Volunteers shoveled up soil at one of two new gardens being added inside a Langley Park, Maryland, neighborhood that officials hope will benefit the local community in multiple ways.
The gardens are one of four new greenspaces being built around the region through a grant by Natural Forward.
(WTOP/Jose Umana)
WTOP/Jose Umana
Volunteers at a Langley Park, Maryland, neighborhood on Friday, Oct. 18, 2025.
(WTOP/Jose Umana)
WTOP/Jose Umana
Volunteers shoveled up soil at one of two new gardens being added inside a Langley Park, Maryland, neighborhood on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025.
(WTOP/Jose Umana)
WTOP/Jose Umana
Children were allowed to paint on the new log seats while CASA volunteers set up picnic tables.
(WTOP/Jose Umana)
WTOP/Jose Umana
One of the gardens is a rain garden, which collects and absorb rainwater runoff from roofs and driveways to reduce flooding.
(WTOP/Jose Umana)
WTOP/Jose Umana
Volunteers shoveled up soil at one of two new gardens being added inside a Langley Park, Maryland, neighborhood Friday afternoon that officials hope will benefit the local community in multiple ways.
The gardens — located on 15th Avenue outside of the headquarters of immigrant advocacy organization CASA — are one of four new greenspaces being built around the region through a grant by Natural Forward, a local agricultural group. One of the gardens is a rain garden, which collects and absorb rainwater runoff from roofs and driveways to reduce flooding.
Alice Sturm, director of restoration for Natural Forward, told WTOP choosing the CASA headquarters made sense for its place as a community hub sitting in the middle of several garden-style apartments. It also was an ideal location due to the building’s structure, which Sturm called “the perfect place to demonstrate conservation landscaping.”
“There needs to be water that’s being collected from an impermeable surface, like a roof or a driveway, that needs to sink in somewhere,” Sturm said. “So this is a big building, and it has a big roof.”
The grant included $100,000 from the Klingenstein Family Foundation and contributions from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation and the Chesapeake Bay Trust.
It paid for the materials to build a rain garden, purchase native plants to rebuild the organization’s community garden, payment for those who worked on the project, and garden kits for those who live in the area.
Sturm said Natural Forward will also assist in training to members of CASA’s workers’ cooperative, the Workers Co-op Without Borders, who work in landscaping to help maintain both gardens. Swamp Rose Co-Op, a worker-owned cooperative based out of Silver Spring, did the work on the gardens and will assist in the trainings.
Shannon Wilk, director for education for CASA, said the new gardens — specifically the rain garden — will do more than just make the area look beautiful.
“There is an issue in this community right now with drainage,” she said. “We’re seeing drainage that is running off into residents’ basements. We’re seeing drainage that is making it into our sewer system after picking up a lot of pollutants.
Landscapers from Swamp Rose Co-op arrived early Friday morning to start working on the rain garden. Cesar Garzon for the co-op said his team had to use special equipment, including a drill, to dig holes for the shrubs added to the garden.
“We had a little bit of hard time here because the soil was very compacted, and years of mowing and just cutting the lawn just compact the soil in a way,” Garzon said.
In the afternoon, volunteers and neighbors arrived on the secondary garden. Signs were posted in Spanish to let the community know about the new native plants added to the area. Children were allowed to paint on the new log seats while CASA volunteers set up picnic tables.
With the neighborhood lacking greenspaces, Wilk said refurbishing its community garden through the grant will allow many to enjoy the space, just as the neighborhood children enjoy using its mini-soccer fields, basketball court and pool.
“They are extremely social,” Wilk said. “They want a community gathering place where they can be safe and in community with each other.”
Wilk said the success of the two gardens will hopefully encourage other organizations to team up with CASA to clean up other spaces in the Langley Park community, including a nearby playground.
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Langley Park, Maryland’s mostly Latino community is proud of its 100-year history as a lively neighborhood of immigrants despite facing ICE raids and housing issues.
Yolanda Brewster at her Guatemalan Xelaju kiosk in La Union mall in Langley Park, Maryland.
(WTOP/Diane Morris)
WTOP/Diane Morris
Maryland state Del. Deni Taveras enjoys a meal at San Alejo Restaurant in Langley Park.
(WTOP/Diane Morris)
WTOP/Diane Morris
Baleadas Express, a Honduran restaurant, located in Langley Park.
(WTOP/Diane Morris)
WTOP/Diane Morris
A painted utility box posted outside the Langley Park Garden Apartments features Spanish-language writing.
(WTOP/Diane Morris)
WTOP/Diane Morris
La Union Mall sits elevated on top of a small hill in Langley Park.
(WTOP/Diane Morris)
WTOP/Diane Morris
The headquarters of the Latino advocacy organization CASA is in Langley Park. The mansion was formerly owned by a British mine owner who established the community in the early 1920s.
(WTOP/Diane Morris)
WTOP/Diane Morris
WTOP celebrates National Hispanic Heritage Month this Sept. 15 through Oct. 15, with stories spotlighting the contributions, culture and accomplishments of Hispanic communities across the D.C. region.
