Chapo Trap House - UNLOCKED: ICE is Coming to a City Near You feat. Memo Torres
Episode Date: October 5, 2025Will interviews Los Angeles reporter Memo Torres, whose site L.A. TACO shifted from covering food and culture in the city to some of the most indispensable and horrific coverage of ICE raids available.... Memo tells us about what happens to people when they get kidnapped, covering the horrors of fortress America, and practical advice for those who might find themselves in ICE’s crosshairs. Read more at L.A. TACO: https://lataco.com/ And follow Memo Torres on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/el_tragon_de_los_angeles/?hl=en
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right. Hello, everybody. I'm back at it with another bonus interview episode out this
week for you. Right now, I'm joined by a reporter with L.A. Taco, Memo Torres. Memo. How's it going?
Going well, man, as well as it could be with all this ice siege and ice activity all over Los Angeles. How
you doing, man? I'm all right. I mean, it seems like the whole country is under siege right now.
And L.A. has always been at the forefront of it. And that's why we wanted to get you on to talk about
this. But before we get into that, because you just tell me a little bit about L.A. Taco and how you
guys sort of went from covering food culture in L.A. to be doing some really indispensable reporting
on the ongoing like siege of your city by federal agencies. Yeah. If you're not familiar with
L.A. Taco out there, crash course. We started off as a blog in 2006 that covered graffiti,
cannabis, and food, specifically tacos. In 2018, we relaunched as a publication. And,
started doing more news coverage, culture arts of Los Angeles is basically of journalism.
But yeah, we've always been 50% food, 50% news, culture arts.
And then when, you know, on June 6th, when Trump sent his troops here and they did the
first raid at an apparel company in downtown Los Angeles, we immediately knew what was happening.
And we just jumped to, we took all our resources, all our community connections and just felt
this kind of instinctual reaction to cover ice from now on. Well, from your perspective in Los Angeles,
like, I know this is a broad question, but like, how bad is it? Like, what have you been seeing
and, like, is it going to get worse? It's getting worse. It's definitely getting worse. It's pretty
bad. I think one thing we have to remind people that Los Angeles is huge. It's a huge metropolitan
area. So if you're not paying attention to what's going on and, you know, if I'm not reporting on what's
happening. It's easy to forget that the ice rates are happening. So we constantly try to, you know,
give voice that like, look, they took 20 people today. They took 18. They rated, they rated 20 different
parts of LA today. And yeah, and I feel like it's, it's been getting slowly worse and worse and
worse. We've gone from like maybe having one or two days where they took 20 to 25 people to now that's
starting to become more common. We're starting to see that more every day now. And in your reporting,
you say like every day they took another 20 people from here another 30 people from here
in covering this when you say like they get taken what happens to these people once they're
taken um yeah that's a good question man a lot of them get taken first to the metropolitan detention
center which short for mdc in downtown l.a that's where the main federal building is the main
detention center the infamous now b18 the basement b18 they get processed through there they get
held there for maybe a day or two, and then they start getting shipped around. Some will be
sent to Adelanto, some will be, get sent to Arizona, some get sent to Texas. And if you're
following any of the coverage, you see that that's one of the tactics the administration is
using to keep detainees away from their families, but more importantly, they're lawyers. So it's
hard for them to, you know, be in touch with lawyers and have their legal help. And like, what does it
feel like in, I know, like, I mean, we're dealing with this in New York right now. I mean,
ICE are assaulting people at the federal building in lower Manhattan right now. They just sent a
journalist to the hospital today. What's it like for you covering these? Like, you know, like when
you interact with ICE agents and like it seems to me that like they have sort of markedly ramped
up their assaults on journalists or anyone filming them or just anyone trying to oppose them in
any way, not just like the targets of their, of these arrests. Yeah. I mean, look, ICE is petty,
first of all. Border Patrol and ICE are super petty.
If anybody's recording them, they turn around and start assaulting them.
And then we'll file a charge against whoever was recording them
and claimed that the person recording them assaulted them.
Just this weekend, we had this incident where they raided a Home Depot in the Dara Heights.
And there was one person, a gentleman was coming out from shopping inside a Home Depot
and heard this guy screaming because this guy was being taken to the floor and being tortured as he was getting handcuffed.
So he came over to record and try to get his name.
So I say just went after him and they tackled him to the ground.
Just as that was happening, this other woman named Rachel was pulling up and she's part of the rapid response group of that area.
And she started recording as well.
And they got mad and then they grabbed her and they threw her in the van.
So they took two day laborers.
They took a lady that was selling tortillas at a stand just on the corner.
And those two people that were reserving the U.S. citizens.
that came out from shopping
and was just kind of trying
to figure out what's going on
and the lady that came to try to record
and try to get the guy's numbers
that were being taken.
