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Tag: Raid

  • El Cajon business, hiring manager plead guilty after fed raid over undocumented workers

    San Diego Powder & Protective Coatings in El Cajon. (Photo courtesy of Google Street View)

    An El Cajon-area business that was raided by federal agents earlier this year pleaded guilty Wednesday along with its hiring manager to federal charges related to employing undocumented workers.

    In March, federal agents swarmed San Diego Powder & Protective Coatings’ warehouse on Magnolia Avenue and detained numerous individuals at the business, which specializes in paint and coatings, including for military and government vessels.

    Prosecutors said the company’s general manager, John Washburn, employed undocumented workers and let them live inside the company’s warehouse. Washburn pleaded guilty earlier this year to engaging in a pattern or practice of employing aliens, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, and was sentenced to one year of probation and ordered to perform 50 hours of community service.

    On Wednesday, the company pleaded guilty and as part of its plea agreement, admitted Washburn and others hired people who did not have authorization to work in the United States.

    The company also agreed to forfeit $230,000 it gained as a result and agreed to take part in the Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Mutual Agreement between Government and Employers (IMAGE) program. The program involves an agreement by participating companies to audits verifying that only people authorized to work in the U.S. are employed and training on topics like fraudulent documents and forced labor.

    The company’s hiring manager, Karli Buxton, 41, also pleaded guilty and admitted she was aware some employees presented fraudulent documents indicating they were authorized to work in the country.

    According to a criminal complaint filed in Washburn’s case, the investigation into the business involved an undercover Homeland Security Investigations agent who obtained a job there with a fraudulent Permanent Resident card and Social Security number.

    The agent secured the job with the help of a “confidential source” who worked there and told Washburn he was looking to get his “friend” a job.

    The complaint alleges that during the conversation, it was clear Washburn was aware the “friend” was purportedly undocumented and that multiple other employees at the business were also undocumented.

    Washburn’s plea agreement includes admissions that he knew at least 10 of the company’s workers were undocumented immigrants and that he had discussed with other managers that some employees weren’t legally authorized to work in the United States. Those discussions led to only assigning employees with “good paperwork” to work at military bases due to the extensive screening procedures on-base.

    San Diego Powder & Protective Coatings admitted in its plea agreement that it knowingly avoided sending undocumented workers to military bases or ports of entry due to stricter screening procedures at those locations.


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  • This L.A. car wash depends on immigrant labor. Can it survive Trump?

    The car wash hadn’t yet opened for the day, but its owner was already on edge.

    He scanned the street for law enforcement vehicles and hit refresh on a crowdsourced map that showed recent immigration sweeps.

    “They were busy in our area yesterday,” he warned his employees. “Be careful.”

    But except for staying home, there were few precautions that the workers, mostly men from Mexico, could take.

    The business is located along one of L.A.’s busiest thoroughfares. Workers are exposed to the street as they scrub, wax and buff the parade of vehicles that streams in between 7 a.m. and 4 p.m., seven days a week.

    Immigration agents descended on the business multiple times this summer as part of a broader campaign against L.A. car washes. Masked men hauled away around a dozen workers, most of whom were swiftly deported. The Times is not identifying the business, the owner or the workers.

    The raids had spooked remaining employees — and many had stopped showing up to work. The replacements the owner hired were mostly other immigrants who showed him Social Security cards that he hoped were legitimate.

    Still, it was an open secret that the car wash industry, which paid low wages for back-breaking labor, largely attracted people without legal status.

    “Americans don’t want to do this work,” the owner said.

    After the raids, he had been forced to close for stretches during the typically lucrative summer months. He was now operating normally again, but sales were down, he had maxed out his credit cards and he was unsure whether his business would survive. Clients — frightened by the raids — were staying away.

    “My target is to pay the rent, pay the insurance and pay the guys,” the owner told his manager as they sipped coffee in the early morning November chill and waited for their first customer. “That’s it.”

    The manager, also an immigrant from Mexico, nodded. He was juggling his boss’ concerns with personal ones. He and his team had all seen friends, relatives and co-workers vanish in immigration raids. He left home each morning wondering whether he would return in the evening.

    The mood at the car wash had once been lighthearted, with employees joking as they sprayed down cars and polished windows. Now everybody, the manager included, kept one eye on the street as they worked. “We say we’re OK,” he said. “But we’re all scared.”

    A few minutes before 7 a.m., a BMW sedan pulled in for a wash. The manager flipped on the vacuum and said a prayer.

    “Protect me. Protect my colleagues. And protect the place I work.”

    The owner was born abroad but moved to Los Angeles after winning the U.S. green card lottery.

    He used his life savings to buy the car wash, which at the time seemed like a sound investment. There are some 36 million vehicles in California. And in Los Angeles, at least for most of the year, people can’t rely on rainfall to keep them clean.

    His business already took a major financial hit this year during the L.A. wildfires, which filled the air with smoke and ash. Customers didn’t bother to clean cars that they knew would get dirty again.

    Then came President Trump, who promised to deport record numbers of migrants.

    I’m not brave. I need the work

    — Car wash employee

    Previous administrations had focused on expelling immigrants who had committed crimes. But federal agents, under pressure to meet arrest quotas, have vastly widened their net, targeting public-facing workplaces that pay low wages.

    Car wash employees — along with street vendors, day laborers, farmworkers and gardeners — have become low-hanging fruit. At least 340 people have been detained in raids on 100 car washes across Southern California since June, according to the CLEAN Car Wash Worker Center, which advocates for workers in the industry.

    The owner was shocked when agents toting rifles and dressed in bulletproof vests first stormed his business, blocking exits with their vehicles and handcuffing employees without ever showing a search warrant.

    “It was a kidnapping,” he said. “It felt like we were in Afghanistan or Iraq, not in the middle of Los Angeles.”

    Some of the men that the agents dragged away in that raid and subsequent ones had been living in the U.S. for decades. Many were fathers of American children.

    The manager was racked with survivor’s guilt. He was from the same small town in Mexico as one of the men who was detained and later deported. Another worker taken by agents had been hired the same morning as the raid.

    That’s when many employees stopped showing up. One stayed home for almost a month straight, surviving on groceries his friends and family brought to his apartment.

    But eventually that employee — and his brother — returned to the car wash. “I’m not brave,” the brother said. “I need the work.”

    The brother had been in the country for nearly 25 years and had three U.S.-born children, one of whom had served as a Marine.

    He had toiled at car washes the whole time — crouching to scrub tires, stretching to dry roofs and returning home each night with aching heels and knots in his neck. Less punishing industries weren’t an option for somebody without valid work documents, he said, especially in the Trump era.

    He had been at the car wash during one of the raids, and had avoided being detained only when the owner stepped in front of him and demanded agents speak to him first.

    The man said he had made peace with the idea that his time in the U.S. might come to an end. “At least my children are grown,” he said.

    The two brothers were working this brisk November day, hand-drying Audis, Mercedes and a classic Porsche. They earned a little over minimum wage, and got to keep most of their tips.

    Their bosses had told them that if immigration agents returned, the workers should consider locking themselves inside the cars that they were cleaning. “Don’t run,” the manager said. “They’ll only chase.”

    At the cash register, the cashier watched a website that tracked Immigration and Customs Enforcement actions around the region. So far, there was no activity nearby.

    She had been present during the immigration sweeps, and was still mad at herself for not doing more to stop agents from taking her co-workers. “You think you’re gonna stand up to them, but it’s different when it happens,” she said. “I was like a deer in the headlights.”

    As workers cleaned his Toyota Camry, a retired history professor waited on a bench, reading a biography of Ulysses S. Grant. The ICE raids had scared some clients away, but had prompted others to express their support. He said he had made a point to patronize the business because he was angry at the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.

    “They’re not getting the worst of the worst, they’re getting the easiest,” he said.

    He noted that a friend of his — a Latino born in the U.S. — now carried a copy of his birth certificate. Just in case.

    “That’s not the America I grew up in,” the customer said.

    The owner of the car wash, too, was trying to square the promise of the United States with the reality that he was living.

    “I thought Trump was a businessman,” he said. “But he’s really terrorizing businesses.”

    The owner had paid taxes on his employee’s earnings, he said. So had they. “They were pushing the economy, paying rent, paying insurance, buying things.”

    “Fine, take the criminals, take the bad guys,” he continued. “But these are hard workers. Criminals aren’t working at a car wash or waiting in front of a Home Depot.”

    The owner had recently obtained American citizenship. But he was disillusioned — by the raids, L.A.’s homelessness crisis, high healthcare costs. He said his wife longed to leave the U.S. and return home.

    “This is not the American dream,” he said. “This is an American nightmare.”

    As the sun began to sink on the horizon, the last car of the day pulled out of the car wash — a sparkling clean Tesla.

    The manager turned off the vacuum, recoiled hoses and exhaled with relief. He and his staff had survived another day. Tonight — at least — they would be going home to their families.

    Kate Linthicum

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  • Federal agents clash with protesters outside St. Paul business

    Federal authorities on Tuesday clashed with protesters outside of a business in St. Paul, Minnesota, leaving several people injured.

    It started around 10 a.m. outside Bro-Tex, Inc., located in an industrial park off Hampden Avenue, a couple of blocks north of University Avenue West.

    Convinced it was an immigration raid, residents responded to a call to action put out by a community network designed, according to protesters at the scene, to protect immigrants.

    “These people are not criminals,” said a woman named Angelica. “They are working here, clearly.”  

    Angelica said her friend’s dad, who is originally from Mexico and now lives in St. Paul, works at Bro-Tex. She said she couldn’t get a hold of him after the dust settled.

