A screenshot from a video shows federal immigration agents detaining a man as a child sits in the back seat of a car.
A screenshot from a video shows federal immigration agents detaining a man as a child sits in the back seat of a car. (Video courtesy of the LA Tenants Union)

The grandmother of a 1-year-old who was separated from her father during an immigration enforcement operation at the Cypress Park Home Depot was in tears as she pleaded for her son’s return at a press conference on Wednesday. 

“Even though [my granddaughter] is safe now, she needs her father and I need my son back,” she said.

The woman, who only identified herself as Maria, said her son is a “kind and quiet person.” He is “the best dad,” she said.

The virtual press conference was held by the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA) and the LA Rapid Response Network, a day after a “targeted immigration enforcement operation” by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). 

DHS said the operation resulted in the arrests of five undocumented immigrants from Mexico and Guatemala. The agency said their criminal histories included driving under the influence, driving without a license, and previous removal from the country. 

“During the operation, a U.S. citizen exited his vehicle wielding a hammer and threw rocks at law enforcement while he had a child in his car,” DHS said in the statement. 

“He was arrested for assault and during his arrest a pistol was found in his car, that is reported stolen out of the state of New York. The individual has an active warrant for property damage,” the statement continued.

Though Maria declined to comment on the allegations made against her son during the press conference, she refuted DHS’s claims to the Los Angeles Times, saying she didn’t think he would throw rocks at anyone and believed the warrant was for graffiti.

Footage shared by the LA Tenants Union, which operates a community defense center outside the Cypress Park Home Depot, shows several agents surrounding and interrogating the man outside a black car, while the child was strapped to a car seat inside the vehicle.

Agents then escort the man in handcuffs, while another agent gets in the driver’s seat of the car, with the child still inside. 

Maria was in tears, describing what she saw in video footage of her son’s arrest. She said her son and granddaughter are U.S. citizens.

“There was no reason for ICE to abduct them. My son didn’t do anything from what we’ve seen in the videos. He was complying,” Maria said.

“He was fighting to not leave her, so they wouldn’t take her, to wait for someone to pick her up. They didn’t let him.” 

Maria said her son, who works in the restaurant business, was with her granddaughter at the Home Depot on his day off.

“Our family received a call from an unknown number. It was the Border Patrol asking to me to pick up my granddaughter,” she said. “We didn’t know what happened to her while she was in their care, and they wouldn’t give us information about when my son would be released, or where he was.”

Maria said she rushed to pick up her granddaughter around 10 a.m. on Tuesday, but was not able to take her home until 1 p.m. after she provided a birth certificate. The Los Angeles Times reported that the family was told to pick up the child at the federal building in downtown LA.

At the press conference, Maria said her family has not received any update on her son’s whereabouts. The family is still trying to find an attorney to represent him, she said. 

Maria did not specify where she picked up the girl. 

Jorge-Mario Cabrera, CHIRLA’s director of communications, denounced the operation.  

“This is insane what we are witnessing in this country. This should not be happening,” he said. “We have a grandmother here and a mother grieving and traumatized for what they saw and what they have experienced.”

Video of the arrest garnered tens of thousands of views on social media.

Viewers widely expressed shock and worry about the agents driving away with the child alone. In the comments of a video posted to TikTok, various people claiming to be the man’s family asked for more footage of the arrest.

On X, the Department of Homeland Security reposted a video of the arrest and wrote, “We refuse to apologize for enforcing the law.”

My background: I was part of the team that launched De Los, a new section of the Los Angeles Times exploring Latino identity. I’ve been a local reporter for The Press-Enterprise in Riverside, The San Gabriel Valley Tribune, and The Orange County Register. You can find my writing on religion, food, and culture in The Atlantic, Eater, the Associated Press, the Washington Post, and Religion News Service. My upbringing spans South Central, El Monte, and Pomona.

What I do: I write about how decisions surrounding immigration, city hall, schools, health, religion and culture impact Boyle Heights and East LA. I do this by spending time with residents and community members, reaching out to civic and elected leaders, and by analyzing related research. I also mentor Boyle Heights Beat youth journalists.

Why LA: It’s where I’m from. Reporting and living here means appreciating the different neighborhood identities that make up LA. Also, nothing beats walking along the LA River, hiking at Debs Park, or catching a sunset while running on the Sixth Street Bridge in Boyle Heights.

The best way to contact me: My email is alejandra.molina@boyleheightsbeat.org.

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.

My background: I’m originally from Fontana in the Inland Empire and have spent most of my career covering local news for Latino communities in Los Angeles. Most recently, I led coverage of the historic 2024 Latino vote in Nevada as editor of the Las Vegas Review-Journal en Español. Before that, I was the Bilingual Communities Reporter at the Long Beach Post, getting to know the city’s vibrant Spanish-speaking communities.

What I do: I cover topics that will help residents in Boyle Heights and East LA navigate and understand the issues they encounter in their everyday lives while also seeing themselves reflected in the stories we spotlight.

Why LA?: I have vivid memories of visiting El Mercadito in Boyle Heights with my family and indulging in gorditas, esquites and nieves de limón before our hour-long drives back to the IE. The struggles of underserved communities are felt across county borders and I’m eager to report on a community that reminds me of home.

The best way to contact me: My email is laura@boyleheightsbeat.org.

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