Washington Post: Signs popping up around D.C. note: ‘ICE kidnapping happened here’

The signs range in style and mark numerous locations where people have been taken by federal agents.

The signs — nailed to trees or wrapped around electricity poles — have appeared across some of the District’s heavily immigrant neighborhoods, marking the anger in a majority-Democratic city where federal immigration arrests have escalated.

“ICE kidnapped a community member here,” reads one. “Never forget/no nos olvidamos,” says another.

Barbara McCann, a city resident for 25 years, created one in August after she came upon a crowd of shouting people and broken glass on the street in her Columbia Heights neighborhood, where federal law enforcement agents had pulled two men from their car.

“People were kidnapped here this morning by ICE or ?” she wrote on the sign. “BANG pots HERE tonight 8pm.”

McCann said later that she thought of “stumbling stones” in Europe, the brass-topped cobblestones that have been placed in front of the former homes and businesses of those who were killed in the Holocaust.

“They are targeting those who are least able to defend themselves, people without homes and people without documentation,” she said. “In the past, when there’s been great injustice, moral clarity takes a long time.”

D.C. has a long tradition of protesting, including the massive marches during President Donald Trump’s first administration. The recent neighborhood signs, more personal and isolated, follow an older tradition of simply bearing witness — in this case, to the arrests of immigrants who make up the fabric of some neighborhoods.

Since late August, when Trump’s 30-day crime emergency in D.C. was in full effect, more than 11 signs and posters memorializing those arrested have appeared in neighborhoods such as Columbia Heights or Brightwood in Northwest Washington.

It’s unclear how much coordination there is between the different sign makers. Some messages are printed on 18-by-24-inch yard signs or smaller placards; others are drawn ornately by hand on paper or written in chalk. The few who will talk about the signs they created say the urgency of the moment compelled them to act.

White House officials said in a statement last month that of more than 2,600 criminal arrests between Aug. 7 and Sept. 14, more than 1,000 involved “illegal aliens.” Attorney General Pam Bondi said D.C.’s lenient policies toward immigrants, which prohibited police from cooperating in ICE arrests, made the city more dangerous.

White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson told The Post in an email that ICE officers are facing an increase in assaults because of “untrue smears like false claims that they are ‘kidnapping’ people.’ ”

ICE has acted “heroically” and “with the utmost professionalism,” she said, and that those accusing agents of violating civil rights are sympathizing with undocumented immigrants and criminals.

Neighbors on Holmead Place in Columbia Heights say three masked agents in tactical vests tackled a man on the sidewalk in late August. As they struggled, onlookers gathered nearby, some with children dressed for the first day of school. According to five people who said they witnessed the event, the agents loaded the man into one of three unmarked cars with tinted windows and drove away.

In the days that followed, residents say they spotted a poster on Holmead Place NW, fastened by screws into a sycamore tree. It described the Aug. 25 arrest of “Angel H.” and the words “Never forget.”

Jacob Stokes, who witnessed the arrest with his wife that morning, came upon the sign while on a walk. Like McCann, he also thought of the stumbling stones and “remembering and associating an event with a particular place.”

“I’m not on the list of people who they’re coming for now,” he said. “It reminded me that those people are our neighbors.”

He and his family have lived in Columbia Heights since May. And he says it’s been quieter than other D.C. neighborhoods where he’s lived in previous years — until the past few months.

Jessica Loya remembers running down from her Brightwood apartment at the sound of a distressed voice outside her window on the morning of Aug. 22. She found her building’s handyman surrounded by three federal agents.

She said he told her in Spanish that he’d gone to his car to get a tool when he was stopped. She and others questioned the officers to understand why he had been approached.

“You can’t tell us what we’re going to do and what we’re not going to do,” a masked officer told Loya, according to video obtained by The Post. The video shows that officers shoved the handyman toward an unmarked vehicle and handcuffed him, then put him in a car and drove away.

Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security, said the handyman had entered the country illegally from Guatemala at an unknown date.

“ICE is not ‘kidnapping’ illegal aliens,” she said in an email. “These smears are leading to our officers facing a 1000% increase in assaults against them including terrorist attacks, cars being used as weapons, and bounties on their heads.”