    “Her dad texted her that ICE was here taking them. They stayed in communication for a little bit, but he lost his phone and I don’t know what else happened,” Angelica said.

    After about an hour, many in the crowd walked through the police tape and attempted to stop federal law enforcement from leaving with people they believed were detained inside.

    WCCO


    WCCO cameras captured a physical confrontation between federal agents, some of them wearing FBI and DEA regalia, and protesters. Agents deployed a chemical irritant on the crowd, and physically removed some community members who were blocking four federal vehicles from leaving.

    Fellow protesters helped Angela Deeb after an agent sprayed an irritant at her in front of WCCO cameras.

    “Physically, my body hurt, but then of course our hearts hurt today,” Deeb said.

    Alejandra Villagrana says her dad was one of the people taken into custody by ICE agents.

    “I heard maybe it was 15 people. My uncle was also one of the ones that were taken,” she said. “It was super emotional. I was crying the whole time because I just couldn’t believe it.”

    Villagrana says her dad is originally from Mexico and was working with a lawyer to obtain legal status.

    “He works two jobs to be able to provide for me and my brother, my mom,” she said.

    Villagrana’s family is still trying to find out where her father and uncle are being held.



    Woman says her dad, uncle were detained by ICE in St. Paul

    02:31

    ICE released a statement regarding the operation on Tuesday afternoon: “Today in St. Paul, ICE, HSI and law enforcement partners conducted court authorized law enforcement activity and served a search warrant in furtherance of a federal criminal investigation. There is no threat to public safety, and the investigation remains ongoing at this time.”  

    The St. Paul Police Department told WCCO it was informed in the morning of a “search warrant that was going to be executed in relation to a criminal investigation into a business.”

    It’s unclear if anyone was detained in connection to immigration, but it’s notable that members of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Drug Enforcement Administration were also involved in the ICE-led operation.

    St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter said he was at the scene and was “in close communication” with the city’s attorney’s office and police department.

    “Though we don’t have many details right now, I share the concern and fear this raises for our workers, families, and entire community,” he wrote in a Facebook post. 

    Immigration advocates plan on holding a rally outside the business on Wednesday morning.

    On June 3, a similar situation unfolded on East Lake Street in Minneapolis when community members clashed with federal agents involved in a drug and money laundering bust at a business.

    In late October, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem came to Minneapolis to provide what she described as an update on ICE operations in the Twin Cities region. Noem claimed that federal agents had arrested more than 4,300 people in the metro area by that point in the year, claiming 3,316 had a criminal history. 

    Just last week, a teenager in Northfield, Minnesota, captured video of ICE agents detaining his father. In a statement, the agency told WCCO there was an active warrant for the man and that he “endangered the lives of officers, passengers, and bystanders” during the arrest, but the man’s legal representation disputed that.

    In a recent 60 Minutes interview with Nora O’Donnell, President Trump said he believed ICE raids “haven’t gone far enough” when asked about footage of ICE detaining legal American citizens, teargassing a Chicago residential neighborhood and smashing a car window.

    Conor Wight

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  • Commentary: Bodies are stacking up in Trump’s deportation deluge. It’s going to get worse

    Like a teenager armed with their first smartphone, President Trump’s masked immigration enforcers love nothing more than to mug for friendly cameras.

    They gladly invite pseudo-filmmakers — some federal government workers, others conservative influencers or pro-Trump reporters — to embed during raids so they can capture every tamale lady agents slam onto the sidewalk, every protester they pelt with pepper balls, every tear gas canister used to clear away pesky activists. From that mayhem comes slickly produced videos that buttress the Trump administration’s claim that everyone involved in the push to boot illegal immigrants from the U.S. is a hero worthy of cinematic love.

    But not everything that Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Border Patrol and its sister agencies do shows up in their approved rivers of reels.

    Their propagandists aren’t highlighting the story of Jaime Alanís García, a Mexican farmworker who fell 30 feet to his death in Camarillo this summer while trying to escape one of the largest immigration raids in Southern California in decades.

    They’re not making videos about 39-year-old Ismael Ayala-Uribe, an Orange County resident who moved to this country from Mexico as a 4-year-old and died in a Victorville hospital in September after spending weeks in ICE custody complaining about his health.

    They’re not addressing how ICE raids led to the deaths of Josué Castro Rivera and Carlos Roberto Montoya, Central American nationals run over and killed by highway traffic in Virginia and Monrovia while fleeing in terror. Or what happened to Silverio Villegas González, shot dead in his car as he tried to speed away from two ICE agents in suburban Chicago.

    Those men are just some of the 20-plus people who have died in 2025 while caught up in ICE’s machine — the deadliest year for the agency in two decades, per NPR.

    Publicly, the Department of Homeland Security has described those incidents as “tragic” while assigning blame to everything but itself. For instance, a Homeland Security official told the Associated Press that Castro Rivera’s death was “a direct result of every politician, activist and reporter who continue to spread propaganda and misinformation about ICE’s mission and ways to avoid detention” — whatever the hell that means.

    An ICE spokesperson asked for more time to respond to my request for comment, said “Thank you Sir” when I extended my deadline, then never got back to me. Whatever the response would’ve been, Trump’s deportation Leviathan looks like it’s about to get deadlier.

    As reported by my colleagues Andrea Castillo and Rachel Uranga, his administration plans to get rid of more than half of ICE’s field office directors due to grumblings from the White House that the deportations that have swamped large swaths of the United States all year haven’t happened faster and in larger numbers.

    Asked for comment, Tricia McLaughlin, Homeland Security assistant secretary for public affairs, described The Times’ questions as “sensationalism” and added “only the media would describe standard agency personnel changes as a ‘massive shakeup.’”

    Agents are becoming more brazen as more of them get hired thanks to billions of dollars in new funds. In Oakland, one fired a chemical round into the face of a Christian pastor from just feet away. In Santa Ana, another pulled a gun from his waistband and pointed it at activists who had been trailing him from a distance in their car. In the Chicago area, a woman claimed a group of them fired pepper balls at her car even though her two young children were inside.

    La migra knows they can act with impunity because they have the full-throated backing of the White House. Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller crowed on Fox News recently, “To all ICE officers: You have federal immunity in the conduct of your duties.”

    That’s not actually true, but when have facts mattered to this presidency if it gets in the way of its apocalyptic goals?

    Greg Bovino, El Centro Border Patrol sector chief, center, walks with federal agents near an ICE detention facility in Broadview, Ill.

    (Erin Hooley / Associated Press)

    Tasked with turning up the terror dial to 11 is Gregory Bovino, a longtime Border Patrol sector chief based out of El Centro, Calif., who started the year with a raid in Kern County so egregious that a federal judge slammed it as agents “walk[ing] up to people with brown skin and say[ing], ‘Give me your papers.’” A federal judge ordered him to check in with her every day for the foreseeable future after the Border Patrol tear-gassed a neighborhood in a Chicago suburb that was about to host its annual Halloween children’s parade (an appeals court has temporarily blocked the move).

    Bovino now reports directly to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and is expected to pick most of the ICE field office directors from Customs and Border Protection, the arm of the federal government that the Border Patrol belongs to. It logged 180 immigrant deaths under its purview for the 2023 fiscal year, the last year for which stats are publicly available and the third straight year that the number had increased.

    To put someone like Bovino in charge of executing Trump’s deportation plans is like gifting a gas refinery to an arsonist.

    He’s constantly trying to channel the conquering ethos of Wild West, complete with a strutting posse of agents — some with cowboy hats — following him everywhere, white horses trailed by American flags for photo ops and constant shout-outs to “Ma and Pa America” when speaking to the media. When asked by a CBS News reporter recently when his self-titled “Mean Green Machine” would end its Chicago campaign — one that has seen armed troops march through downtown and man boats on the Chicago River like they were patrolling Baghdad — Bovino replied, “When all the illegal aliens [self-deport] and/or we arrest ‘em all.”

    Such scorched-earth jibber-jabber underlines a deportation policy under which the possibility of death for those it pursues is baked into its foundation. ICE plans to hire dozens of healthcare workers — doctors, nurses, psychiatrists — in anticipation of Trump’s plans to build more detention camps, many slated for inhospitable locations like the so-called Alligator Alcatraz camp in the Florida Everglades. That was announced to the world on social media with an AI-generated image of grinning alligators wearing MAGA caps — as if the White House was salivating at the prospect of desperate people trying to escape only to find certain carnage.

    In his CBS News interview, Bovino described the force his team has used in Chicago — where someone was shot and killed, a pastors got hit with pepper balls from high above and the sound of windshields broken by immigration agents looking to snatch someone from their cars is now part of the Windy City’s soundtrack — as “exemplary.” The Border Patrol’s peewee Patton added he felt his guys used “the least amount of force necessary to accomplish the mission. If someone strays into a pepper ball, then that’s on them.”

    One shudders to think what Bovino thinks is excessive for la migra. With his powers now radically expanded, we’re about to find out.

    Gustavo Arellano

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  • U.S. attorney said she was fired after telling Border Patrol to follow a court order

    The acting U.S. attorney in Sacramento has said she was fired after telling the Border Patrol chief in charge of immigration raids in California that his agents were not allowed to arrest people without probable cause in the Central Valley.

    Michele Beckwith, a career prosecutor who was made the acting U.S. attorney in the Eastern District of California earlier this year, told the New York Times that she was let go after she warned Gregory Bovino, chief of the Border Patrol’s El Centro Sector, that a court injunction blocked him from carrying out indiscriminate immigration raids in Sacramento.