They throw her in the van,
then they went down the street
as they usually do.
They usually run,
after they do a raid,
they rendezvous in the area somewhere else.
They find an empty parking lot,
which they did down the street
at Buckingham Parkway.
And then they thought it was empty,
but there was people inside
of the office buildings
that came out to screens
to also document that.
And they could see that
one of the guys was down
on the floor. They beat his legs and beat his knees so they would get down on his knees.
They tasered him in the ribs. The other lady, the other observer, who's a U.S. citizen, was
screaming for help. And she eventually, according to witnesses, she was beaten badly and
she was beaten unconscious. So the point where they needed to get an ambulance, she got taken
to the Cedarsina Medical Center in Marina D'L. Ray. And the person that was observing that,
the third person that was observing that, well, they started chasing her.
And she started running.
And as they were chasing her, they were like, why are you running?
Why are you running?
Now they wanted to arrest her.
But she was able to get back into her office before they did that, which is one of the MOs of
ICE.
For them, if anybody runs, they're guilty of something.
So they're going to arrest you.
And they've been doing nothing but like arrest now verify later policies where people will
get dropped off now in the middle of the street somewhere after they verify that
they're a permanent resident or you a citizen.
from your perspective like what is the profile i mean you said of ice they're petty but like what is the
profile of the average ice agent because like from my perspective of what i see they look like
a gang of otherwise unemployable peanut-headed thugs but like i know they've like i mean like
i know they're offering like student loan um forgiveness if you join uh you know the american
and Gestapo, but like from what ranks of society are they drawing this huge workforce of
like deep, you know, ice just thugs. Like, I don't know what else to call them. Yeah, no.
Since this is all started, I think I've seen every single video of every raid, every kidnapping,
every agent. And it got to the point where like I had nicknames for a lot of them. And I sort of got
the, like half of them looked like Buzz Lightyear. They got their tight masks on and their face
they're fat, you know, they're like, you know, there's a bunch of dorks.
They're out of shape.
There's a couple of dudes that it just looked like bane, you know, they got all roided out.
It's like the weirdest, like, you know what I was thinking about this morning.
It was like this literally feels like we're living in a Mad Max world where you have all these
group of like freaks, you know, different sizes out of shape, dorks, losers, quirky dudes,
masked up and just going out and raids every single day and grabbing like hardworking people.
Yeah. I mean, it feels like, I mean, like I know there's a certain personality type
attracted to law enforcement, but these people seem like someone who have never had authority
in their life and have now been given godlike authority to, I don't know, intimidate,
torture, and even kill anyone who stands in their way. And particularly just, let's be
honest, like anyone who looks Latino walking the streets of Los Angeles or any other major American
city like are there any for people who are like uh like worried like are there any tells for like
how do you how would how do you identify an ice agent i mean i know here in new york like it used to be
like if you saw a guy milling around out just outside the turnstile on the subway and he had like
a jets or yankee starter jacket was just hanging out there pretty good chance he's an undercover cop
like what are like are there any tells after observing ice agents for as long as you have um
Yeah. It's so funny. It's like, yeah, I think, I think it's, it's, it's kind of a good feeling that you develop out there a while. Yeah, they'll wear like, and it's, it's, it's, it's, it sounds very simple, but they'll wear T-shirts. Um, they have, they're like, you know, they have a lot of tattoos. Um, they have these, they're into their haircuts. They're all into their haircuts, they're all into their haircuts, first of all. So it's like these white dudes trying to dress like their street people, you know, like regular,
normal street people. So it's like they just don't fit in. Like you go, if they're in Compton or in Boyle Heights
or in Englewood and you're just like, you see them, you see the neighborhood people and then you look
at them as like, they're not dressed the same. They don't fit in. Like you can just tell. You know,
they try to maintain a low profile, but in maintaining that low profile, they give themselves up.
Well, like in these neighborhoods, like in like the, you know, like Los Angeles is in many ways,
like the Latino capital of America. But like in, in these communities, in these neighborhoods,
What's it feel like to just live in Los Angeles right now, even if you are documented or even
if you are a U.S. citizen? Well, it's scary. I think everybody's living in fear. I, you know,
I have a lot of connections with community people. I go out to eat a lot still. And I just hear
these stories of people just living in fear. I have, you know, the other day I ran into a friend of
mine who was like, dude, I got pulled over by a nice agent. I was riding my bike. And they stopped me.
They rushed me like fucking five guys just ran up to me, grabbed me and wanted to take me and I had to prove
that I was a U.S. citizen.
Well, how were they able to prove that they were a U.S. citizen?
Well, they started talking shit to him in English, first of a while.
He's got good English.
And then he pulled out his real ID.