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In Langley Park, Md.’s immigrant spirit endures despite ICE raids, Purple Line turmoil
Sit down in the San Alejo Salvadoran restaurant, near the corner of New Hampshire Avenue and University Boulevard in suburban Maryland, and you have entered the heart of Langley Park — like a mini Central America.
Situated on the border where Montgomery County ends and Prince George’s County begins, Langley Park’s mostly Latino community is proud of its 100-year history as a lively neighborhood of immigrants, filled with Hispanic markets, restaurants and small businesses that line its busy streets.
But challenges from landlord neglect and the impacts of the Maryland Transit Administration’s new Purple Line are making life more difficult for the residents who call Langley Park home. And more recently, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids have put the community on edge.
National politics hit home
As she sat eating tamales at San Alejo, Maryland State Del. Deni Taveras talked about how the ICE raids in the neighborhood have also reopened old wounds.
“A lot of people here lived through wars in their countries. To have masked men with machine guns breaking down doors at 6 a.m., that brings trauma,” she said, referring to how ICE officers have been entering homes in Langley Park. “People are afraid to go to work. They’re afraid to make a living,” she said.
Lindolfo Carballo, senior director of community economic development of the Latino advocacy organization CASA, which is located in the center of Langley Park, agreed with Taveras. “What this administration is doing has horrified our community,” he said and added that he’s seen ICE officers pull people right off the street and social media posts have tracked the abuse in the neighborhood.
Carballo said ICE officers broke the window of a Langley Park woman’s car with her teenage daughter inside. “Her daughter saw the whole thing. And that’s not only illegal but it’s inhumane,” he said.
The reason for the targeting? About 85% of the neighborhood’s 22,000 residents are from Central America, and some are undocumented, Carballo said. The majority are from El Salvador and Guatemala, along with immigrants from Nicaragua, Honduras and other countries.
Carballo himself is an immigrant who escaped El Salvador in the early 1980s after he was arrested for participating in anti-government activities during the nation’s civil war. Fearing persecution under a military government, he was able to get asylum in D.C. before coming to the Langley Park area. He is concerned that Central American immigrants now are being denied the opportunities he received.
Even before he came to work in Langley Park, the area was always a neighborhood of immigrants, Carballo said, stretching back to the 1920s when a British immigrant, Frederick McCormick-Goodhart bought the land where Langley Park now sits.
The mining magnate built a 30,000-square-foot mansion, where CASA is now headquartered. Developers built low-cost garden apartments surrounding the mansion, which attracted large groups of immigrants over the past 90 years, from Eastern European Jews to Africans to an influx of Central Americans starting in the 1970s.
Housing, economic strains and fentanyl
While ICE raids are the latest concern for Langley Park residents, the neighborhood has had some longstanding problems that leaders are still addressing.
Carballo said while immigrants were able to find cheaper housing in Langley Park, its housing stock has long suffered neglect. For years, landlords often deferred maintenance and faced few consequences because non-English speaking tenants didn’t have the tools to legally challenge them — leaving some occupants living in deteriorating buildings.
“Drive around here and you can see windows made of cardboard,” Carballo said. “And in the wintertime, that is cruel.”
About 20 years ago, with the help of CASA, which is celebrating its 40th anniversary next month, some tenants organized and fought to improve living conditions, which brought about upgrades in some buildings.
“This is a hardworking area of individuals that want to make their American dreams come true,” Taveras said. But now people are paying $1,700 a month for rent, which is very high for someone making just $15-$20 an hour, she said.
To make ends meet, many people rent out rooms or families double up so they can make rent, causing overcrowding in some buildings.
Taveras has represented different parts of Prince George’s County on the council for 12 years, and now represents Langley Park while living on the edge of the neighborhood. She came to the D.C. area from New York in the early 2000s.
Of Dominican heritage, she says she’s proud to fight for the neighborhood, a community grappling with the same housing and economic struggles she knew growing up as an orphan in one of New York’s Hispanic neighborhoods.
Adding to the economic strains, fentanyl is also eating away at the neighborhood, especially among young people, Taveras said. “It was an onslaught, especially at Northwestern and High Point high schools” where many Langley Park teens attend.
Over the past 10 years, however, “we’ve been able to address the addiction through Narcan,” she said. Legislation and distributing fentanyl detection strips have also helped “because a lot of people didn’t know that what they were taking was laced with fentanyl.”
The Purple Line — hopes and hazards
The Purple Line, MTA’s long-awaited 16-mile light rail stretching from Bethesda to New Carrollton, cuts directly through Langley Park.A 2017 report said few deny that the Purple Line will bring new amenities and services to what researchers referred to as a “long-neglected portion of the county.”
While many in Langley Park welcome better transit access, they also worry it will accelerate gentrification, Carballo said.
Construction of the line over the past seven years has cut into profits for businesses along the rail’s path, according to Yolanda Brewster, a Guatemalan immigrant who runs the Xelaju kiosk, which sells Guatemalan food, clothes and souvenirs in La Union Mall on University Boulevard.