The next day, Loya said she stared at the spot where the handyman had stood and added that the flashbacks of his disappearance were “unbearable.” She worked late into the night with Julio Obscura, an artist and friend, to design a sign.

At one point, she considered the monarch butterfly symbol often associated with migrant advocacy groups, but felt the positive feeling wasn’t fitting for the moment.

“What I was trying to capture here in the sign was this terror,” she said.

They settled on the black sign with bold white lettering: “ICE kidnapped a community member here.”

Loya ordered three at a cost of $297.86 and picked them up from a printer three days later. With her landlord’s blessing, she planted one of them next to her building and kept the others in case the first one was damaged or stolen.

Her voice buckled as she talked about the handyman’s family. His wife is terrified, she said, and his three children, who all are younger than 10, don’t understand what’s happened to their father.

Loya said she has been helping the family since he was detained, hoping to show them “not every U.S. citizen believes in what this administration is doing.”

Polling shows Americans overall are split on whether immigrants deported by the Trump administration should have been removed. A majority of D.C. residents oppose D.C. police helping with deportations, according to a Washington Post-Schar School poll.

Another man was working as an Uber driver when he was detained by federal agents and D.C. Police on 8th and Tuckerman Street the night of Aug. 26. Council member Janeese Lewis George (D-Ward 4) rushed to the intersection and began live-streaming the arrest.

Lewis George told The Post she couldn’t get information about the man at the time of his apprehension and was unable to locate him in nearby police precincts afterward. His car and phone were left behind, she said, so neighbors were able to make contact with a friend.

“There was a moment where, like, is this really happening to us?” Lewis George said. “I kept thinking, like, Oh, my God, are our neighbors going to have to end up in our basements and attics?”

Former Advisory Neighborhood Commission member Sophia Tekola — who said she spoke to the man in Amharic and has been in touch with his family — learned that he’d been detained in a facility outside Washington and was released the next day.

Loya, who saw Lewis George’s live stream of the arrest, rushed up the street that same night with her extra signs from the incident with her building’s handyman and approached a neighbor lingering nearby.

“I think it’s important to put these up,” Loya told the woman. The neighbor fastened the memorial to a tree in her yard, near the spot where the man had been arrested.

The next day, the council member took to social media and made a six-minute, 34-second video urging her followers to call their representatives. As Lewis George spoke, a photo of Loya’s black and white memorial was visible in the background.

Shows of disapproval and protest of Trump and his administration’s policies haven’t matched the volume seen in Trump’s previous term despite concerns about potential abuse of power. For people like Loya and McCann, who have spent years in a town known for its statues and monuments, the act of remembering those taken away isn’t just an act of empathy — it’s a signal.

McCann said she’s long had an interest in history. This moment in the city has made her reflect on what may lie ahead for it and the country, she said.

“What I always have on my mind is like, well, what’s next?” she said.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/politics/government/signs-popping-up-around-d-c-note-ice-kidnapping-happened-here/ar-AA1OgJh4

Latin Times: Support for Deporting Noncriminal Immigrants Slips as Public Backs Legal Protections: Poll

67% of respondents to the UMASS poll opposed separating undocumented immigrants from their children during enforcement proceedings

A growing share of Americans support legal protections for undocumented immigrants, while enthusiasm for broad deportations has declined, according to a new poll from the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

The poll found that 63% of respondents favored a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants. Only 37% supported deporting those without criminal records beyond immigration violations, and just 30% supported deporting undocumented immigrants who work full time and pay taxes.

Support for deporting immigrants with criminal records remains high, though it has softened slightly, dropping from 74% in April to 69% in July, the poll reveals. At the same time, 67% of respondents opposed separating undocumented immigrants from their children during enforcement proceedings, and 54% opposed deporting undocumented immigrants to foreign prisons.

Tatishe Nteta, a political science professor and director of the poll, said the findings suggest the Trump administration “should emphasize the detention and removal of undocumented immigrants with criminal records” if it wants to align with public sentiment.

Despite this stated focus, deportation records published by CBS News on July 16 show that many individuals removed under Trump’s second term did not have violent criminal records.

Between January 1 and June 24, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) deported approximately 100,000 people, of whom 70,583 were labeled as having criminal convictions. However, the vast majority of these were for traffic or immigration-related offenses. In fact, convictions for violent crimes were relatively rare: 0.58% for homicide, 1.2% for sexual assault, and 0.42% for kidnapping.