    Beckwith did not respond to a request for comment from the L.A. Times, but told the New York Times that “we have to stand up and insist the laws be followed.”

    The U.S. attorney’s office in Sacramento declined to comment. The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to a request for comment Friday evening.

    Bovino presided over a series of raids in Los Angeles starting in June in which agents spent weeks pursuing Latino-looking workers outside of Home Depots, car washes, bus stops and other areas. The agents often wore masks and used unmarked vehicles.

    But such indiscriminate tactics were not allowed in California’s Eastern District after the American Civil Liberties Union and United Farm Workers filed suit against the Border Patrol earlier in the year and won an injunction.

    The suit followed a January operation in Kern County called “Operation Return to Sender,” in which agents swarmed a Home Depot and Latino market, among other areas frequented by laborers. In April, a federal district court judge ruled that the Border Patrol likely violated the Constitution’s protections against unreasonable search and seizure.

    As Beckwith described it to New York Times reporters, she received a phone call from Bovino on July 14 in which he said he was bringing agents to Sacramento.

    She said she told him that the injunction filed after the Kern County raid meant he could not stop people indiscriminately in the Eastern District. The next day, she wrote him an email in which, as quoted in the New York Times, she stressed the need for “compliance with court orders and the Constitution.”

    Shortly thereafter her work cell phone and her work computer stopped working. A bit before 5 p.m. she received an email informing her that her employment was being terminated effective immediately.

    It was the end of a 15-year career in in the Department of Justice in which she had served as the office’s Criminal Division Chief and First Assistant and prosecuted members of the Aryan Brotherhood, suspected terrorists, and fentanyl traffickers.

    Two days later on July 17, Bovino and his agents moved into Sacramento, conducting a raid at a Home Depot south of downtown.

    In an interview with Fox News that day, Bovino said the raids were targeted and based on intelligence. “Everything we do is targeted,” he said. “We did have prior intelligence that there were targets that we were interested in and around that Home Depot, as well as other targeted enforcement packages in and around the Sacramento area.”

    He also said that his operations would not slow down. “There is no sanctuary anywhere,” he said. “We’re here to stay. We’re not going anywhere. We’re going to affect this mission and secure the homeland.”

    Beckwith is one of a number of top prosecutors who have quit or been fired as the Trump administration pushes the Department of Justice to aggressively carry out his policies, including investigating people who have been the president’s political targets.

    In March, a federal prosecutor in Los Angeles was fired after lawyers for a fast-food executive he was prosecuting pushed officials in Washington to drop all charges against him, according to multiple sources.

    In July, Maurene Comey, a federal prosecutor in Manhattan and the daughter of former FBI director James Comey, was fired by the Trump administration, according to the New York Times.

    And just last week, a U. S. attorney in Virginia was pushed out after he had determined there was insufficient evidence to prosecute James B. Comey. A new prosecutor this week won a grand jury indictment against Comey on one count of making a false statement and one count of obstruction of a congressional proceeding.

    Jessica Garrison

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  • U.S.-South Korea ties strained as 300 Koreans detained by ICE at Georgia Hyundai plant wait to fly home

    More than 300 South Korean nationals detained by federal agents in a massive immigration raid last week on a Hyundai plant in Georgia for alleged visa violations were waiting Wednesday for a charter flight due to carry them back to their country.

    The South Korean workers were among some 475 people detained on Sept. 4 by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents at a still-under construction joint Hyundai-LG electric vehicle battery facility near Savannah. ICE said they were suspected of living and working in the U.S. illegally.

    South Korea’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the departure of the Air Korea charter flight, which had been expected on Wednesday, was delayed due to unspecified circumstances in the U.S., but it would not provide any further information. 

    A spokesperson for Hartsfield-Jackson airport in Atlanta told CBS News that the charter operation to transport the detainees had been canceled for Wednesday, subject to change. The spokesperson did not provide any information on the reason for the change in plans.

    Buses are seen behind razor wire at the Folkston ICE Processing Center, Sept. 9, 2025, in Folkston, Georgia. A chartered plane had been expected to depart from Atlanta for Seoul on Sept. 10 to repatriate hundreds of South Korean workers detained in a sweeping immigration raid, but the plan was delayed without explanation.

    ELIJAH NOUVELAGE/AFP/Getty


    The raid and the detention of hundreds of South Koreans in an ICE facility has tested U.S.-South Korea ties that are important politically, militarily and economically. South Korea is the biggest foreign direct investor in the U.S. and the sixth biggest trading partner overall.

    President Lee Jae Myung, visiting the White House in July, pledged $350 billion in new U.S. investment to sweeten a trade-and-tariff deal with President Trump.

    “The sentiment is obviously very, very negative,” James Kim, Chairman and CEO of the American Chamber of Commerce in Seoul, told CBS News. “In my office, I usually have my TV turned on to the news – and this is obviously covered from morning to evening constantly. But everyone who I speak to, they view America as its number-one partner here from South Korea. Yes, we’re going to have some challenging times.” 

    South Korean Foreign Minister Cho Hyun, was peppered with demands from angry lawmakers during a parliamentary session in Seoul on Sept. 8, before he departed for meetings with Secretary of State Marco Rubio and other U.S. officials. 

    Lawmaker Kim Joon-hyun demanded that Cho respond to the ICE raid by launching investigations into every U.S. national teaching English in South Korea who could be working illegally on a tourist visa. 

    “Are we giving our money, technology, and investment to the United States only to be treated like this?,” Kim asked.

    Federal authorities conduct an immigration enforcement operation at a Hyundai battery plant in Bryan County, Georgia, Sept. 4, 2025.

    Federal authorities conduct an immigration enforcement operation at a Hyundai battery plant in Bryan County, Georgia, Sept. 4, 2025.

    ATF


    Cho replied by saying he would try to negotiate with Rubio to increase the number of visas issued to highly skilled Korean nationals to work in specialty occupations in the U.S.

    The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said the ICE raid was the biggest single-site enforcement action in the agency’s history. ICE alleges that the South Korean workers either overstayed their visa waiver permits, known as ESTAs, which allow business visits of up to 90 days, or were holding visas that did not permit them to perform manual labor, called B-1 business visas.

    Kim, at the American Chamber in Seoul, called it a “blip” in U.S.-Korea ties and said he was “very, very optimistic about a much brighter future between the two” countries. 

    South Korea’s president, however, took a more critical tone. 

    “As the president who is in charge of national safety, I feel a great responsibility,” Lee said Tuesday. “I hope that the unfair infringement of our people and corporate activities for the joint development of both Korea and the United States will not happen again.”

    A poll conducted in South Korea found that almost 60% of respondents said they were disappointed by the U.S. crackdown and called the measures “excessive,” while about 31% said the ICE action was “inevitable” and that they could understand the reasoning.

    President Trump, in a Sunday post on his Truth Social platform, addressed all foreign companies operating in the U.S., saying “your investments are welcome, and we encourage you to LEGALLY bring your very smart people.” 

    Kim at the chamber of commerce urged companies to heed the advice.

    “My key message is listen to what President Trump said today. He wants to encourage more foreign companies to invest in America. Bring your people, bring your resources into America, but do it legally,” he told CBS News.

    Industry experts caution, however, that it may be difficult to maintain investment levels under those guidelines, as securing visas can take years, while many projects face strict deadlines and delays can drive up costs. There is a shortage of highly skilled workers in the U.S., meanwhile, for battery manufacturing, semiconductor and modern shipbuilding industries — all arenas in which South Korea has been investing heavily for years. 

    Such jobs can require years of experience, not just a few months of on-the-job training.

    A spokesperson for South Korea’s Foreign Ministry told CBS News that since Mr. Trump’s second term began, it had already reached out 52 times on the matter of securing more visas for highly-skilled workers.

    Kim, the U.S. chamber of commerce leader, said the current upset in relations represented “an opportunity to really fix some things that could be in the grey area, make it a lot more clear, so that they can have an even better relationship.”

    He said that, given Seoul’s importance as an investor in the U.S., it may be a good time for Washington to consider adopting a new policy that allows South Koreans to more easily come and work in the U.S.

    “I think that in the past, Korea may not have been a significant investor in the United States, but now they are,” he said. “So I think it’s worthy and deserving of that kind of a new status.”

    Mr. Trump gave a nod in his Truth Social post to the notion that the U.S. does need foreign expertise, saying foreign companies should bring people over to help train American workers — and then hire them to do the work themselves. 

    Rubio, during his meeting Wednesday in Washington with South Korean Foreign Minister Cho, “said the United States welcomes ROK (South Korea) investment into the United States and stated his interest in deepening cooperation on this front,” according to a readout shared by the State Department, which did not mention the ICE raid in Georgia.

    Rubio and Cho discussed advancing U.S.-South Korean ties “through a forward-looking agenda” that “revitalizes American manufacturing through ROK investment in shipbuilding and other strategic sectors, and promotes a fair and reciprocal trade partnership,” the State Department said.

    contributed to this report.

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  • Huge immigration bust

    Bust at an E.V. battery plant: “Immigration officials arrested nearly 500 workers, most of them South Korean citizens, at the construction site of an electric vehicle battery plant in Georgia on Thursday,” reports The New York Times. The Hyundai plant raid was the largest single-site immigration bust in recent history. The people arrested were accused of belonging to one of three categories: They’d illegally crossed in the first place, or they’d received a visa waiver that prohibited working, or they’d overstayed a visa. Most of them were classified as subcontractors, and some of them were working to complete construction of the plant.

