LOS ANGELES (AP) 鈥 Just before dawn, 10 people met at a parking lot shared by a laundromat and coffee shop in South Central Los Angeles on what has become a daily mission: Look for immigration officers and warn people of their presence to try to prevent arrests. Bullhorns and sirens are ready for use.
鈥淭丑别谤别鈥檚 that鈥檚 been detained,鈥 Ron Gochez, founder of Union del Barrio's Los Angeles chapter, said before they split up in five cars. 鈥淚t seems like there鈥檚 more activity now. Let鈥檚 keep a close eye out.鈥
Working with other similar-size groups and using walkie-talkies, the Community Self-Defense Coalition, made up of more than 60 organizations, found nothing Thursday but appeared to have disrupted U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations earlier in the week. In Los Angeles and across the country, these tactics have been a thorn in ICE's side as it tries to carry out President Donald
鈥淧ositive spotting right now of ICE agents at the Target in Alhambra,鈥 Lupe Carrasco Cardona said in a live Instagram report Sunday from the Los Angeles suburb over a blaring siren to draw attention. She said at least six government vehicles were identified in the ICE operation.
Counter-ICE operations have had 鈥渁 huge impact,鈥 said John Fabbricatore, a former head of ICE's enforcement and removal division in Denver.
鈥淚t's dangerous for the officers because they are trying to get into a situation, maybe undercover, trying to make an arrest without alarming the neighborhood, and then these guys come out here with these bullhorns and they start yelling and screaming,鈥 Fabbricatore said.
Advocates 鈥済o right to the edge鈥 of a law against impeding federal law enforcement to avoid criminal prosecution, he said.
Advocates say they are exercising free speech and reminding people of their rights. ICE officers cannot forcibly enter a home without a judicial warrant, which they rarely have. Sophisticated urge people to stay inside and not open the door.
For years, including during Trump鈥檚 first administration, ICE has contended with advocates who rely on blast text messages, social media and bullhorns to spread the word.
Trump's was visibly angry after joining ICE officers who were met at apartments in the Denver area by activists who insulted them and used bullhorns to alert residents. He insisted word of the operation was leaked.
鈥淭he less people know about these operations, the better,鈥 Homan said outside the White House after the than expected.
ICE referred questions to the Homeland Security Department, which did not respond to questions about the advocates' tactics and any activities in Los Angeles this week. The agency stopped releasing daily arrest figures, but Homan said last week that it made about 21,000 arrests. That's an average of more than 600 a day, roughly double what President Joe Biden's administration did in a 12-month period ending Sept. 30.
In the Los Angeles area, about 150 volunteers fanned out Sunday in response to rumors of ICE operations. Organizers said they spotted ICE in Alhambra and San Fernando, preventing arrests.
Volunteers meet before dawn, as many workers are heading to their jobs and when advocates believe ICE is most likely to move in. They zigzag through quiet residential streets and sleepy intersections, looking for double-parked vehicles, tinted windows and newer cars parked in red zones.
If they spot ICE officers, they hit record on their phones. They blare sirens. And through a megaphone, they announce that ICE is in the neighborhood. "They鈥檙e here."
鈥淲e don鈥檛 use violence. We don鈥檛 break any laws. But we will do anything legally possible to defend our community," Gochez said.
Back at the parking lot about two hours after Thursday's mission started, the city was waking up. On the corner, a street vendor had set up her tamales stand.
鈥淲e just got a report right now that all of our patrols happening in San Diego, Escondido, California; Los Angeles, California; South Gate and Alhambra, everything is all clear right now,鈥 said Gochez, before heading to his day job as a high school history teacher.
___
Spagat reported from San Diego.
Dorany Pineda And Elliot Spagat, The Associated Press