“First we had the pandemic, which wiped us out,” she said. “Then we had Purple Line construction, which took away business when it became too difficult to travel here. Now it’s like a cemetery — no one comes here anymore.”
Culture helps build community
Despite these challenges, Langley Park endures as a place where families build futures. Carballo of CASA said that, to him, the neighborhood represents “everything positive.”
“It’s a very young neighborhood, right? There are so many kids here, so many people, and that is the future of the United States.”
Del. Taveras agrees on how deeply that spirit runs. “We have children here that are on their way to Dartmouth. We have families starting their businesses, that are extremely entrepreneurial.”
“We have a sense of resilience here, a sense of community here, a sense of culture that is extremely rich and very endearing,” Taveras said.
She said this is especially important to point out during Hispanic Heritage Month, when the U.S. celebrates all things Latino. She remembered celebrations past at Langley Park’s MegaMart Hispanic grocery store, which had a party for Guatemalian Independence Day on Oct. 15 last year that was “so big, it lasted until the next day.
“As somebody who could have lived anywhere, I chose to be here,” Taveras said, “and I’m so proud of where I live.”
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The two men charged with murder in the fatal shooting of a 2-year-old boy in Langley Park, Maryland, last week will be held without bond.
The two men charged with murder in the fatal shooting of a 2-year-old boy in Langley Park, Maryland, last week will be held without bond.
On Monday, suspects Johnny Alejandro Turcios, 28, and Israel Fuentes Jr., 33, of Lewisdale, were charged with first- and second-degree murder in the death of 2-year-old Jeremy Poou-Caceres. A Prince George’s County judge ordered the two to be held without bond before their next scheduled court appearances next month.
“We are going to pursue this case. Like we do every other case. But this is a very sad case — it just is. A 2-year-old, an innocent child is dead, gone. [He] didn’t have a chance to really fully live a life, to pursue their dreams, to grow up,” State’s Attorney Aisha Braveboy said at a press conference after the hearing.
Braveboy vowed to get justice.
“My heart is broken. Our community is grieving, the family of the baby is grieving,” said Braveboy.
The 17-year-old mother of the child, who was also shot during the exchange, spoke to Telemundo44 saying, “When I heard the first gunshot, I knew I had to run because I knew I had to protect my son.”
According to charging documents, Turcios and Fuentes were in an argument with a group of other men over drug distribution territory before they opened fire on the group and got into a carjacked gold Ford Explorer.
Attorney Giovanna Miller said, “We believe that they were caught in [the] crossfire, based on accounts given by the witnesses.”
The carjacked Ford connected to the incident was found with an AK-47 style gun inside — which matched the shell casings near the scene.
It was later discovered that Turcios was on probation following a robbery conviction but still had a gun at the time of the murder.
Authorities also said about 90 minutes after the shooting, Fuentes called police and said he was robbed of his phone and money in the same area. Fuentes blocked the number he was calling from, something detectives say he did to attempt to explain why his phone history would put him near the murder scene.
WTOP reported that neither of men’s public defenders argued that they should be released on bond.
Police are still searching for two other suspects in this case, as the investigation is ongoing.
A 3-year-old boy is dead and his mother was injured after a Thursday night shooting outside an apartment complex in the Langley Park neighborhood of Maryland.
Prince George’s County police are investigating a shooting in the 1400 block of Kanawha Street in the Langley Park neighborhood of Maryland.(WTOP/Scott Gelman)
Prince George’s County police are investigating a shooting in the 1400 block of Kanawha Street in the Langley Park neighborhood of Maryland.(WTOP/Scott Gelman)
A 3-year-old boy is dead and his mother was injured after a Thursday night shooting outside an apartment complex in the Langley Park neighborhood of Maryland.
Authorities said it happened in the 1400 block of Kanawha Street around 5:30 p.m.
A detective working in the area responded to the scene after hearing gunshots, officials said. That’s when they found the child and young mother.
The mother was taken to a D.C. hospital. The 3-year-old was taken to Children’s National Hospital, where he later died.
At a news conference, Prince George’s County Deputy Chief Barry Stanton called the shooting a “senseless act of violence that no community should accept, ever.”
“This is trauma not only to the family but in the community,” he said, vowing to “do all we can to get the perpetrators of this senseless act of violence.”
The mother of the child is in stable condition, according to Assistant Police Chief Vernon Hale III, who urged anyone with information about the suspects to come forward.
He said the child did not deserve to die “because someone wants to come out here and play with guns.”
“I can only pray that they weren’t trying to kill a child,” Hale said.
Below is a map of the area where it happened:
WTOP’s Scott Gelman reported from the scene and added that police said it “was too early to say” if this case is related to another incident that was happening in the area.
“This isn’t about snitching, this is about justice for the victims,” said Hale.
Police are actively investigating this case and are asking for anyone with information to contact them. A $25,000 reward through Crime Solvers will be given to anyone who provides information that leads to an arrest.
“We need you. We need the media. We need the community. We need friends of these individuals. We need anybody that was here and saw this to help us,” Hale said.
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