    “The unfinished battery plant represented the kind of strategic investment the United States has welcomed from South Korea in recent years—one that promised to create manufacturing jobs and build up a growing industry,” adds the Times. Georgia’s governor, who has visited South Korea twice, has spent a lot of time courting investment, luring semiconductor material, solar panel, and battery manufacturers to his state.

    “Seoul-based Hyundai, whose U.S. sales have hit record monthly highs for nearly a year straight, has pledged $26 billion in fresh American investments since Trump took office earlier this year—including $5 billion after South Korea’s leader visited the White House early last week,” reports The Wall Street Journal.

    Given Trump’s purported manufacturing revitalization agenda, it will be interesting to see whether this plant gets completed, and on what timeline, following these busts.

    Killing of woman on light rail in Charlotte: The common refrain on the right goes something like this: The left-leaning mainstream media fails to sufficiently cover crimes in which the victim is sympathetic and the perpetrator has a mile-long rap sheet. The killing of Ukrainian woman Iryna Zarutska provides a perfect example.

    Zarutska, a 23-year-old blonde woman who fled her native Ukraine due to the war, was riding the light rail in Charlotte, North Carolina, minding her own business late last month. Decarlos Williams, a 35-year-old black man with many arrests under his belt and schizophrenia, unprompted and seemingly out of nowhere, stabbed her.

    Elon Musk has signal-boosted this:

    “This is a tragic situation that sheds light on problems with society safety nets related to mental healthcare and the systems that should be in place,” said the city’s mayor in a statement released after the killing. “As we come to understand what happened and why, we must look at the entire situation. While I do not know the specifics of the man’s medical record, what I have come to understand is that he has long struggled with mental health and appears to have suffered a crisis.”

    The kicker: “I am not villainizing those who struggle with their mental health or those who are unhoused. Mental health disease is just that – a disease like any other than needs to be treated with the same compassion, diligence and commitment as cancer or heart disease. Our community must work to address the underlying issue of access to mental healthcare. Also, those who are unhoused are more frequently the victim of crimes and not the perpetrators. Too many people who are on the street need a safe place to sleep and wrap around services to lift them up.”

    Looked at one way, it’s a local crime story, and not every local crime story rises to the news of mainstream media coverage. Looked at another, it’s a pattern: Someone who is a repeat offender, who should probably have been locked up, is able to kill an innocent person, and the Democratic mayor gives an awful lot of airtime to the plight of the perpetrator. We’ve seen this one play out again and again in blue cities over the last few years.

    Now it’s becoming a “Republicans pounce” story—thus warranting coverage:


    Scenes from New York: “Lawmakers made two pledges in advocating for a law to enforce the city’s longstanding prohibition on short-term rentals, which finally went into effect in 2023,” reports The Wall Street Journal. “The first was that a crackdown would remove noisy, disruptive tourists from residential buildings that had turned into de facto hotels. The second was that curtailing Airbnb and other short-term rental companies’ operations would protect the city’s tight housing supply.” But that second one never came to fruition: “Apartment rents are at all-time highs, while the vacancy rate is next to nothing. The new legislation removed tens of thousands of short-term rentals from New York City apartment buildings, but it is unclear how many of those units are now occupied by year-round tenants.”


    QUICK HITS

    • French Prime Minister François Bayrou has put forward an “austerity budget proposal, designed to confront a severe deficit and a worsening national debt, in part by freezing welfare payments at their current levels,” per The New York Times. His reward? Most likely: a vote of no confidence that gives him the boot.
    • “Partial results of the Buenos Aires legislative elections: Fuerza Patria with 46.93% of the votes, while La Libertad Avanza achieved 33.85%,” reports La Nación (translated from Spanish). For those keeping track: That’s a victory for Perónism and a huge defeat for President Javier Milei’s party (La Libertad). And if Milei can’t get more supporters into the legislature, he’s going to be severely hamstrung in what he can do.
    • Florida’s New College has been the target of an ideological takeover by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis (and henchmen like Chris Rufo). Now some disgruntled former administration insiders there are trying to privatize the school, which sounds like a win for the taxpayers of Florida.
    • Niiiice:

    Liz Wolfe

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  • Nearly 500 people detained after Hyundai raid in Georgia



    Nearly 500 people detained after Hyundai raid in Georgia – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    At least 475 people were detained in Georgia following an immigration raid at a Hyundai plant on Thursday.

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  • ACLU filing: Sacramento Home Depot raid violated court order, high schooler among those arrested

    A recent Border Patrol raid at a Home Depot parking lot in the south Sacramento area broke a court order, according to a newly filed court motion. | PREVIOUS COVERAGE ABOVE | Florin Road Home Depot raid | CBP boasts capturing serious criminal offenderThe documents also claim an 18-year-old high school student who was walking to a nearby Ross clothing store across the street was swept up in the raid. On July 17, masked Border Patrol agents conducted operations in Sacramento, leading to at least 11 arrests. At the time, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said the arrests included a dangerous serial drug abuser and a dealer with 67 previous charges. In a motion filed Aug. 29, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and United Farm Workers (UFW) claim Border Patrol violated a court order during the Home Depot raid. The motion was filed as part of a previous case focused on a Kern County raid earlier this year. In April, a federal district court judge issued a preliminary injunction, preventing Border Patrol agents from conducting stops without reasonable suspicion that the person is unlawfully in the country. Read the full filing here.According to the latest motion, ACLU and UFW claim, “…Border Patrol agents targeted individuals based on their apparent ethnicity, apparent occupation, and presence at or near a Home Depot with no reason to believe the specific individuals they stopped were in the country unlawfully, and arrested them without assessing flight risk.”The documents state that one of those arrested was 18-year-old Selvin Osbeli Mejia Diaz. In a declaration signed by Diaz, he said he was walking from home to the Ross store on Florin Road after his aunt gave him money to buy a new shirt and shoes. He said that while he was walking, a masked man “dressed like a soldier” jumped out of a Chevy Silverado truck and started chasing him. He said he ran for about 10 steps before the agent threw him to the ground, handcuffed him and put him in the truck. Diaz said the agent didn’t identify himself before driving him to the Stockton ICE processing center and taking his phone. He said that’s when he was placed in a cell with about 11 other people who were arrested in Sacramento. He said later that night, he was taken to a detention center in Sacramento, where he slept on the floor with an aluminum blanket. He said he kept asking to call his aunt, but agents wouldn’t let him until about two or three days later. According to his declaration, Diaz fled Guatemala when he was 16 years old and was seeking asylum. He said he was living in Sacramento with his aunt, uncle and cousins and was attending Valley High School. Diaz said he had never committed any crime and was concerned he would never see his family again. The Aug. 29 motion said that less than two weeks after the arrests in Sacramento, two of the 11 people arrested were still in ICE custody, leading the plaintiffs to believe the others had already been deported. RELATED | Leaders, officials react to Border Patrol operations in SacramentoThree days before the motion was filed, KCRA 3’s Ashley Zavala spoke with El Centro Sector Chief Gregory Bovino via Zoom for a one-on-one interview. Bovino has been outspoken about the raids and has warned there will be more. Zavala asked him how Border Patrol was deciding which communities to focus on. “The communities that we go into and our law enforcement actions, like the one you saw in Sacramento, are based on what we call targeted enforcements,” Bovino answered. “We have predefined targets that we look to create a law enforcement function to go after. That’s what we did in Sacramento. That particular operation, there were some individuals that we were after. We did end up apprehending several individuals that were aggravated felons and some folks that you would not want walking the streets of your community with impunity … We go where the threat takes us.” He said Californians should expect to continue to see Border Agents on the street until more “dangerous felons” are taken off the street. Bovino also said the state’s sanctuary legislation is tying the hands of law enforcement and limiting cooperation between local agencies and federal immigration officials. KCRA 3 also reached out to DHS for a comment on the recent motion and has not received a statement. For more of Ashley Zavala’s conversation with Chief Bovino, along with a sit-down interview with Senator Alex Padilla responding to recent raids, watch California Politics 360 at 8:30 a.m. Sunday.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

    A recent Border Patrol raid at a Home Depot parking lot in the south Sacramento area broke a court order, according to a newly filed court motion.

    | PREVIOUS COVERAGE ABOVE | Florin Road Home Depot raid | CBP boasts capturing serious criminal offender

    The documents also claim an 18-year-old high school student who was walking to a nearby Ross clothing store across the street was swept up in the raid.

    On July 17, masked Border Patrol agents conducted operations in Sacramento, leading to at least 11 arrests. At the time, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said the arrests included a dangerous serial drug abuser and a dealer with 67 previous charges.

    In a motion filed Aug. 29, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and United Farm Workers (UFW) claim Border Patrol violated a court order during the Home Depot raid. The motion was filed as part of a previous case focused on a Kern County raid earlier this year. In April, a federal district court judge issued a preliminary injunction, preventing Border Patrol agents from conducting stops without reasonable suspicion that the person is unlawfully in the country.

    Read the full filing here.

    According to the latest motion, ACLU and UFW claim, “…Border Patrol agents targeted individuals based on their apparent ethnicity, apparent occupation, and presence at or near a Home Depot with no reason to believe the specific individuals they stopped were in the country unlawfully, and arrested them without assessing flight risk.”

    The documents state that one of those arrested was 18-year-old Selvin Osbeli Mejia Diaz. In a declaration signed by Diaz, he said he was walking from home to the Ross store on Florin Road after his aunt gave him money to buy a new shirt and shoes. He said that while he was walking, a masked man “dressed like a soldier” jumped out of a Chevy Silverado truck and started chasing him. He said he ran for about 10 steps before the agent threw him to the ground, handcuffed him and put him in the truck.

