Reporter.

El reciente despliegue de la Guardia Nacional y la Infantería de Marina de los EE. UU. en el sur de California aumenta el peligro. A diferencia de la policía local, la Infantería de Marina no está entrenada en seguridad comunitaria ni en disturbios civiles. Está entrenada para enfrentarse y eliminar a los oponentes en zonas de combate utilizando munición real. Esto no es control de multitudes, sino una táctica de escalada.

Entrar en ciudades ya sumidas en la agitación, las protestas y la inestabilidad política con soldados listos para el combate no es una demostración de poderío, sino una declaración de guerra contra la población, los derechos civiles y la libertad de prensa. Ofrece un ejemplo esclarecedor de las consecuencias de la excesiva intromisión del gobierno.

La Primera Enmienda protege la libertad de prensa como un escudo contra la tiranía, no como un favor. El público se ciega cuando se silencia a la prensa. Vivimos en una civilización regulada, no democrática, donde quienes dicen la verdad son vistos como oponentes.

Vincent Sarmiento, de la Junta de Supervisores del Condado de Orange, y Benjamín Vázquez, alcalde interino de Santa Ana. Foto: The Orange County Reporter.

Exigimos que todos los funcionarios electos, las organizaciones de derechos civiles y los defensores legales actúen de inmediato para investigar estas violaciones. Protejan a los periodistas. Antes de que la violencia se intensifique, desmilitaricen nuestra sociedad ante todo.

Todo el mundo observa. ¿Se convertirá el sur de California en un santuario de libertad o caerá bajo la opresión?

Editorial: Law Enforcement Targets Southern California Reporters

California National Guards on Standby in The Streets of Santa Ana CA. Photo by: The Orange County Reporter

In Orange and Los Angeles counties, law enforcement appears to have switched from protestors to the very people who report the truth in what can only be considered as a developing and serious crisis for democracy. Local police agencies have resorted to violence, unlawful arrests, and public threats against reporters, photographers, and media personnel covering ICE raids and civil protests, according to reports.

This is backed by eyewitness testimonies, ground level eyewitness accounts, and video—not hypothesis. Rubber bullets have been pointed and fired at journalists, imprisoned without cause, and explicitly told not to cover police wrongdoing. Such behavior is not only illegal but also totalitarian, hence destroying the free media foundation of every functioning democracy.

Peaceful Demonstration outside of The Federal Courthouse in Santa Ana CA. Photo by: The Orange County Reporter.

The recent deployment of National Guard and US Marines to Southern California increases the danger. Unlike local police, marines are not trained in community security or civil unrest. They are trained how to engage and eliminate opponents in fighting zones using actual ammo. This is not crowd control, but an escalation tactic.

Entering cities already embroiled in turmoil, protests, and political unrest with battle-ready soldiers is not a display of might but rather a declaration of war against the populace, civil rights, and the free press. It offers a sobering illustration of the results of too much government meddling.

The First Amendment safeguards freedom of the press as a shield against tyranny, not as a kindness. The public becomes blind when the press is silenced. We live in a regulated civilization, not a democratic one, where those who speak the truth are viewed as opponents.

Orange County Board of Supervisors Vincent Sarmiento and Santa Ana Mayor Pro-Term Benjamin Vazquez. Photo by: The Orange County Reporter.

We demand that all elected officials, civil rights organizations, and legal protectors act right now to look into these violations. Protect journalists. Before the violence intensifies, demilitarize our society above all else.

The whole globe is watching. Will Southern California become a sanctuary of liberty or fall under oppression?

Editorial: Downtown Santa Ana Demonstration Turns Violent Amid Police Crackdown

Orange County Sheriff Department

What started out as a calm protest in Downtown Santa Ana quickly descended into disorder and violence as various law enforcement agencies —including the Santa Ana Police Department, Huntington Beach, Anaheim, Irvine, Seal Beach, La Palma, Orange County Sheriff’s Department (OCSD), even the California National Guard— descended on the demonstration to forcefully disperse the crowd.

Witnesses say that police in riot gear advanced fiercely aided by armored vehicles and monitoring drones. What should’ve First Amendment rights exercise turned into a conflict involving tear gas, rubber bullets, and batons against demonstrators. Police sirens and shouting dispersal commands drowned out justice chants.

Orange County Sheriff Department

Why agencies from cities miles away—including Huntington Beach and Seal Beach—were called in to intervene in a Santa Ana protest? Why was the National Guard sent in a civilian environment and with what mandate?

The scene reflected a disturbing national trend: the swift militarization of local law enforcement and the organized suppression of public opposition. It begs immediate concerns about civil liberties, jurisdictional overreach, and the decline of local trust when peaceful protesters are treated as enemy combatant and police from different jurisdictions act in harmony without transparency or local accountability.

Santa Ana Police Department

This is not public safety.” This is a display of power;it sets a hazardous precedent.”

