By
Anita ChabriaColumnist
FollowDec. 12, 2025
3 AM PT
1
7 min
Click here to listen to this article
Share via
Close extra sharing options
Email Facebook X LinkedIn Threads Reddit WhatsAppCopy Link URL
Copied!
0:00
0:00
1x
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here.
Homeland Security denies detaining U.S. citizens, but congressional testimony and reports reveal dozens have been arrested in immigration sweeps, including Californians.
Two California citizens testified that masked ICE agents detained them. ‘They ignored me as I repeated it again and again that I am a U.S. citizen,’ one said.
Call it an accident, call it the plan. But don’t stoop to the reprehensible gaslighting of calling it a lie: It is fact that federal agents have detained and arrested dozens, if not hundreds, of United States citizens as part of immigration sweeps, regardless of what Kristi Noem would like us to believe.
During a congressional hearing Thursday, Noem, our secretary of Homeland Security and self-appointed Cruelty Barbie, reiterated her oft-used and patently false line that only the worst of the worst are being targeted by immigration authorities. That comes after weeks of her department posting online, on its ever-more far-right social media accounts, that claims of American citizens being rounded up and held incommunicado are “fake news” or a “hoax.”
“Stop fear-mongering. ICE does NOT arrest or deport U.S. citizens,” Homeland Security recently posted on the former Twitter.
Advertisement
Tuesday, at a different congressional hearing, a handful of citizens — including two Californians — told their stories of being grabbed by faceless masked men and being whisked away to holding cells where they were denied access to phones, lawyers, medications and a variety of other legal rights.
Their testimony accompanied the release of a congressional report by the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations in which 22 American citizens, including a dozen from the Golden State, told their own shocking, terrifying tales of manhandling and detentions by what can only be described as secret police — armed agents who wouldn’t identify themselves and often seemed to lack basic training required for safe urban policing.
These stories and the courageous Americans who are stepping forward to tell them are history in the making — a history I hope we regret but not forget.
Immigration enforcement, boosted by unprecedented amounts of funding, is about to ramp up even more. Noem and her agents are reveling in impunity, attempting to erase and rewrite reality as they go — while our Supreme Court crushes precedent and common sense to further empower this presidency. Until the midterms, there is little hope of any check on power.
Advertisement
Under those circumstances, for these folks to put their stories on the record is both an act of bravery and patriotism, because they now know better than most what it means to have the chaotic brutality of this administration focused on them. It’s incumbent upon the rest of us to hear them, and protest peacefully not only rights being trampled, but our government demanding we believe lies.
“I’ve always said that immigrants who are given the great privilege of becoming citizens are also some of the most patriotic people in this country. I know you all love your country. I love our country, and this is not the America that we believe in or that we fought so hard for. Every person, every U.S. citizen, has rights,” Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Long Beach) said as the hearing began.
L.A. native Andrea Velez, whose detention was reported on by my colleagues when it happened, was one of those putting herself on the line to testify.
Attacks on ICE up 1,000%? Trump administration claim not backed up by court recordsThe Trump administration has cited a more than 1,000% increase in assaults on immigration agents to justify aggressive tactics. But court records reviewed by The Times show the majority of the alleged assaults in the areas where ICE and Border Patrol have been most active resulted in no injuries.
Dec. 1, 2025
Less than 5 feet tall, Velez is a graduate of Cal Poly Pomona who was working in the garment district in June when ICE began its raids. Her mom and teenage sister had just dropped her off when masked men swarmed out of unmarked cars and began chasing brown people. Velez didn’t know what was happening, but when one man charged her, she held up her work bag in defense. The bag did not protect her. Neither did her telling the agents she is a U.S. citizen.
Advertisement
“He handcuffed me without checking my ID. They ignored me as I repeated it again and again that I am a U.S. citizen,” she told committee members. “They did not care.”
Velez, still unsure who the man was who forced her into an SUV, managed to open the door and run to an LAPD officer, begging for help. But when the masked man noticed she was loose, he “ran up screaming, ‘She’s mine’” the congressional report says.
The police officer sent her back to the unmarked car, beginning a 48-hour ordeal that ended with her being charged with assault of a federal officer — charges eventually dropped after her lawyer demanded body camera footage and alleged witness statements. (The minority staff report was released by Rep. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, the highest-ranking Democrat on the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations.)
“I never imagined this would be occurring, here, in America,” Velez told lawmakers. “DHS likes ... to brand us as criminals, stripping us of our dignity. They want to paint us as the worst of the worst, but the truth is, we are human beings with no criminal record.”
This if-you’re-brown-you’re-going-down tactic is likely to become more common because it is now legal.
In Noem vs. Vasquez Perdomo, a September court decision, Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote that it was reasonable for officers to stop people who looked foreign and were engaged in activities associated with undocumented people — such as soliciting work at a Home Depot or attending a Spanish-language event, as long as authorities “promptly” let the person go if they prove citizenship. These are now known as “Kavanaugh stops.”