So I guess the real ID was enough.
And that was enough to let him go.
But he's like, yeah, they harassed me for about half an hour before they let me go.
You have situations where, like, in restaurants, the other day I went to a restaurant,
and the owner was telling me how sheriffs came in to eat.
And he took their order.
He turned around to the kitchen.
and the kitchen staff were all gone.
Like, they just saw a green uniform and they booked it.
And, like, you know, people are just living in fear, especially in the Spanish communities,
you know, like they, and a lot of the Latino communities don't understand the difference
between sheriff, um, ice, Border Patrol and all the different agencies.
And a lot of them are not going to wait around to take a chance.
If they see somebody that looks like a, like some kind of a law enforcement agency,
they book it, they run, you know, like, you know, LA's living in fear and it's very traumatized.
right now. Well, I mean, like, and I mean, I wish I could say that that was misplaced. I mean,
like, this is a very grim subject and it really does feel like all of the evil in this
country is sort of congealing one moment right now. But like, I got to bring this up because
the fact the matter is that a lot of people keep dying in ICE custody or if they aren't dying,
they're being severely mistreated. And I just want to talk about like, you covered a story of a man
named Ismael Alaya Uribe.
Could you discuss who he was and what happened in the circumstances surrounding his death?
Yeah, that was a really difficult story to cover.
It was me and my team.
We now have a team here that's helping me cover the ice.
I have Aisha, Wallace Palomares, and Izzy Ramirez, who I've kind of brought under my
wings to help me cover all of this.
We had to dig into the story and look at different facets of what happened because,
one, DHS never tells you the truth.
DHS is always full of shit.
And everything, a statement they put out, they're lying.
Billis Salee, the acting federal attorney, has tried to bring charges against all these people that are observers or at protest or even people they arrest.
And the courts have thrown out like 90% of them saying like these are false.
They're like blatantly false statements by the DHS.
So we have to dig around and find the families, find that actually happened.
And this young gentleman got arrested.
at a car wash while he was working.
He's been at the car wash, working there as a manager.
He's been there for 15 years.
He was brought to the US when he was four years old.
He was a DACA recipient.
Didn't have children, but he's an uncle to kids
and godfather to his nephew and niece.
And poor guy.
He ended up getting to the Atlanta Detention Center.
This was about a month ago.
And within two weeks, his mom
I spoke to his mom, and she would tell me how she would go visit them, and he just started
with a cough and was like, hey, get some medical attention. He's like, mom, they won't do anything
for me. And then she went back to next week, and they started looking real pale and, you know,
bloodshed eyes and was like, you need to get some medical attention. He's like, they won't believe
I'm sick, mom. They won't give me anything. And finally, he collapsed shaking and convulsing.
And that's when the prison set the alarm blue, the code blue alarm.
And they came and they gave him a shot.
And they started giving them 500 milligrams of Tylenol three times a day.
So that last time they saw on, she was like, she said she went on a Saturday.
And that he was like, Mom, I can't anymore.
I can't anymore, Mom.
I can't do this anymore.
So she said she was going to talk to the lawyer on Monday.
but that Sunday
she got noticed
that he got taken
to the local hospital
he was there for about 14 hours
and on Monday morning
at 5.30 morning
hunting beach police
showed up at her door
to give her the news
that her son had passed away
and basically what had happened
is that he had developed
a napsis that got infected
and I've had an abscess
before that shit is painful as fuck
I almost died from anapsis
like it's no fucking
joking matter like that shit is
terrible to try to have it
without any medication, and that shit will kill you.
And it did, to that point.
So I mean, what you're describing is circumstances in which, like, a guy who had been
in this country since he was 40 years old and working at, basically just as the man,
since he was four.
Yeah.
Working as a manager of a car wash is arrested just, like, not because he did any crime,
but just because what, like, his legal status was in dispute, was sent to some sort
of detention center or prison where he was denied medical care.
repeatedly that caused him to die. How confident are we that like this kind of incompetence or
negligence is not in fact like a systematic matter of policy? Oh, I mean, it's definitely a matter
of policy. Adelanto facility is no stranger to having deaths. They've had several deaths in the
past. This is just the first death they've had this year alone. There's other facilities that are
being reopened by the administration that were shut down because of their negligence, because of
of the amount of deaths and medical negligence they've had.
Constantly, we have reports of people being taken who are diabetic or have cancer
or taking some kind of medications for blood pressure or whatever,
and agents will throw the medications out and not give it to these people.