The administration has also touted its crackdown on gang-affiliated individuals, but only 3,256 of the deported individuals were identified as known or suspected gang members or terrorists.

In response to questions about enforcement priorities by CBS News, Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said ICE has now deported about 140,000 undocumented immigrants since Mr. Trump took office. She also added that 70% of those arrested by ICE were of “illegal aliens with criminal convictions or have pending criminal charges,” but declined to detail the nature of the convictions or criminal charges, or offer further specifics.

https://www.latintimes.com/support-deporting-noncriminal-immigrants-slips-public-backs-legal-protections-poll-588106

Real Clear Politics: Sen. Alex Padilla: If ICE Agents Don’t Have To ID Themselves, Why Wouldn’t You Think You’re Being Kidnapped?

California Democrat Sen. Alex Padilla, in response to a question about a group arrested for planning to attack an ICE facility in Texas, told CNN this morning: “I do have concern when there are no requirements for ICE agents or other federal agents involved with the immigration enforcement actions to not even identify themselves.”

“If you’re a member of a working-class immigrant community, and you see unmarked cars roll into your community, people getting out of those cars with no identifiers that they are law enforcement, and literally not just detaining, in your mind, maybe kidnapping,” he warned.

DANA BASH, CNN: Officials are looking for a suspect who appeared to fire a gun at a federal agent during a raid. A few days before that, 10 people were arrested after opening fire outside an immigration detention facility in Texas, injuring a police officer. Authorities say it was a planned ambush.

Earlier this week, a man with a rifle in tactical gear was shot dead after firing at Texas Border Patrol, at least the facility. Are you worried that heated rhetoric around this and around the policies are actually putting law enforcement agents at risk?

SEN. ALEX PADILLA: First, let me just denounce any violence. Any violence against law enforcement is unacceptable.

Do I think heated rhetoric is part of what’s causing this response? Sadly, yes. And we have seen this administration escalate and escalate and escalate in all ways and matters, whether it’s the tactics of — with which they’re going about immigration enforcement. There’s a smarter, more effective way to do this than what they’re doing.

BASH: Well, they say that it’s the Democrats’ rhetoric, some calling ICE agents secret police, comparing them to the Gestapo.

PADILLA: Well, I wouldn’t use those words, but I do have concern when there are no requirements for ICE agents or other federal agents involved with the immigration enforcement actions to not even identify themselves.

I mean, if you’re a member of a working-class immigrant community, and you see unmarked cars roll into your community, people getting out of those cars with no identifiers that they are law enforcement, and literally not just detaining, in your mind, maybe kidnapping.

So that’s why Senator Booker and I have this bill to require that identification for ICE agents or anybody involved with immigration enforcement. It’s for the safety of the officers and agents, as well as safety for the community… and to protect against people exploiting the circumstances, impersonating ICE agents and getting involved with burglary, theft, kidnapping, sexual assault and worse.

BASH: The president, as you know, says that they wear masks to protect their own identity from people who want to go after law enforcement.

https://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2025/07/13/sen_alex_padilla_if_ice_agents_dont_have_to_id_themselves_why_wouldnt_you_think_youre_being_kidnapped.html

The Grio: Trump admin ends legal protections for half-million Haitians who now face deportations- critics call it a “death sentence”

Advocates say sending 500,000 Haitians back to a nation overrun by gang violence and displacement is a death sentence.

The Department of Homeland Security said Friday that it is terminating legal protections for hundreds of thousands of Haitians, setting them up for potential deportation.

DHS said that conditions in Haiti have improved and Haitians no longer meet the conditions for the temporary legal protections.

Safe for whom?

The Department of State, nonetheless, has not changed its travel advisory and still recommends Americans “do not travel to Haiti due to kidnapping, crime, civil unrest, and limited health care.”

https://thegrio.com/2025/06/30/trump-admin-ends-legal-protections-for-half-million-haitians-who-now-face-deportations-critics-call-it-a-death-sentence

Associated Press: Trump administration ends legal protections for half-million Haitians who now face deportations

The Department of Homeland Security said Friday that it is terminating legal protections for hundreds of thousands of Haitians, setting them up for potential deportation.

