Red card distributed at LAUSD schools. Photo by Andrew Lopez/Boyle Heights Beat.

This week, schools across the Los Angeles Unified School District began distributing “red cards,”  also known as “Know Your Rights” cards, to help people assert their rights and defend themselves if they encounter federal immigration agents.

The effort comes as the Trump administration announced Tuesday that it would allow Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to conduct arrests in sensitive areas such as schools and churches, dismantling policies dating back to 2011

Brooklyn Avenue School teacher Elisa Fonseca holds up a red card distributed at LAUSD schools. Photo by Andrew Lopez.

The cards, from the Immigrant Legal Resource Center, are red, about the size of a credit card and list directions on how to respond if approached by immigration agents.

Students at Roosevelt High School in Boyle Heights said they received cards on Thursday detailing their rights in both English and Spanish. 

Elisa Fonseca, who teaches at Brooklyn Avenue School in East Los Angeles, said she was glad to be passing out cards to students at her school where she estimates many may be a part of mixed-status families. She said her school received 200 cards and hoped they’d be getting more. 

Dr. Rocio Rivas, LAUSD School Board member representing many Eastside schools in District 2, said she had urged the district to provide schools with timely, accurate information and resources for students and their families, including red card distribution, “regardless of immigration status.” 

As part of its response, the district said it was providing training and resources to educators and also relaunched a 2017 initiative through a campaign called LA Unified 2025: We Are One, which offers resource guides, trainings and webinars for students and families. 

You can print your own Red Cards here in several languages. 

Andrew Lopez is a Los Angeles native with roots across the Eastside. He studied at San Francisco State University and later earned a master’s degree in journalism from the University of California, Berkeley. He returned to Los Angeles from the Bay Area to report for Boyle Heights Beat from 2023 to 2025 through UC Berkeley’s California Local News Fellowship. When he is not reporting, Lopez mentors youth journalists through The LA Local’s youth journalism program. He enjoys practicing photojournalism and covering the intersections of culture, history and local government in Eastside communities.

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