And somehow some of these people get very sick and ill,
it forces some people to just self-deport and say, like, screw it,
I'm just going to self-deport and sign the paperwork so they,
get deported because they're afraid of dying in jail. It's a very real thing. And most people ask,
well, why don't all these people self-deport? Why do they stick around? Well, most of these people
that are being detained have been in the U.S. have families. I've been here for 10 years. They own
businesses. Their lives are here. And apart from like, you know, those horror stories you hear about
them being afraid to go back to their home countries because they might be persecuted in their home
countries, they, you know, they've built a life here. So they're staying here for the off chance
that they get to get a court hearing and get to get released on bail at least and get back to their
families. Like, you know, given what you're describing, like a policy of, you know,
ethnic cleansing and intentional disregard that leads to circumstances, that leads to kind of like
a passive extermination of people. Like, do you feel that like when people refer to ICE as the American
Gestapo or these is Nazi tactics. Do you feel that that's like appropriate or is that misplaced?
I would like to say that they're worse. They're worse because they're cowards. They're hiding their
faces, right? They don't want to identify themselves. I think that they slowly are leading that way.
I mean, we don't have full on death camps, you know, we don't have full on concentration camps,
but how far away are we from that? You know, we're with Alligator Alcatraz.
I think there's about 300 detention camps and there's only like 190 something that are publicly known, right?
And so like a lot of these people are just, and then the, you take into account that ICE is really not about paperwork.
You know, they've stopped updating their page on the desks in their detention centers.
You know, I have the count of a total of 16.
Their page still only shows 13.
You know, they haven't showed the last three.
They haven't updated it.
they stopped doing paperwork they scrapped paperwork they used to have to file paperwork as to where
they're going to go who they were going to detain file all of that they said not we're not doing that
anymore because it just takes too much time so this whole culture of like screw the paperwork just
grab detain verify later throw them in jail and you know whatever like they it's a complete
recklessness for due process for bureaucratic elements that are supposed to put safeguards on the
citizens that they're taking or the residents that they're taking are all immigrants.
It's a complete disregard for all due process.
When you consider that, I'm just wondering, because I see people at least like online or people
who support this or people who say, I voted for this and people who talk about the victims
of, you know, like the targets of these raids and of these deaths as invaders, that these
people have invaded our country or it's like some sort of like they're waging war against
America or they're a threat to America.
I mean, I'm not asking to, like, to psychoanalyze these people, but, like, what does that make you feel when you see that, like, a certain, through a certain chunk of America, this is not just, like, not horrifying or shameful, but like something to be celebrated or something to be gloated over?
I don't know, man.
I don't understand it.
I don't understand it.
How do you celebrate families being detained in Chicago?
There's a video of a poor five-year-old, of a five-year-old little girl watching her parents get taken.
And then you see a picture of her in a detention cell with a yellow plastic bag over her trying to stay warm on a bench all by herself.
How do, like, how do people lose their humanity, you know?
I mean, when people start hailing laws and due process, yet celebrate the law enforcement that are acting lawlessly and have no due process, like, how do you equate the both?
how do you justify it? How do you celebrate that? You know, it's just, it's complete hypocrisy to me
in my mind. Um, or like the, how do you believe that America is like the best and most powerful
country in the world, but like a five-year-old girl is like an existential threat to this country
or your safety? It's just, I don't have an explanation for it. I really don't. Everybody they've
gone after here in Los Angeles. Look, everybody said this. I've said this. The, the criminals,
the cartels. Yeah, like taken. We, no.
Nobody wants criminals and cartel activity.
But who are they actually going after?
They're going to actually not doing that.
Yeah.
People sell an old lady selling tamales on the street.
An old man waiting for the bus to go to work.
You know, people gardening, people at the day labor center just looking for their next, you know, meal.
Like it's literally they're going after people that speak Spanish are in work clothes and have dark skin.
That's literally who they're going after, which is workers.
people that contribute to the economy.
I mean, I've said this before
on other episodes of my show,
but when I think about this,
I think it's, like, in the minds
of someone like Stephen Miller,
like who I think is like probably
the intellectual godfather
behind what we're seeing
in the streets of Los Angeles
or Chicago or New York,
I think someone who is in this country
undocumented or here illegally
who's committing serious crimes,
who's like murdering people
or raping or fucking doing home invasions.
I think them being in this country
is less of a threat to their ideology
than that old woman who's selling Tamales
or that guy who's like doing a roof.
I think the idea of like,
what do you want to call it,
immigrants, undocumented people,
Latinos in this country who are just working,
having families, starting businesses,
becoming a part of the fabric
of just American life and economy and culture.
That to them is what they regard
as the existential threat, not MS-13,
not cartels, not drug dealers.
Yeah, I mean, exactly.