    Diaz said the agent didn’t identify himself before driving him to the Stockton ICE processing center and taking his phone. He said that’s when he was placed in a cell with about 11 other people who were arrested in Sacramento. He said later that night, he was taken to a detention center in Sacramento, where he slept on the floor with an aluminum blanket. He said he kept asking to call his aunt, but agents wouldn’t let him until about two or three days later.

    According to his declaration, Diaz fled Guatemala when he was 16 years old and was seeking asylum. He said he was living in Sacramento with his aunt, uncle and cousins and was attending Valley High School. Diaz said he had never committed any crime and was concerned he would never see his family again.

    The Aug. 29 motion said that less than two weeks after the arrests in Sacramento, two of the 11 people arrested were still in ICE custody, leading the plaintiffs to believe the others had already been deported.

    RELATED | Leaders, officials react to Border Patrol operations in Sacramento

    Three days before the motion was filed, KCRA 3’s Ashley Zavala spoke with El Centro Sector Chief Gregory Bovino via Zoom for a one-on-one interview. Bovino has been outspoken about the raids and has warned there will be more. Zavala asked him how Border Patrol was deciding which communities to focus on.

    “The communities that we go into and our law enforcement actions, like the one you saw in Sacramento, are based on what we call targeted enforcements,” Bovino answered. “We have predefined targets that we look to create a law enforcement function to go after. That’s what we did in Sacramento. That particular operation, there were some individuals that we were after. We did end up apprehending several individuals that were aggravated felons and some folks that you would not want walking the streets of your community with impunity … We go where the threat takes us.”

    He said Californians should expect to continue to see Border Agents on the street until more “dangerous felons” are taken off the street. Bovino also said the state’s sanctuary legislation is tying the hands of law enforcement and limiting cooperation between local agencies and federal immigration officials.

    KCRA 3 also reached out to DHS for a comment on the recent motion and has not received a statement.

    For more of Ashley Zavala’s conversation with Chief Bovino, along with a sit-down interview with Senator Alex Padilla responding to recent raids, watch California Politics 360 at 8:30 a.m. Sunday.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

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  • Trump’s unprecedented show of force in L.A., Washington is pushing norms, sparking fears

    In downtown Los Angeles, Gov. Gavin Newsom was holding a news conference with Democratic leaders when the Border Patrol showed up nearby to conduct a showy immigration raid.

    In Washington D.C., hundreds of National Guard troops patrolled the streets, some in armored vehicles, as city officials battled with the White House over whether the federal government can take control of the local police department.

    President Trump has long demonized “blue” cities like Los Angeles, Washington and New York, frequently claiming — often contrary to the evidence — that their Democratic leaders have allowed crime and blight to worsen. Trump, for example, cited out-of-control crime as the reason for his Washington D.C. guard deployment, even though data shows crime in the city is down.

    But over the last few months, Trump’s rhetoric has given way to searing images of federal power on urban streets that are generating both headlines and increasing alarm in some circles.

    While past presidents have occasionally used the Insurrection Act to deploy the military in response to clear, acute crises, the way Trump has deployed troops in Democratic-run cities is unprecedented in American politics. Trump has claimed broader inherent powers and an authority to deploy troops to cities when and where he decides there is an emergency, said Matthew Beckmann, a political science professor at UC Irvine.

    “President Trump is testing how far he can push his authority, in no small part to find out who or what can challenge him,” he said.

    State and local officials reacted with shock when they learned Border Patrol agents had massed outside Newsom’s news conference Thursday. The governor was preparing to announce the launch of a campaign for a ballot measure, which if approved by voters, would redraw the state’s congressional maps to favor Democrats before the 2026 midterms.

    Border Patrol Sector Chief Gregory Bovino told a Fox 11 reporter: “We’re here making Los Angeles a safer place since we won’t have politicians that’ll do that, we do that ourselves.” When the reporter noted that Newsom was nearby, Bovino responded, “I don’t know where he’s at.”

    However, local law enforcement sources told The Times that the raid was not random and that they had received word from the federal authorities that Little Tokyo was targeted due to its proximity to the governor’s event. The raid, the sources told The Times, was less about making arrests and more of a show of force intended to disrupt Democrats.

    Whatever the reason, the raid generated news coverage and at least in the conservative media, overshadowed the announcement of the redistricting plan.

    Trump’s second term has been marked by increased use of troops in cities. He authorized the deployment of thousands of Marines and National Guard troops to L.A. in June after immigration raids sparked scattered protests. The troops saw little action, and local leaders said the deployment was unnecessary and only served to inflame tensions.

    The operation reached a controversial zenith in July when scores of troops on horseback wearing tactical gear and driving armored vehicles, rolled through MacArthur Park. The incident generated much attention, but local police were surprised that the raid was brief and resulted in few arrests.

    After the MacArthur Park raid, Mayor Karen Bass complained “there’s no plan other than fear, chaos and politics.”

    Beckmann said the situation is a “particularly perilous historical moment because we have a president willing to flout constitutional limits while Congress and the court have been willing to accept pretext as principle.”

    UC Berkeley Political Science Professor Eric Schickler, co-director of the university’s Institute of Governmental Studies, said the recent military displays are part of a larger mission to increase the power of the president and weaken other countervailing forces, such as the dismantling of federal agencies and the weakening of universities.

    “It all adds up to a picture of really trying to turn the president into the one dominant force in American politics — he is the boss of everything, he controls everything,” Schickler said. “And that’s just not how the American political system has worked for 240 years.”

    In some way, Trump’s tactics are an extension of long-held rhetoric. In the 1980s, he regularly railed against crime in New York City, including the rape of a woman in Central Park that captured national headlines. The suspects, known as the Central Park Five, were exonerated after spending years in prison and have filed a defamation suit against Trump.

    Trump and his backers say he is simply keeping campaign promises to reduce crime and deport people in the country illegally.

    “Our law enforcement operations are about enforcing the law — not about Gavin Newsom,” said Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin.

    Federal agents “patrol all areas of Los Angeles every day with over 40 teams on the ground to make L.A. safe,” she said.

    In Washington D.C., where the federal government has began assuming law enforcement responsibilities, the business of policing the streets of the nation’s capital had radically transformed by Friday. Federal agencies typically tasked with investigating drug kingpins, gunrunners and cybercriminals were conducting traffic stops and helping with other routine policing.

    Twenty federal law enforcement teams fanned out across the city Thursday night with more than 1,750 people joining the operation, a White House official told the Associated Press. They made 33 arrests, including 15 people who did not have permanent legal status. Others were arrested on warrants for murder, rape and driving under the influence, the official said.

    Thaddeus Johnson, a senior fellow with the Council on Criminal Justice, said the administration’s actions not only threaten democracy, but they also have real consequences for local leaders and residents. Citizens often can’t distinguish between federal or local officers and don’t know when the two groups are or aren’t working together.

    “That breeds a lot of confusion and also breeds a lot of fear,” Johnson said.

    Thomas Abt, founding director of University of Maryland’s Center for the Study and Practice of Violence Reduction, emphasized that pulling federal agents from their jobs can hurt overall public safety.

    “There’s a real threat to politicizing federal law enforcement, and sending them wherever elected officials think there’s a photo opportunity instead of doing the hard work of federal law enforcement,” Abt said.

    Already, D.C. residents and public officials have pushed back on federal law enforcement’s presence. When federal officers set up a vehicle checkpoint along the 14th Street Northwest corridor this week, hecklers shouted, “Go home, fascists” and “Get off our streets.”

    On Friday, the District of Columbia filed an emergency motion seeking to block the Trump administration’s takeover of the city’s police department.

    “This is the gravest threat to Home Rule DC has ever faced, and we are fighting to stop it,” D.C. Attorney General Brian Schwalb said in a statement on Friday. “The Administration’s actions are brazenly unlawful. They go well beyond the bounds of the President’s limited authority and instead seek a hostile takeover of MPD.”

    The show of force in L.A. has also left local officials outraged at what they see as deliberate efforts to sow fear and exert power. Hours before agents arrived in Little Tokyo, Bass and other officials held a news conference calling for an end to the continued immigration raids.

    Bass said she believes the recent actions violated the temporary restraining order upheld this month by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals prohibiting agents from targeting people solely based on their race, vocation, language or location.

    The number of arrests in Southern California declined in July after a judge issued the order. But in the past two weeks, some higher profile raids have begun to ramp up again.

    In one instance, an 18-year-old Los Angeles high school senior was picked up by federal immigration officers while walking his dog in Van Nuys. On Thursday, a man apparently running from agents who showed up at a Home Depot parking lot in Monrovia was hit by a car and killed on the 210 Freeway.

    Bass appeared to be seething as she spoke to reporters after Newsom’s press conference on Thursday, calling the raid in Little Tokyo a “provocative act” and “unbelievably disrespectful.”

    “They’re talking about disorder in Los Angeles, and they are the source of the disorder in Los Angeles right now,” she said.

    Hannah Fry, Grace Toohey, Richard Winton

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  • Altadena ICE raid highlights fears that roundups will stymie rebuilding efforts

    When ICE agents raided the construction site of a burned property in Altadena this month, they made no arrests. The man they were after was not there. But the mere specter of them returning spooked the workers enough to bring the project to a temporary halt.

    The next day, half of the 12-man team stayed home. The crew returned to full strength by the end of the week, but they now work in fear, according to Brock Harris, a real estate agent representing the developer of the property.