DHS said that conditions in Haiti have improved and Haitians no longer meet the conditions for the temporary legal protections.

The termination of temporary protected status, or TPS, applies to about 500,000 Haitians who are already in the United States, some of whom have lived here for more than a decade. It is coming three months after the Trump administration revoked legal protections for thousands of Haitians who arrived legally in the country under a humanitarian parole program, and it is part of part of a series of measures implemented to curb immigration.

https://apnews.com/article/tps-trump-immigration-haiti-temporary-ce021d96aeb81af607fcd5c7f9784c3b

That’s just one big lie (seem to get a lot of them out of the Trump administration). Here is the Dept. of State’s current travel advisory for Haiti:

Updated to reflect additional information on crime.

Do not travel to Haiti due to kidnappingcrimecivil unrest, and limited health care.

Country Summary: Since March 2024, Haiti has been under a State of Emergency. Crimes involving firearms are common in Haiti. They include robbery, carjackings, sexual assault, and kidnappings for ransom. Kidnapping is widespread, and U.S. citizens have been victims and have been hurt or killed. Kidnappers may plan carefully or target victims at random, unplanned times. Kidnappers will even target and attack convoys. Kidnapping cases often involve ransom requests. Victims’ families have paid thousands of dollars to rescue their family members. 

Protests, demonstrations, and roadblocks are common and unpredictable. They often damage or destroy infrastructure and can become violent. Mob killings and assaults by the public have increased, including targeting those suspected of committing crimes.  

The airport in Port-au-Prince can be a focal point for armed activity. Armed robberies are common. Carjackers attack private vehicles stuck in traffic. They often target lone drivers, especially women. As a result, the U.S. embassy requires its staff to use official transportation to and from the airport.

Do not cross the border by land between Haiti and the Dominican Republic due to the threat of kidnapping and violence. These dangers are present on roads from major Haitian cities to the border. The U.S. embassy cannot help you enter the Dominican Republic by air, land, or sea.  U.S. citizens who cross into the Dominican Republic at an unofficial crossing may face high immigration fines if they try to leave. The U.S. Coast Guard has concerns about security in the ports of Haiti. Until those are addressed, the Coast Guard advises mariners and passengers traveling through the ports of Haiti to exercise caution.

 The U.S. government is very limited in its ability to help U.S. citizens in Haiti. Local police and other first responders often lack the resources to respond to emergencies or serious crime. Shortages of gasoline, electricity, medicine, and medical supplies are common throughout the country. Public and private medical clinics and hospitals often lack trained staff and basic resources. In addition, they require prepayment for services in cash.

U.S. government personnel are subjected to a nightly curfew and are prohibited from walking in Port-au-Prince. Personnel movement is restricted throughout Haiti. U.S. government personnel in Haiti are also prohibited from:

  • Using any kind of public transportation or taxis. 
  • Visiting banks and using ATMs. 
  • Driving at night. 
  • Traveling anywhere after dark. 
  • Traveling without prior approval and special security measures in place.

Read the country information page for additional information on travel to Haiti.   

If you decide to travel to Haiti: 

  • Avoid demonstrations and crowds. Do not attempt to drive through roadblocks. 
  • Arrange airport transfers and hotels in advance, or have your host meet you upon arrival. 
  • Do not give personal information to unauthorized people to include those without uniforms or credentials. Individuals with bad intent may frequent areas at the airport, including near immigration and customs. 
  • If you are being followed as you leave the airport, drive to the nearest police station immediately. 
  • Travel by vehicle to reduce walking in public. 
  • Travel in groups or at least do not travel alone. 
  • Always keep vehicle doors locked and windows closed when driving. 
  • Be cautious and alert. This is especially important when driving through markets and other crowded areas. 
  • Do not fight back during a robbery. It increases the risk of violence and injury to you. 
  • Purchase travel insurance with medical evacuation coverage ahead of time. 
  • Review information on Travel to High-Risk Areas. 
  • Enroll in the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP) to receive Alerts and make it easier to locate you in an emergency. 
  • Follow the Department of State on Facebook and X/Twitter. 
  • Review the Country Security Report on Haiti. 

Prepare a contingency plan for emergency situations. Review the Traveler’s Checklist.

https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/traveladvisories/traveladvisories/haiti-travel-advisory.html