Exactly. And, you know, to them, this whole image of like MS-13, here in Los Angeles, I am so sick and tired of them using MS-13 to justify their raids. They're like, they did the whole staging at MacArthur Park here in Los Angeles, where they pulled out everybody, U.S. Marshals, Border Patrol, ICE, Department of Homeland Security, ATF, DA, on horses, on military tanks, marching down through a park where there were kids literally just.
having a little summer camp there because to them that's ms 13 territory we haven't seen ms 13 here
on l.A for like the longest time i mean we're talking about like that's shit that happened when i grew
up you know i haven't seen a goddamn ms 13 member like forever and over 20 years so like they're
they're using this as like the boogeyman and just to find raids around like macarthur park area
in the west lake area as like oh yeah they're going after ms 13 like really ms 13 is selling tamales
on the corner and looking for work at home depot that's ms 13 like give me a fucking break
I want to go back to something we were talking about a little earlier in this conversation,
which is that, like, thus far, it seems like for ordinary civilians or people who are horrified
by this, like the primary means of fighting back against this or resisting it, if it happens
in front of you, is taking out your phone and filming what you see. And I'm just wondering,
like, from your perspective, like, I've wondered, like, what I would do myself, because I see this
happen on, like, screens. I know it's happening here in my city, but it hasn't happened,
like, right in front of me. So, in your opinion, like, as someone who's covered this for a
long time. Are there a set of like best practices? If you see, if you see ice taking someone on the
streets, what should you do? Yeah, very basic. You always had to remember the who, what,
when, where, hows, okay? Very basic. Like, that's just basic writing journalism 101. Who, what,
when, where, how? When was it? Okay. narrated through the phone, put it on the captions,
the date, the time, where this is happening, not just like a general Los Angeles.
Like, no, these cross streets in this city, okay?
Because it's happening everywhere now.
And it's like somebody who, like myself was documenting everything that's happening here
in Los Angeles.
Sometimes I come across videos and it's just like, ICE is here.
Okay, great.
Where are you?
When was it?
Is it ICE?
You know, first of all.
Try to get pictures of the agents, you know, get video of the agents and the vehicles
especially because we can look up license plates um they're very tricky with their license plates
so that's a good tip to figure out if it's ice or not um they switch out license plates on their
vehicles all the time so the license plate um will not match the vehicle so if you if you see like a
f-150 truck and you look at the license plate the last six plate might say it's a camry right
um or you know the the license plates are all registered for some reason in oklahoma you know
it'll be a california license plate but the registered owners in california i mean in oklahoma you know
shit like that.
Just shit just doesn't match up.
So that's how you know it's a nice vehicle because they're unmarked.
But yeah, but capture that, narrate if you see people being taken, how many people are being taken, how many agents were there?
If you can get close enough but not too close because they will rough you up and take your ass to try to ask the people being taken, what's your name and what's your birthday?
Don't ask him country of origin.
I've seen people like doing that, especially at the immigration courts where they're like, what's your country of
Where are you from? Don't ask him that because they can use that to justify taking somebody
being like, yeah, he's not from here.
Country of origin is America.
That's what they are right now.
Yeah, exactly.
That's the country they're from.
Yeah.
So, yeah, get all of that information.
Make sure you document all of it.
And it's important.
The documentation process is really important.
If not for now, at least for the future, but a lot of this documentation helps a lot
of people get out of court, especially they're getting accused of being of assaulting a federal agent.
because federal agents are fucking pussies all right if you could put in a camera at them all of a sudden it's violence against them according to pan bondie right you know yeah yeah so so yeah document document all the details you can all the context you can and look for your local um look for your if you're not a part of a rapid response group if you're just in an area look for the rapid response group in your area or also look for the local um immigration organizations that do immigration help cheerla is a big national one too you can reach out to chirla and send that
to them. They'll file it away. You know, I'm documenting everything as well, too. So maybe in the
future, some justice can be done and all of this can be used in some court cases. You've also
covered, you've done some stories about, like, incidents of community responders, like actually
foiling ice or getting them to, like, pack up and go away. Like, what does that look like?
So, I was just talking about how, like, this morning about how some areas of LA, we know there's
being like there's, there's ice rates happening, but we, we don't, we don't know about it in some
areas, right? Like, in the valley, they don't have any, like, they don't have as many rapid
response groups. I think there's only, like, one rapid response group in the valley.
And the valley is huge. I'm talking about San Fernando Valley. Um, it's huge. That, like, is the
biggest part of LA and people forget that that's actually the city of LA. Um, but then you have
areas in like Orange County where they've been hitting hard, like around Santa Ana. And in Long
Beach, you know, in Long Beach, they've been hitting language hard. And those rapid response groups
have figured it out. They're, they've gone together. So this is what it looks like. You have
groups that are outside of Terminal Island. They're called the Harbor Peace Patrol. And they just
sit out there and just as the vehicles leave, they just take pictures or the license plates in the
vehicles and be like, these are the vehicles that are going out. And then they share that to the other
networks. All the other networks are, all right, cool, they're coming. Now they look for those vehicles.