    “It had a chilling effect,” he said. “They’re instilling fear in the workers trying to rebuild L.A.”

    Harris said another developer in the area started camouflaging his construction sites: hiding Porta Potties, removing construction fences and having workers park far away and carpool to the site so as not to attract attention.

    The potential of widespread immigration raids at construction sites looms ominously over Los Angeles County’s prospects of rebuilding after the two most destructive fires in its history.

    A new report by the UCLA Anderson Forecast said that roundups could hamstring the colossal undertaking to reconstruct the 13,000 homes that were wiped away in Altadena and Pacific Palisades on Jan. 7 — and exacerbate the housing crisis by stymieing new construction statewide.

    “Deportations will deplete the construction workforce,” the report said. “The loss of workers installing drywall, flooring, roofing and the like will directly diminish the level of production.”

    A house under construction in Altadena.

    (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

    The consequences will spread far beyond those who are deported, the report said. Many of the undocumented workers who manage to avoid Immigration and Customs Enforcement will be forced to withdraw from the labor force. Their specialties are often crucial to getting projects completed, potentially harming the fortunes of remaining workers who can’t finish jobs without their help.

    “The productive activities of the undocumented and the rest of the labor force are often complementary,” the report said. “For example, home building could be delayed because of a reduction in specific skills” resulting in “a consequent increase in unemployment for the remaining workforce.”

    Jerry Nickelsburg, the director of the Anderson Forecast and author of the quarterly California report released Wednesday, said the “confusion and uncertainty” about the rollout of both immigration and trade policies “has a negative economic impact on California.”

    Contractors want to hire Americans but have a hard time finding enough of them with proper abilities, said Brian Turmail, a spokesperson for the Associated General Contractors of America trade group.

    “Most of them are kind of in the Lee Greenwood crowd,” he said, referring to a country music singer known for performing patriotic songs. “They’d rather be hiring young men and women from the United States. They’re just not there.”

    “Construction firms don’t start off with a business plan of, ‘Let’s hire undocumented workers,’” Turmail said. “They start with a business plan of, ‘Let’s find qualified people.’ It’s been relatively easy for undocumented workers to get into the country, so let’s not be surprised there are undocumented workers working in, among other things, industries in construction.”

    The trade group said government policies are partly to blame for the labor shortage. About 80% of federal funds spent on workforce development go to encouraging students to pursue four-year degrees, even though fewer than 40% of Americans complete college, Turmail said.

    “Exposing future workers to fields like construction and teaching them the skills they need is woefully lacking,” he said. “Complicating that, we don’t really offer many lawful pathways for people born outside the United States to come into the country and work in construction.”

    A home under construction in Altadena, where immigration agents visited earlier this month.

    A home under construction in Altadena, where immigration agents visited earlier this month.

    (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

    The recently raided Altadena project had plenty of momentum before the raid, Harris said. The original house burned in the Eaton fire, but the foundation survived, so the developer, who requested anonymity for fear of ICE retribution, purchased the lot with plans to rebuild the exact house that was there.

    Permits were quickly secured, and the developer hoped to finish the home by December. But as immigration raids continue across L.A. County, that timeline could be in jeopardy.

    “It’s insane to me that in the wake of a natural disaster, they’re choosing to create trouble and fear for those rebuilding,” Harris said. “There’s a terrible housing shortage, and they’re throwing a wrench into development plans.”

    Los Angeles real estate developer Clare De Briere called raids “fearmongering.”

    “It’s the anticipation of the possibility of being taken, even if you are fully legal and you have your papers and everything’s in order,” she said. “It’s an anticipation that you’re going to be taken and harassed because of how you look, and you’re going to lose a day’s work or potentially longer than that.”

    De Briere helped oversee Project Recovery, a group of public and private real estate experts who compiled a report in March on what steps can be taken to speed the revival of the Palisades and Altadena as displaced residents weigh their options to return to fire-affected neighborhoods.

    The prospect of raids and increased tariffs has increased uncertainty about how much it will cost to rebuild homes and commercial structures, she said. “Any time there is unpredictability, the market is going to reflect that by increasing costs.”

    The disappearance of undocumented workers stands to exacerbate the labor shortage that has grown more pronounced in recent years as construction has been slowed by high interest rates and the rising cost of materials that could get even more expensive because of new tariffs.

    “In general, costs have risen in the last seven years for all sorts of construction,” including houses and apartments, said Devang Shah, a principal at Genesis Builders, a firm focused on rebuilding homes in Altadena for people who were displaced by the fire. “We’re not seeing much construction work going on.”

    The slowdown has left a shortage of workers as many contractors consolidated or got out of the business because they couldn’t find enough work, Shah said.

    “When you start thinking about Altadena and the Palisades,” he said, “limited subcontractors can create headwinds.”

    Roger Vincent, Jack Flemming

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  • California touts $544 million in illegal weed seizures. Drop in the bucket, exasperated officials say

    California touts $544 million in illegal weed seizures. Drop in the bucket, exasperated officials say

    Two major state programs to combat illegal cannabis recently sent out news releases lauding their collective seizures of some $544 million worth of illicit weed.

    But when it comes to reining in California’s sprawling black market, experts say it’s just a drop in the bucket.

    Those in the thick of the fight against illegal pot, like Mendocino County Sheriff Matthew Kendall, can’t help but roll their eyes.

    “Don’t get me wrong, I love when those guys [state law enforcement officers] show up to help,” he said, “but I would need 50 police officers for 50 days to even begin putting a dent in it.”

    Mendocino County Sheriff Matt Kendall stands near an illegal cannabis grow in January 2022 in the Halls Valley area near Covelo, Calif.

    (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

    So far this year, an estimated $353 million worth of illicit plants have been seized through a California Department of Justice program, while a task force with the governor’s office has seized an estimated $191 million.

    Despite these alarming numbers, some law enforcement leaders say the raids are barely slowing the black market — which, according to a study by Beau Whitney, founder of cannabis economics research firm Whitney Economics, makes up more than half the state’s marijuana sales.

    “If we examine the statistics, it is clear that these operations are not effectively or aggressively putting a dent into the illegal market,” said Siskiyou County Sheriff Jeremiah LaRue.

    For example, operations by the state Department of Justice’s Eradication and Prevention of Illicit Cannabis program, or EPIC, have seized about 77,000 cannabis plants in 36 counties this year. Yet, Siskiyou County alone produces an estimated 12 million to 16 million illegal plants per year. Therefore, if EPIC only focused on Siskiyou for a year, it would eradicate just 6% of the estimated local black market, he said.

    A member of a Siskiyou County sheriff's task force drags cannabis plants out of a greenhouse.

    A member of a Siskiyou County sheriff’s task force drags cannabis plants out of a greenhouse for burial during a Mount Shasta Vista raid.

    (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

    This sentiment was echoed by Kendall, who noted that in Mendocino County’s 35-square-mile Round Valley alone there are an estimated 1 million illegal marijuana plants.

    “The black market is as big and bad as ever,” he said.

    The Riverside County Sheriff’s marijuana enforcement team told The Times there is still a lot of work to do to address that county’s black market, which has not gotten any smaller in the last two years.

    In 2022, a Times investigation found that California’s massive illegal marijuana market pushes legal growers toward financial ruin, exacerbates community violence, causes massive amounts of environmental degradation and forces laborers to toil in squalid and often dangerous conditions.

    Since then, many law enforcement leaders say they believe the state has done little to address the problems fueling the black market — onerous taxation and regulations for legal producers, few consequences for illegal operators and limited access to legal marijuana in wide swaths of California.

    “It’s like [state leaders] came to our counties, they sprayed the whole thing with gasoline and lit it on fire,” Kendall said. “Then they start talking about EPIC doing this work that is basically showing up with a garden hose.”

    A spokesperson for Gov. Gavin Newsom referred questions about the concerns raised by local law enforcement leaders to the state Department of Cannabis Control, which did not respond to a request for comment.

    California legalized weed through Proposition 64, a 2016 ballot measure that promised “to tax the growth and sale of marijuana in a way that drives out the illicit market.” Eight years later, the illicit market continues to thrive.

    “California did a horrible job of incentivizing [illegal] cultivators to convert over,” said Whitney, the cannabis economist. “They taxed them heavily, they regulated them heavily, they couldn’t make any money.”

    California charges a 15% excise tax on marijuana sales on top of additional local marijuana taxes. A recent study by cannabis industry research and analysis firm GreenWave Advisors found that legal weed companies owe the state more than $730 million in back taxes, 72% of which is owed by companies that have gone out of business.

    Four people stand inside a room with plastic crates. A woman holds an iPad.

    Johnny Casali, center, and partner Rose Moberly talk with state cannabis control inspectors at Casali’s Garberville farm in 2022. Casali and other growers face steep taxes and onerous rules.

    (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

    Another challenge is that more than half of California counties don’t allow the sale of marijuana, which restricts access to legal weed in wide swaths of the state and drives demand to the black market.

    There are also major incentives for sellers to opt into the illegal market — they can dodge taxation and licensing fees, while knowing that the penalty for selling or transportation of marijuana without required licenses is only a misdemeanor.

    “From the criminal mindset, there is minimal downside and massive upside to cultivating marijuana illegally and selling it on the black market,” said San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Lt. Larry Lopez.

    Siskiyou County Sheriff LaRue said that, although there are enhanced penalties for certain violations involving tax evasion and environmental crimes, most of the illegal-cultivation offenses do not have harsh enough penalties to deter production.