City and county level elected officials have to account for this increase. Mayor Valerie Amezcua and the Santa Ana City Council have to account for their involvement—or lack of influence—regarding what happened. People ought to know why if they approved this.Who else would?

Demonstrators put up a barrier

The citizens of Santa Ana are entitled to object, seek justice, and hold those in authority responsible. Official news releases or cleaned reports should not cover the events of this day. The community is watching; history will remember.

Editorial: Where Are Our Elected Officials in Los Angeles’s Military Crisis?

Militarized Blackhawk Helicopter

In a troubling escalation, the California National Guard has reportedly been sent to Los Angeles equipped with live ammunition rounds. Even more troubling is the fact that a military Blackhawk helicopter was observed in the metropolis providing live rounds to an ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) site. On American land, in the middle of one of the most diverse cities in the country, not in a faraway war zone, this is occurring in our neighborhoods.

This incredibly disturbing conduct raises several urgent problems. Who authorized this military mission? With such extreme force, what is the justification for equipping federal immigration detention facilities? And, above all, where are the voices of accountability?

A Military Blackhawk Helicopter Delivering Live Ammunition and Explosives to ICE Agents near Downtown Los Angeles as Documented by ABC7 News Helicopter.

Bound by the Constitution to demand accountability and transparency, Congressman Lou Correa, representing part of Orange County and sitting on the powerful Homeland Security Committee, is bound by the Constitution. His quiet is overwhelming. As he is in charge of federal law enforcement agencies and homeland operations, his constituents need protection from the creeping normalization of military presence in civilian areas.

In the same vein, where are California’s other members of Congress, especially those who were directly elected to represent the Los Angeles area? What are they doing while military-grade equipment is flown to ICE grounds? The people they represent are watching their neighborhoods become militarized zones, and there is very little public discussion, hearings, or monitoring being done during this metamorphosis.

Particularly when live rounds are employed, the line between military occupation and civil policing becomes fuzzy when the National Guard is deployed in conjunction with federal immigration enforcement. Not just excessive, these acts serve as a terrifying, unlawful, and dangerous reminder of how unbridled authority damages democracy.

If elected officials like Lou Correa keep passive, they will be complicit in the erosion of civil rights and the growing adoption of authoritarian approaches under the pretense of national security. California officials cannot afford to turn a blind eye to problems. The public demands justification. They call for action. They call for bravery.

Those in power now have a choice to either back the people or remain apart and allow those who will.

Editorial: Federal Agencies and Private Militants Terrorize Paramount, California — Protester Run Over

Police State

Paramount, California — a working-class, predominantly immigrant city — is now the latest flashpoint in a terrifying pattern of militarized crackdowns and unchecked aggression by federal agencies and private operatives. Residents report a surge of operations involving Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), private contractors like Blackwater (now rebranded as Constellis), and even rogue bounty hunters acting outside of constitutional limits. These forces have descended upon the city with military-grade equipment, assault rifles, unmarked vehicles, and the blatant disregard for civil rights that has come to characterize such operations.

The most horrifying incident came during a peaceful protest earlier this week, when a protester was run over by a federal vehicle. Witnesses state that the victim — a young activist marching against ICE raids in the neighborhood — was deliberately targeted. The federal agents present refused to offer medical assistance and instead formed a perimeter to shield the vehicle and its driver from public accountability. The victim was later rushed to the hospital by fellow demonstrators. No arrests have been made. No apologies issued.

Peaceful Demonstrator was hit and killed by ICE Agents when ICE Agents ran him over with a Federal Vehicle.

What is happening in Paramount is not law enforcement. It is a campaign of fear. Residents speak of pre-dawn raids, helicopters circling above schools, families pulled from their homes without warrants, and masked operatives demanding identification with no legal basis. Community members are being surveilled, harassed, and detained — not for crimes, but for the crime of existing in a system that criminalizes immigrants, Black and Brown bodies, and anyone who dares to dissent.

The involvement of Blackwater-style contractors and bounty hunters — with their long track records of war crimes, human rights violations, and total lack of accountability — only amplifies the terror. These groups are not bound by the same protocols and oversight as public law enforcement, yet they are armed to the teeth and deployed as if the community were a battlefield.

Where is the oversight? Where are California’s state leaders, the county supervisors, the city officials? Their silence is complicity.

Paramount is not a war zone. It is a community of hard-working families, students, elders, and everyday people who deserve safety — not occupation. No federal badge or military patch gives anyone the right to terrorize civilians, run over protesters, or treat neighborhoods like enemy territory. If this happened abroad, the U.S. government would call it a human rights violation. But on American soil, under the guise of “law enforcement,” it is business as usual.

We must demand an independent investigation into these operations. We must demand the names of every agency, contractor, and officer involved. We must demand justice for the protester injured — and for every family living in fear.

This is not democracy. This is a dystopia.

The people of Paramount deserve better. The nation must pay attention.