When people spot those vehicles, they'll start following them.
They'll go around to like the regular places, which it'll be a public park,
a government building or federal building in the area.
They'll stage behind like supermarkets or anywhere that has like big parking lots,
the front of the parking lot or behind the stores where they have a lot of loading areas.
They look for them there.
And then when they spot them in the area, they'll start alerting the local like rapid responders
that are out watching at home depots and car washes.
Now we have a network of people that have started, you know, looking out for car washes.
So then when they spot them in a certain area, they'll alert people, like, hey, they're in the area.
Like, watch out.
So then people will move into like somewhere safe or they kind of get out of the area.
The laborers will get moved away.
And so by the time the ice ages actually show up, nobody, there's nobody there to be taken.
You know what I mean?
So it's really just being on top of them, watching where there are, being alerting the other community members and having this network be like, okay, they're here, they're over there.
Cool. Hey, watch out. They're close to this area. Hey, they're headed in that direction. Okay, let's let this car washes know. Let's let that Home Depot know. And then they let the community members know. And then they alert everybody. And that's how they do it. You know, they don't impede. They don't get in the way. They're just eyes, just eyes and voices out there, letting people know where they're at. Well, like I was supposed in addition to, I don't know, like tapping into some of these community responder groups, it sounds like they have like a fairly impressive network of, I don't know, counter surveillance. If there's anyone,
like in our audience who's listening who has like an undocumented family member or is maybe even
undocumented themselves like is there anything that they can do to practically avoid being picked up
and like what preparation should someone have in place in anticipation should the worst case
scenario happen um to avoid getting picked up i don't know bleach your hair blonde and
start working on your accent start working on your accent dress white as hell i don't know what that means
Dockers, tucked in, chinos, golf shirts, you know, things like that.
Yeah, could start putting an American flag shirt on or something.
I don't know.
It's real difficult because there's, ICE has such an advantage over everybody.
You know that they're using facial recognition.
So they're literally like, we'll go, they spend days scouting areas.
They'll go to like the Home Depot's, like, in those send scouts undercovers and just kind of like with their phones,
try to like get pictures, use their phones for facial recognition on whoever's there.
day laborers and then come back, you know, a day or two later, you know, and try to raid the
place. The DMVs have shared like the license plate data with, I mean, if we can all get
DMV license plate data and check vehicles, so can they. And they're constantly getting all
this data. So they're looking, as they're driving around, they're looking up license plates
on people. And if it's somebody that's in their database of somebody that might be undocumented,
they'll pull them over, break the windows and pull them out of the cars. So it's really,
difficult. I mean, you'd have to literally not have any license plates that are registered to
anybody that may be undocumented. You, you probably have to ride around in somebody else's
vehicle. Avoid areas that ice frequents, like in L.A. Isis at the Home Depot's and the car
washes. That's where they're at, besides driving around, including different places.
I would say, go to work. I hope you're, wherever you work at has a plan.
in place. A lot of a lot of little local businesses and restaurants have developed their own
little plans of what to do if I shows up. It's almost kind of like, it's almost kind of like
like Anne Frank, you know, we're like a lot of businesses are like, okay, we're going to hide
this storage room. We're going to put a shelf here. And if I shows up, go here, hide here,
and then we'll hide the door or something, right? Or, you know, they're like even like, I heard
the one instance of one place bought a van, an old van and just keep it in the back in the
parking lot. So, you know, if ice shows up, the guys can all just run and hide in the van.
Just crazy shit like that. But it's kind of a weird world that people have to have these
plans in place in case ice does show up. What we tell people is like, look, memorize at least
one phone number. If you're undocumented or your fear you're going to be taken by ICE or you could
be a target of ICE, have at least one number, phone number memorized.
If you are in the system, right, you have an A number, which is the alien number.
That's what everybody gets.
It gets an alien number.
Remember that alien number, too, and make sure somebody in your family or your friends
or whoever you're going to call has that alien number so that they can track you.
I mean, ICE isn't doing a very good job of logging information as to where you are.
But those are the very least things you can do.
So, like, obviously, like I said, you've been covering this for a long time in Los Angeles.
And Los Angeles has been sort of the forefront of.
of this national siege that's going on right now.
But like many other American cities
are also in the crosshairs.
You mentioned they just launched a big operation in Chicago.
Trump has been talking about, you know,
some sort of military occupation of Portland.
Obviously here in New York,
we're dealing with the same shit.
What can other cities,
oh yeah, what can other cities and communities
in America learn from like what you've seen
and documented in Los Angeles?
Like, what can LA teach the rest of the country
about how to deal with ICE and just,
like, where this is all going?