    Because enforcement measures are limited, Mendocino County Sheriff Kendall said the raids conducted by state agencies are like a game of Whac-A-Mole.

    “We can chop it down and, by golly, it pops up again the next day,” he said.

    A man in green coveralls and a ball cap walks between rows of plants.

    Mendocino County sheriff’s deputies destroy cannabis in a 2022 raid.

    (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

    Raids are also a limited enforcement tool, because they mostly lead to the arrest of laborers — not owners.

    “It is a frequent strategy for the black-market organizers to hide behind the labor force and remain shielded from law enforcement,” LaRue said. “It is rare that higher-level organizers are anywhere near the cultivation areas.”

    Despite the drawbacks and frustrations, Sheriffs LaRue and Kendall and Lt. Lopez still support conducting raids and welcome state assistance.

    But they say that, to have a meaningful effect, raids need to be accompanied by policy changes that address the narrow profit margin for legal cultivators and the minor penalties for illegal ones.

    And after years of calling for change, there’s a growing sense of exasperation among those on the front lines.

    “We have reached a time in the state of California where the architects of these laws — the governor, the legislators — they’re refusing to speak with the carpenters, and that’s the sheriffs and the police chiefs,” Kendall said. “When we say this isn’t going to work, it’s falling on deaf ears.”

    Clara Harter

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  • Graid Technology Inc. and KLC Group Forge Groundbreaking Partnership to Redefine High-Speed RAID and Data-at-Rest Security

    Graid Technology Inc. and KLC Group Forge Groundbreaking Partnership to Redefine High-Speed RAID and Data-at-Rest Security

    Protecting enterprise and military servers with unmatched NVMe RAID performance and the most advanced cybersecurity encryption on the market.

    As data demands surge in today’s hyper-competitive landscape, organizations are constantly seeking solutions that balance cutting-edge security with uncompromised performance. A new strategic partnership between Graid Technology, creators of SupremeRAID™, and KLC Group, innovators behind CipherDriveOne Plus, is set to redefine this balance with a first-of-its-kind solution for high-speed storage and NSA CSfC-certified Data-at-Rest (DAR) Security.

    At the core of this collaboration is a novel approach to data security. Combining the National Security Agency’s (NSA) Commercial Solutions for Classified (CSfC) Data-at-Rest (DAR) Security guidelines, the joint solution integrates encryption, access controls, and authentication to deliver military-grade data protection. This breakthrough is designed to meet the critical needs of government contractors and organizations that require NSA CSfC-certified protection alongside high-performance RAID storage.

    While CipherDriveOne Plus provides robust hardware-based full-disk encryption, traditional RAID solutions have presented challenges, including drive-locking mechanisms that limit the performance of CSfC-compliant NVMe SSDs or spinning disks. SupremeRAID™ by Graid Technology offers a groundbreaking alternative. As a GPU-accelerated software RAID, SupremeRAID™ eliminates the bottlenecks and limitations of hardware RAID, allowing CSfC-compliant systems like CipherDriveOne Plus to operate without compromising authentication processes or drive performance. This results in superior data protection and seamless NVMe SSD operation.

    CipherDriveOne Plus, a Hardware Full Disk Encryption – Authorization Acquisition (AA) solution, is designed to meet the U.S. Government’s strict Data-at-Rest (DAR) standards. It provides key management, encryption, and authentication over OPAL 2.0 self-encrypting SSDs or HDDs, ensuring immediate data protection that is OS-agnostic and governed by FIPS-140-2 level key encryption with options for single, two-factor, or multi-factor authentication.

    “We are thrilled to embark on this new journey with our esteemed partner, where innovation meets collaboration. Together, we have achieved remarkable milestones and won several government customers in a short time. There is no other solution capable of our joint technology in the market today,” said Kurt Lennartsson, CEO of KLC Group.

    “By joining forces with KLC Group, we are redefining the performance and security benchmarks in high-performance computing, AI, and diverse industries reliant on data-intensive operations,” stated Leander Yu, President and CEO of Graid Technology. “The collaboration between SupremeRAID™ and CipherDriveOne Plus not only enhances performance but also ensures comprehensive data protection, scalability, and flexibility.”

    To explore the advanced data protection and storage performance offered by this partnership, download the solution brief.

    For more information:

    __________________________________________________

    About KLC Group and CipherDriveOne 
    KLC Group is a leading provider of cybersecurity solutions, dedicated to safeguarding organizations from evolving cyber threats. With a focus on innovation and excellence, KLC Group has consistently delivered cutting-edge security solutions tailored to meet the unique needs of its clients. Learn more: www.klc-group.com

    About Graid Technology and SupremeRAID™ 
    Graid Technology is led by a dedicated team of experts with decades of experience in the SDS, ASIC, and storage industries, and continues to push boundaries in data storage innovation by protecting NVMe-based data from the desktop to the cloud. Cutting-edge SupremeRAID™ GPU-based RAID removes the traditional RAID bottleneck to deliver maximum SSD performance without consuming CPU cycles or creating throughput bottlenecks, delivering unmatched flexibility, performance, and value. With headquarters in Silicon Valley supported by a robust R&D center in Taiwan, we are globally committed to spearheading advancements in storage solutions. For detailed product information, visit our website, or connect with us on Twitter (X) or LinkedIn.

    Source: Graid Technology Inc.

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  • NYPD phones subpoenaed, FBI raids homes of 2 of Mayor Eric Adams’ top deputies

    NYPD phones subpoenaed, FBI raids homes of 2 of Mayor Eric Adams’ top deputies

    NEW YORK (WABC) — The FBI conducted searches at the homes of two of New York City Mayor Eric Adams’ closest aides, sources familiar with the investigation told ABC News, and subpoenaed the cellphones of at least seven people in the NYPD.

    The Hamilton Heights home of First Deputy Mayor Sheena Wright and the Hollis, Queens home of Deputy Mayor for Public Safety Phil Banks were searched as part of an ongoing investigation, the sources said.

    The searches began Wednesday morning but news broke of the raids on Thursday afternoon. It is likely they both occurred at dawn Wednesday.

    The FBI seized evidence, including electronics from Wright, as part of the searches, according to sources.

    Wright shares her Hamilton Heights home with her partner, Schools Chancellor David Banks, who is the brother of Phil Banks.

    No charges have been filed and the investigation continues by the FBI and U.S. Attorneys Office in Lower Manhattan.

    Wright and Banks are the highest-ranking Adams administration officials to have their homes searched by federal investigators.

    In total, seven people in the NYPD received subpoenas for their phones, which they turned over, an official said.

    At least four were NYPD executives, the rank of captains or above. At least three others in the NYPD also had their phones subpoenaed.

    An NYPD spokesperson released the following statement:

    “The Department is aware of an investigation by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York involving members of service. The Department is fully cooperating in the investigation. Any questions regarding the investigation should be directed to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.”

    Federal agents have previously raided the homes of several other associates of Mayor Adams, who turned over his own electronic devices to the FBI.

    “I think the most important thing that I must do is to send the right message to my team and all the employees in the city, we’re going to comply with whatever rules, and we’re going to follow the law, and we’re going to make sure that whatever information is needed, we’re going to turn over that information, and that is what we have been doing since the beginning,” Adams said.

    Federal officials have previously executed search warrants at the homes of:

    • Rana Abbasova, the mayor’s international affairs aide
    • Winnie Greco, a special adviser to the mayor and director of Asian affairs

    Adams reiterated that he is not aware of “any wrongdoings or misgivings” from anyone on his team and they will continue to cooperate.

    “I wake up every morning with the same feeling, commit yourself to the city, and for the entire years of my life, I follow the rules and procedures,” Adams said. “And you know, I’m confident that everything is reviewed. We’re going to comply with whatever information that’s needed and to make sure that this has come to a completion.”

    The mayor’s chief counsel Lisa Zornberg released a statement saying: “Investigators have not indicated to us the mayor or his staff are targets of any investigation. As a former member of law enforcement, the mayor has repeatedly made clear that all members of the team need to follow the law.”

    A source familiar with the matter said the searches do not appear to be related to the investigation into whether Adams accepted donations from Turkey in exchange for official favors.

    The FBI declined to comment and a spokesman for the US Attorney’s office for the Southern District of New York declined to comment.

    ———-

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  • Ex-police chief who led raid on Kansas newspaper charged with obstruction of justice

    Ex-police chief who led raid on Kansas newspaper charged with obstruction of justice

    The former Kansas police chief who last year led a raid on a local newspaper has been charged with felony obstruction of justice, for allegedly persuading a potential witness to withhold information from investigators who at the time were pursuing a probe into the ex-chief’s own conduct.

    Gideon Cody resigned from his position at the Marion Police Department in September 2023, less than two months after he spearheaded the beginnings of a criminal inquiry into the staff of a weekly newspaper, the Marion County Record, accusing them of committing identity theft, or a similar computer crime, for how they obtained reporting for a story that was never ultimately written. He’s faced a slew of of federal lawsuits since then over his conduct and the motivations behind it, which also sparked national criticism and conversations about journalistic rights and freedom of press in the U.S.

    The criminal charge for obstruction of justice was filed Monday in Marion County District Court, shortly after two special prosecutors released an exhaustive 124-page report scrutinizing the original police inquiry into the newspaper and the convoluted context in which it unfolded. That report, authored by Sedgwick County District Attorney Marc Bennet and Riley County Attorney Barry Wilkerson at the request of the district attorney in Marion, found that there wasn’t enough evidence to suggest that police, reporters or anyone else involved in the story or the raid had committed crimes under Kansas law. 

