
Los Angeles – Anger and frustration extended through the Southern California immigrant rights community, after the United States Supreme Court lifted restrictions on rooted patrols and racist descriptions during immigration stations.
Outside a home warehouse near Macarthur Park, the site of multiple raids by federal agents in recent months, organizers, lawyers and local legislators said that the Los Angeles residents will not scare.
“Regardless of the decision that was today, we will continue to stand strongly,” said Flore Milindez, CEO Car Work Worker, a non -profit organization to defend work. “This decision does not push us back. It brings our society forward, and we need to see it.”
Melindez said that eighty car wash was targeted by federal agents, several times each, and 250 car wash employees have been held since the application of sweeping immigration began in June. She said that the detainees included a work organizer who was arrested while he was washing cars last week.
She said: “The workers like him make our society better, and improve industries for other workers, who defend that injustice and make it better.” “It is unacceptable.”
The Supreme Court grants the ruling a request for emergency by the Trump administration to prevent the American provincial court judge on July 11, which is prohibited by federal agents from preventing people on their race, race or language in which they speak.
The original lawsuit was filed by the American Civil Liberties Union and other civil rights groups in response to aggressive procedures by federal agents who implement the collective deportation agenda of President Donald Trump.
“The majority of the Supreme Court has chosen by Trump has become the Great Marshal in a procession of racist terrorism in Los Angeles,” the governor of the state, Gavin News, said in a statement.
He added: “This is not related to the imposition of immigration laws-it is related to the targeting of Latinians and anyone who does not seem like the idea of Stephen Miller from an American, including American citizens and children, to harm California families and companies deliberately.”
The arrests and detention began in southern California in early June, when they were sent shock waves across the region and the operation of lawsuits and protests.
Trump responded by deploying 4,000 national guard soldiers and 700 naval infantry in Los Angeles, which was spent by a federal judge in California last week that violated a law in the nineteenth century, prohibiting the use of soldiers for civil law enforcement activities.
“Migration agents are now given the ability to get rid of people, stop them, and arrest them because of their skin color, the language they speak, or the work they do,” said Armando Godwino, a member of the Los Angeles Center and a prosecutor in the federal case. “When doing this, they effectively in racial stereotypes and thus racial discrimination.”
He continued: “We will not be silent, nor will we stop fighting so that the constitution is not preserved, but has been restored for every worker, a migrant and every family in this country.”
After starting the campaign, the immigrant rights defenders moved quickly to create an alliance of dozens of groups active with hundreds of volunteers who liked home warehouses, car washing and other locations that have become enforced targets.
Volunteers publish arrests and detention on social media, and they warn workers when Federal agents are close and host workshops “known your rights” for citizens and illegal residents.

After Monday’s ruling, the organizers said that they are determined to increase their numbers and strike efforts to protect members of society.
The active groups began to dump social media through jobs urging people to stay at a state of high alert and join special groups on mobile applications that cannot be easily monitored or infiltrated.
In one mailSIEMPRE UNIDOS LA, a seven -distant residents, warned against expecting enforcement procedures starting from Tuesday. In a different publication, West Los Angeles has told its followers to prepare to document interactions with federal agents, including those who suffer from immigration and customs application.
“We can expect an ice activity throughout the city, especially in home and other workers’ warehouses, such as car wash,” the group wrote. “The ice tactics that we have learned are what we can expect to see in greater numbers and frequency. At times such, it is very necessary to remain brave, organized and dark.”