Yeah, I think the most effective thing I've seen is the rapid response groups.
And I've talked with politicians.
I've talked to community members.
It really comes down to people.
It comes down to U.S. citizens protecting their neighbors, people in the communities,
looking out for themselves.
It doesn't have to be a big organized operation.
And even some of like the rapid response networks that we have here in Los Angeles aren't
big operations.
We're talking about like two or three people, you know, two or three people.
and then you'll have a group chat with like other community members and then when people can
come out when they're not working, they'll come out. It doesn't take a lot of people to start this,
but you always want to do these things in numbers, you know? And it just starts with your neighborhood
and nobody knows your neighborhood best, right? In your neighborhood, I'm sure you go down the street,
you go get a cup of coffee or a sandwich, right? And you know the cashiers, right? Like you know who they are,
right? Like you have these little, they might not be personal relationships, but you know,
their neighborhood people. I mean, you see them like every other day, you know, that's like a relationship
right there. Exactly. So, so nobody knows your neighborhood best in you. If you don't have a
rapid response network, I mean, literally just you can start one on your own by just talking to your
neighbors, talking to your local businesses, setting up a phone number and being like, look,
let's just start up a network, a big group chat. I mean, I'm in several group chats with different
rapid response neighborhood watches. Like, there's, there's at least three of them that I'm in,
and each one of them has like six to 800 people.
So when that chat starts going off, it's like, oh, we just saw ice in this area.
Can somebody go, oh, my cousin just told me that they just saw ice over there.
Can somebody go verify and then people go and verify and let the Home Depot's know?
Somebody else will follow them around.
Be like, okay, they're over here.
They're over there.
And that's a great way to just kind of like watch out for your own neighborhood.
I would say just start at the basics.
Start with your own block.
Start with your own little neighborhood.
And that's all it really takes.
Well, I mean, like, yeah, I mean, you've talked about, like, some very impressive work being done by just individual people in the community who have put together very quickly these very impressive, like I said, sort of networks of counter surveillance and action.
But, like, how would you rate the response of just the politicians elected to represent the people of Los Angeles, from the mayor to the city council to the governor of California?
Like, have they just left people more or less naked against this assault on their civil liberties?
it's tough man it's really tough to to it's easy to be critical of your leaders because you expect a lot
more from your leaders you know um it's also tough to know what to demand and what to expect of them
especially when a lot of people don't understand civics right just basic civics as to what powers a mayor
does have like in los angeles the mayors doesn't really have a weak mayoralty system yes yeah
it doesn't really have like in in l.a there's a police commission so the mayor can't
exactly direct the police to do something she has to go through a commission and the
people have to go through the commission and commit the commission to get the captain of the
LAPD to do so the chief of the LAPD to do something right um versus like in New York the mayor has
direct control of the NYPD right the mayor says NYPD do this and what PD does that right but in
in California it's very different it's uh even our system of government here is a what do they call it the
people's, uh, I forget the, the people, Democratic people, government or something like that,
um, where it's different. Like, so I felt like a lot of these politicians, um, our political
leaders feel like their hands are tied. There's only so much they can do before they start
themselves doing what Trump is doing. It's just ignoring their own laws, ignoring the
limitations on their own power set on by their own local governments before they start crossing
those lines. So it's like, there's really not much they can do without crossing their own
own legal, um, uh, framework. So, and they've told me themselves, like, look, bro, like,
the only thing that, the, that we can do is this. We're limited. It really comes down to the people.
And that's why you'll hear politicians in California be like, get out there and protest. Get out there
and do that. Get out there and do this. But then they do that. And then what happens? LAPD comes and,
you know, shuts the party down, harasses protesters, defense ice, you know? So it's like, you know,
How can our local leaders stop LAPD?
Well, they don't have power over LAPD.
LAPD has their own power.
You know, they only, they have the commission.
They have to commit the convention to do something.
And even then, are they going to follow it?
I mean, Chief, Chief McDonald said that he was going to implement, like, you know,
verifying ice agents around the city.
It was going to have his LAPD go around and ask people that are mass and unmarked cars
to identify themselves as actual federal agents.
This is before even the new No Vigilantes Act passed in California.
He didn't do it.
He just said he was going to do it, but we never did.
Not one single case.
Not one reported single case of them doing that.
So we're stuck here between politicians that have limited power, especially against a federal government.
You know, there's this thing called the supremacy clause, which, you know, I'm not sure if you know about that, but, you know, where the federal government literally has more power than the state.
So how do they change?
challenge that as a state or as a city. To what extent does the LAPD or L.A. County Sheriff's Department,
like, how hand in glove do they work with ICE and other federal law enforcement agencies?