    Marion County Record
    Front pages hang on a wall at the Marion County Record on Aug. 16, 2023, about a week after police served a search warrant on the newspaper in Marion, Kansas. 

    Luke Nozicka/The Kansas City Star/Tribune News Service via Getty Images


    But they did conclude that some of Cody’s actions in the wake of the raid on the Marion County Record — one of multiple search warrants executed last August in relation to how the paper acquired personal information about an area restaurant owner’s driver’s license — illegally interfered with the state investigation that followed. Neither the special prosecutors’ report nor the criminal complaint against Cody offered many details as to what exactly he’s accused of doing, although the report mentioned that Cody allegedly instructed the business owner, Kari Newell, to delete text messages they’d exchanged after the raids were carried out.

    Special prosecutors said that Marion City Administrator Brogan Jones heard from several city attorneys on Sept. 29, 2023, who informed him that Cody had given the instruction to Newell, the restaurant owner, once he’d executed search warrants on the newspaper headquarters and the publisher’s home in August. The mayor placed Cody on administrative leave from the Marion police force that same day, and on Oct. 2, Cody resigned.

    The report explicitly said it would not provide more information about the nature of the text messages or his alleged persuasion to delete them, which Newell herself corroborated in comments to the Associated Press, but prosecutors noted that there was probable cause to bring an obstruction of justice charge over the text messaging issue. 

    In the criminal complaint, Marion County prosecutor Barry Wilkerson alleged that it stemmed from conduct between Aug. 11 and Aug. 17 of last year, where Cody “knowingly or intentionally … induced a witness to withhold information” in the midst of a felony criminal investigation.

    CBS News contacted a team of attorneys representing Cody in one of the federal civil lawsuits against him for comment, or more information about his legal representation in the criminal case, but did not receive an immediate reply.

    Cody originally sought and carried out search warrants on the Marion County Record, the home of its publisher Eric Meyer and the home of Marion City Council Member Ruth Herbel, after learning that journalists at the newspaper had obtained Newell’s driver’s license records, while following a tip that suggested she did not have a valid one because of a DUI more than a decade earlier. 


    Kansas newspaper, publisher’s home raided by local police

    04:47

    Because she owned a local restaurant and was in the process of applying for a liquor license, efforts were made to verify the legitimacy of a driving record that appeared to show she hadn’t driven with a valid license for all those years. They ultimately didn’t pursue a story because a copy of the record was first shared with the newspaper by her estranged husband while divorce proceedings were underway, and involving the press in that situation didn’t seem necessary, the journalists later told authorities.

    Cody went on to claim that he had evidence the publisher and a reporter had broken the law while trying to verify the driving record. The subsequent police raids, to seize materials that would supposedly support that claim, were heavily scrutinized. Body camera footage of the raid on Meyer’s home, where his 98-year-old mother and newspaper co-owner Joan Meyer also lived, showed her visibly distressed by the ordeal that preceded her death one day later. Her son has blamed his mother’s death on the raid and the stress that it caused her.


    Marion newspaper raid report by
    The Kansas City Star on
    Scribd

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  • SF Chronicle report: FBI officials raid home of Oakland mayor

    SF Chronicle report: FBI officials raid home of Oakland mayor

    FBI agents raided the home of Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao on Thursday, according to a report from The San Francisco Chronicle, a Hearst affiliate.An FBI spokesperson told the Chronicle that they could not provide more information outside of the agency “conducting court authorized law enforcement activity on Maiden Lane.”The Chronicle reports that property records link the home on 80 Maiden Lane to Thao.Video from affiliate KTVU shows no marked vehicles outside the home as of 9:35 a.m. Earlier, agents came and went from a white van with tinted windows.Thao has not returned calls for comment that the Chronicle made earlier. Oakland’s website describes 38-year-old Thao, the city’s 51st mayor, as the first Hmong-American mayor of a major city in the country. She was elected in 2022 and is from Stockton.This is a developing story. Stay with KCRA 3 as we work to gather details.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.

    FBI agents raided the home of Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao on Thursday, according to a report from The San Francisco Chronicle, a Hearst affiliate.

    An FBI spokesperson told the Chronicle that they could not provide more information outside of the agency “conducting court authorized law enforcement activity on Maiden Lane.”

    The Chronicle reports that property records link the home on 80 Maiden Lane to Thao.

    Video from affiliate KTVU shows no marked vehicles outside the home as of 9:35 a.m. Earlier, agents came and went from a white van with tinted windows.

    Thao has not returned calls for comment that the Chronicle made earlier.

    Oakland’s website describes 38-year-old Thao, the city’s 51st mayor, as the first Hmong-American mayor of a major city in the country. She was elected in 2022 and is from Stockton.

    This is a developing story. Stay with KCRA 3 as we work to gather details.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.

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  • Who Won the World’s First Race for Destiny 2 Salvation’s Edge Raid?

    Who Won the World’s First Race for Destiny 2 Salvation’s Edge Raid?

    Anyone who attempted Destiny 2’s raid, Salvation’s Edge, assumed it would be days until someone claimed the win but, surprisingly, this was not the case! A record-breaking team has claimed victory after 19 relentless hours, just 11 minutes longer than the previous longest time recorded. So, who won the world’s first race for Destiny 2 Salvation’s Edge raid?

    Salvation’s Edge Winners Confirmed by Bungie

    Salvation’s Edge went live on Friday 7 June, 2024 at 1 pm ET. Players quickly launched into the race to see if they would be the first to the finish. Unfortunately for many teams, it became undeniable this was no simple battle and the foes were of a superior power level! When 12 hours had passed and no winner was declared, project leader Catarina Macedo announced: “The Witness is the biggest threat the universe has ever seen. We warned you.”

    The last raid race to take this long to complete was Last Wish back in 2018, which took a team 18 hours and 49 minutes. Raid races don’t usually take this long to beat, which is a testament to how tough and challenging Salvation’s Edge was. The Destiny 2 community joins together to congratulate team Parabellum on their impressive win.

    The team of six consisted of Astro, Bravo, DrakathShadow, Ham, Jake, and Tyraxe. The team battled gallantly through the hordes of goblins and nasties to clear Salvation’s Edge!

    The winners were verified by Bungie at 8:25am ET, 15 minutes after the studio discovered a fireteam had been successful. There was no live recording of the win as the team had not been streaming, but they did take to social media to shout their victories and congratulate each other.

    Image Source: Tyraxe on X / Bungie

    So what is next for the more adventurous Guardians among us? A new challenge was announced not long after the raid race was declared. This time we are treated to a 12-player activity, Excision:

    The Witness has retreated from the monolith – but, an important battle awaits. We’ll need all Guardians available to help us defeat the Witness, once and for all. Rally with us and launch into Excision, a newly unlocked 12-player activity.

    A massive congratulations to the winning team! Who knows, perhaps it will be another six years until a Destiny 2 raid will last as long?

    For more Destiny 2 coverage why not check out our Frozen Fairway Pathfinder guide? Or how to get the Facet of Bravery.


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    Rowan Jones

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  • Oop! Video Of Diddy’s Los Angeles & Miami Homes Reportedly Being Raided By Federal Agents Surfaces (WATCH)

    Oop! Video Of Diddy’s Los Angeles & Miami Homes Reportedly Being Raided By Federal Agents Surfaces (WATCH)

    Federal agents for Homeland Security are reportedly raiding various residents owned by Diddy across Los Angeles, Miami, and New York.

    RELATED: Exclusive: Diddy Pops Out For A Family Dinner In Los Angeles Amid Piling Sexual Assault Accusations (Exclusive Photos)

    Here’s What’s Reportedly Happening

    According to TMZ, law enforcement agents informed the outlet this afternoon that Homeland Security was executing a raid on Diddy’s homes. The sources reportedly explained that additional law enforcement agencies were also onsite at the raids.

    Officers were reportedly walking through Diddy’s residences with “guns drawn,” and speaking to everyone present.

    The outlet notes that a representative for the music mogul has not issued a statement about the incident.

    Since TMZ‘s initial report, photos have surfaced of Diddy’s sons, Christian Combs and Justin Combs, being placed in handcuffs and questioned by agents. The outlet has also obtained a video from the music mogul’s Miami home.

    According to the outlet, the raid is connected to a case being handled out of the Southern District of New York. However, no additional information about what prompted the search has yet been released.

    A Brief Recap Of The Sexual Assault Allegations Against Diddy

    As The Shade Room previously reported, Diddy’s ex-girlfriend, Casandra Ventura, initially filed a 35-page lawsuit against him in November 2023. The suit accused Diddy of sexual assault, abuse, and trafficking.

    A few days later, Ventura privately settled the suit, per The Shade Room. However, the allegations didn’t end there.

    In December 2023, the music mogul was hit with another lawsuit. This one accused him of engaging in the sexual assault of a minor in 2003, per The Shade Room. Then, in February, a former male employee filed a 73-page sexual assault lawsuit against Diddy.

    The lawsuit accused Diddy of “grooming” the former male employee for sex, “drugging and raping” the male, and enlisting his son Justin Combs to find underage girls and prostitutes for alleged sexual escapades.

    To date, Diddy’s attorney has denied all allegations against him.

    This is a developing story. Be sure to check back with The Shade Room for more updates.

    RELATED: UPDATE: Stevie J & Rep For Justin Combs Respond To Allegations Made By Former Male Employee In New Lawsuit Against Diddy

    Jadriena Solomon

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    3/23: CBS Saturday Morning

    3/23: CBS Saturday Morning – CBS News


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