
A demonstrator holding a Mexican flag stands in front of US federal agents standing guard as they block a road leading to an agricultural facility where US federal agents and immigration officers carried out an operation, in Camarillo, California, July 10.— Reuters
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According to the worker’s lawyer group, US immigration agents raided the Nursery of Bhang and arrested hundreds of people after a California farm activist died on Friday. On the same day, a federal judge ordered the Trump administration to temporarily stop some of its most aggressive tactics targeting non -documentary immigrants.
During the operation on Thursday, rural southern California encountered dozens of refugee rights activists with federal agents, which is the latest increase in President Donald Trump’s campaign for the widespread deportation of immigrants in the United States.
A California judge on Friday stopped the Trump administration from racial profiling immigrants as he tries to deport and refuses to access lawyers during their detention of immigrants.
According to the government’s estimates, the Trump administration has made conflicting statements about whether the immigration agent will target the form labor work force, half of which are unauthorized to operate in the United States.
The Homeland Security Department said that about 200 people were arrested illegally in the country, which targeted two places of cannabis operation glass house farms.
The agents also found 10 immigrants in the form, the department said in an email statement. In this facility, children’s labor violations, customs and Border Protection Commissioner Rodney Scott have been posted on X.
The company did not immediately respond to the comment request.
According to the scene photos and videos, the scene was suffering from chaos on Thursday, in which the federal agents used tear gas and smoke cans on angry protesters in helmets and facial masks.
Elizabeth Street, National Vice President of United Farm Workers, said several farm workers were injured and injured on Friday after a 30 -foot (9 meters) from a building fell from a building during the raid.
The deceased worker was identified by the name of Jim Elins on a confirmed giftmi page created by his family, who said he was raising money to help his family and for burial in Mexico.
“He was the provider of his family. He took a person from our family. We need justice,” Al Nanasi’s family wrote on the giftum page.
US citizens were detained during raids, and some are still countless, Starter said.
The DHS said that his agent was not responsible for the death of the man, he said, “Although it was not being pursued by law enforcement agencies, the person fell on the ceiling of the greenhouse and fell 30 feet.” The agents demanded immediate medical evacuation, the DHS said.
‘Mountain of evidence’ stops aggressive plans
In southern California, there was a riot when the Trump administration faces dozens of litigation across the country, which is on its controversial tactics in detecting non -documentary immigrants for deportation.
US District Court Judge Mama Frampong has given two temporary prevention orders that are preventing the administration from detaining immigrants on suspicion of living in the country on the basis of ethnic profiling and refusing to talk to detained people with a lawyer.
In response to the case of immigration lawyers groups, the decision states that the administration is violating the fourth and fifth amendments to the constitution to hold a “patrolling patrol” to allow the non -documented immigrants to be accessed by their Latin, and then access to Latin.
Frampong wrote in its judgment, “What would the federal government believe in the face of the mountain of evidence presented to this court – is it not really happening?”
Alerts on food supply
California’s rural legal aid, which provides legal services and other support to farm workers, is working to check up for glass house workers.
Praisdo said that some of the glasses house workers during the raid were able to call only the family after voluntarily signing the deportation orders, and were told that they could be jailed for life because they worked in hemp.
“The allegations that ICE or CBP agents have refused to ask the detainees with legal aid,” DHS spokeswoman Tressia McLAflin said in an e -mail statement, dismissing the allegations.
UFW President Teresa Romero said in a statement that some civil workers who were detained have been released from custody after deleting photos and videos of raids from their phone.
“These violent and cruel federal measures terrorize American communities, interfere with US food supply chain, threaten lives and separate families,” Romero said.
Form groups have warned that a large -scale exile of farm workers will eliminate the country’s food supply chain.
In his recent comments, Secretary Agriculture Secretary Brook Rollins said deportation for field workers would be “no ordinary amnesty”. Trump, though, has said that migrant workers should be allowed to stay in the fields.