Like, I mean, you mentioned, like, it seems like there are some things proposed to maybe, I don't
know, like, gum up the works or slow them down, but like that doesn't seem to be happening.
Do you get the impression that LAPD is more or less completely happy to acquies to the presence
of ICE in their cities and what they're doing to just the civilians?
in Los Angeles that the LAPD at least theoretically is there to protect and serve.
You know, I can't speak for the whole department, but I'll tell you what I've seen.
I've seen LAPD fist bumping ice agents, you know, pulling over and having chats with them,
shaking hands, bringing peace signs, you know, I've seen at sheriff's office, you know,
where ICE shows up to a sheriff's office and, you know, the sheriff's being like,
hey, happy to have you here, happy to see you here.
um they like law enforcement all of themselves they all see themselves as birds of a feather
and you know from what i've seen in my opinion so yeah they don't they don't they don't want to
get into way of ice and when they have been called out to areas where ice activity has been
heavy and a lot of people show up to protest um whether they're being downtown la when they
took a couple of u.s. citizen girls um or when they're protesting at the mdc. LAPD is happy to come and
provide protection for ICE agents and to make sure the ICE agents aren't interfered with by,
you know, local citizens.
I guess just like to take it back to LA Taco and I guess like the original remit of,
of your blog and organization, like covering food, culture in LA, like how has like, how has like,
how has this affected both the economy and the culture of food in Los Angeles?
It's devastated it.
It's absolutely devastating.
Every business out there, look, and it's not just ice, you have to remember,
We just went through these devastating wildfires that wiped out two whole neighborhoods,
like not small neighborhoods, huge neighborhoods, Altadena and Pacific Palisades.
That just happened this year, earlier this year.
And then before that, we're still trying to figure out Hollywood.
Hollywood is like, was the main source of income for a lot of businesses.
People think it's just like it's just actors and writers that were affected.
No, Hollywood fed a lot of LA through catering events, through like side gigs, you know, props, lighting and grip.
people building stages, people that maintain the lots, all the side jobs.
I mean, a huge part of LA's economy was based on Hollywood here and all the extra things
that happened on the side.
So, yeah, you take the account the economy.
And then before that, we had the pandemic, of course, everybody suffered from the pandemic.
But we had pandemic.
We have Hollywood strike that we still haven't recovered from.
Hollywood has left.
They're in Atlanta.
They're in Australia.
They're in Scotland and Ireland.
They're filming in other parts, but L.A.
Then you had the fires.
And now you have ice.
And we are in a deficit now as a, as a city.
Most of our money now is going out to pay out lawsuits against the LAPD for brutalizing people at protests or not protests.
Like, we are in a real ship bind here.
Well, I mean, I wish I had a less grim way to end this episode.
I know.
I'll tell you this much, though.
I'll tell you this much.
As much of a shipbine we're in right now, L.A. is strong.
And the L.A. is resilient. And L.A. will get through this shit. And just as we have through every single
crisis in the past, we're going to get through this. And I believe in my Angelinos. And if anything,
all of this is bringing us closer together as a community, bringing ties together, the way people
are organizing and realizing that it really is going to be up to them to pull, you know, this city
together and get through all of this. Absolutely. I mean, L.A. is not my home. Basically,
half of our show lives in L.A. I'm in L.A. a lot. It's a wonderful city. It's one of my favorite places
in the world. It's one of the most unique American cities. And I believe, I believe you,
when you say L.A. is going to get through this. Yeah. Yeah, it will. All right. Memo Torres,
I really want to thank you for your time and all the work you've done. If any of our listeners
would like to support L.A. Taco or support any of these local, like, rapid response teams that you've
talked about. Like, what would you advise them to do? Yeah. At L.A. Taco, we could always use
to help, go to any of our link of bios on any of your social media apps and our pages.
You can drop a donation or you can become a member, you know, and if you become a member,
you get cool as merch.
We got the coolest merch out of anybody because we hire nothing but local artists to do the
merch, L.A. people.
So, yeah, you can support those two ways or you can just buy the merch, you know, if you don't
if you don't want to donate or be a member, get something out of it, get some of the merch.
And the rapid response groups, we're always shutting them out.
I'm always shutting them out in my daily memo.
the videos as who's out there.
And if you need resources
and want to figure out who these rapid response groups are,
go to laitaco.com slash ice.
We have a whole page full of resources
where you can volunteer.
If you need lawyers,
if you're a victim of these raids,
where you can get resources,
different immigration organizations
you can reach out to.
So yeah, we have it all there.
We're here and we're ready for L.A.
Once again, Memo Torres of L.A. Taco.
Really, thank you.
Thank you so much for your time today.
Hey, thank you for having much.
Appreciate it.
I appreciate the show too. Great job, guys. Thanks, man.