Advertisement
Disregarding how racist and problematic that policy is, “promptly” seems to be up for debate.
Javier Ramirez, born in San Bernardino, testified as “a proud American citizen who has never known the weight of a criminal record.”
He’s a father of three who was working at his car lot in June when he noticed a strange SUV idling on his private property with a bunch of men inside. When he approached, they jumped out, armed with assault weapons, and grabbed him.
“This was a terrifying situation,” Ramirez said. But then it got worse.
One of the men yelled, “Get him. He’s Mexican!”
On video shot by a bystander, Javier can be heard shouting, “I have my passport!” according to the congressional report, but the agents didn’t care. When Ramirez asked why they were holding him, an agent told him, “We’re trying to figure that out.”
1 million Mexican Americans were deported a century ago. A new L.A. audio tour explores this ‘hidden’ historyA new audio tour from the California Migration Museum examines the origins of historic Olvera Street and El Pueblo de Los Angeles Historical Monument — and the immigration raid that took place there in the 1930s.
April 17, 2024
Like Velez, Ramirez was put in detention. A severe diabetic, he was denied medication until he became seriously ill, he told investigators. Though he asked for a lawyer, he was not allowed to contact one — but the interrogation continued.
After his release, five days later, he had to seek further medical treatment. He, too, was charged with assault of a federal agent, along with obstruction and resisting arrest. The bogus charges were also later dropped.
Advertisement
“I should not have to live in fear of being targeted simply for the color of my skin or the other language I speak,” he told the committee. “I share my story not just for myself, but for everyone who has been unjustly treated, for those whose voice has been silenced.”
You know the poem, folks. It starts when “they came” for the vulnerable. Thankfully, though people such as Ramirez and Velez may be vulnerable due to their pigmentation, they are not meek and they won’t be silenced. Our democracy, our safety as a nation of laws, depends on not just hearing their stories, but also standing peacefully against such abuses of power.
Because these abuses only end when the people decide they’ve had enough — not just of the lawlessness, but of the lies that empower it.
More to Read
How an ICE hospital incident sparked alarm about the patient rights of immigrantsNov. 28, 2025
‘An American nightmare’: L.A. hosts first congressional hearing on effect of immigration raidsNov. 24, 2025
Voices
Contributor: ICE is grabbing U.S. citizens, defying its own rules and the ConstitutionNov. 19, 2025
Insights
L.A. Times Insights delivers AI-generated analysis on Voices content to offer all points of view. Insights does not appear on any news articles.
Viewpoint
This article generally aligns with a
Left
point of view.
Learn more about this AI-generated analysisPerspectives
The following AI-generated content is powered by Perplexity. The Los Angeles Times editorial staff does not create or edit the content.
Ideas expressed in the piece
The author contends that the Department of Homeland Security has systematically detained and arrested American citizens during immigration enforcement operations, despite Secretary Kristi Noem’s repeated public denials that this occurs. The author argues that DHS is engaging in deliberate misinformation by posting claims on social media that allegations of citizen detentions are “fake news” or a “hoax,” characterizing these statements as reprehensible gaslighting. The author points to testimonies from California residents Andrea Velez and Javier Ramirez as evidence that federal agents have conducted unauthorized detentions of U.S. citizens, including denying them access to legal counsel, phones, and necessary medications during their detention. The author emphasizes that these individuals were detained based on appearance and race despite presenting identification and asserting their citizenship, describing the enforcement approach as resembling “secret police” tactics. The author suggests that a recently issued court decision permitting stops based on appearance and behavior associated with being undocumented has created legal cover for discriminatory enforcement practices. The author frames these citizens’ willingness to testify publicly as an act of patriotism and courage, positioning their testimonies as historical records of government abuse of power and arguing that the broader public has a responsibility to hear and act against such abuses.
Different views on the topic
Officials within the Trump administration have countered these allegations by asserting that immigration enforcement is operating appropriately and targeting only those subject to valid removal orders. When addressing claims of citizen detentions during a congressional hearing, DHS provided specific legal justifications for deportations, explaining that individuals cited had received final removal orders from immigration judges with no remaining legal basis to remain in the United States[2]. A White House spokesperson stated that Secretary Noem is effectively implementing the administration’s immigration agenda and enhancing American safety[1]. The administration maintains that immigration enforcement operations have resulted in what supporters view as successful outcomes, with the Trump administration continuing to conduct what those in the administration describe as vigorous immigration enforcement despite criticism[1]. Supporters of the current enforcement approach argue that the administration is pursuing appropriate immigration policy rather than engaging in discriminatory practices, framing the enforcement actions as necessary and lawful applications of existing immigration law[2].