On a greenhouse rooftop in Camarillo, California, a young farmworker named Jaime Alanis fell thirty feet while trying to flee an ICE raid, and later died. Hours later, a federal judge ruled that the same raids violated constitutional rights. Meanwhile, a Gallup poll revealed that nearly 8 in 10 Americans, including a growing share of Republicans, now believe immigration is good for the country.
This 48-hour period has been a whirlwind of tragedy, legal reckoning, and shifting public sentiment, a snapshot of America’s fraught but evolving relationship with immigration.
Nuccio DiNuzzo/Getty
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The Courts Push Back
The judiciary sent a powerful message this week: the Constitution still matters.
In Los Angeles, a federal judge halted ICE’s aggressive “roving raids” across Southern California after finding that agents unlawfully relied on race, language, and location as stand‑ins for probable cause, in violation of the Fourth Amendment. The order also mandated better access to legal counsel for detainees, a crucial protection given the chaotic, indiscriminate nature of the enforcement operations. The judge wrote that the Trump administration “is indeed conducting roving patrols without reasonable suspicion and denying access to lawyers.”
At the same time, Florida’s Senate Bill 4‑C, signed into law by Governor Ron DeSantis in February, was struck down in federal court. The law had sought to criminalize undocumented presence in the state by imposing mandatory jail time, stripping bail options, and even introducing death penalty clauses for some severe violations. The court found the law unconstitutional, and the Supreme Court refused to lift the block, reaffirming that immigration enforcement is the purview of the federal government, not individual states.
Perhaps most strikingly, on July 10th, a federal judge in New Hampshire blocked Donald Trump’s executive order revoking birthright citizenship, and did so despite the Supreme Court’s recent ruling limiting “universal injunctions.” Readers of our earlier coverage may recall that lower courts are no longer permitted to impose nationwide injunctions that go beyond the plaintiffs before them. But Judge Laplante carefully crafted his ruling by certifying the plaintiffs as representatives of a nationwide class of affected children. This class‑action approach allowed him to grant relief to all members of that class — effectively nationwide — while staying within the Supreme Court’s new constraints.
See our reporting on nationwide injunctions here:
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The Human Toll of Enforcement
Even as the courts intervened, the human toll of these policies became tragically clear.
During the ICE raid at the Southern California cannabis farm on July 10th, tear gas and crowd‑control munitions sent workers scattering. Some were arrested. Others, like Jaime Alanis, ran, climbing onto a greenhouse roof where he fell to his death. The United Farm Workers confirmed his death the following day, calling it a preventable consequence of militarized enforcement that punishes workers while leaving employers largely untouched.
Jaime Alanis’s death is part of a broader — and largely invisible — toll. While deaths during raids like his are rare and often uncounted, ICE’s own records show at least 13 people have died in detention or during transport already this year. Our earlier reporting explores this tragic pattern of preventable deaths in custody, a stark reminder of the human cost of militarized immigration policy.
See our reporting on ICE deaths here:
Meanwhile, the Trump administration on Friday announced a sweeping new rule barring undocumented immigrants from receiving services under at least 44 federal programs. These include Head Start — which for decades has offered preschool, nutrition, and health services to vulnerable children regardless of status — as well as community health clinics, mental health services, substance‑use grants, adult education, and technical training. Advocates warn that this policy change will not only harm undocumented families but also intimidate U.S.-citizen children from participating in programs they remain legally entitled to, deepening fear and confusion across immigrant communities.
Communities Take Action
Communities themselves have also begun taking protective action in the face of these pressures.
Following security threats tied to immigration enforcement, Cal State LA on July 10th moved all classes online, prioritizing the safety of students and staff. Local Catholic parishes have similarly adapted, granting parishioners dispensations from in‑person Mass, encouraging livestream worship, and making special accommodations for elderly and vulnerable congregants. Also on July 10, Bishop Rojas of San Bernardino issued a broader decree encouraging parishioners fearful of enforcement to stay home. These choices reflect a quiet but resolute effort by local institutions to protect their people when official policy fails them.
Public Opinion Shifts
Perhaps the most striking development of all came not from the courts or the streets, but from public opinion.
According to a new Gallup poll released on Friday, 79% of Americans now say immigration is good for the country, the highest level in the poll’s 25‑year history. Republican support for immigration has surged, with the share of Republicans calling for reduced immigration dropping by 40 points since last year. Support for mass deportations has also fallen, and a clear majority now favors pathways to citizenship for the undocumented. These numbers underscore how far public sentiment has moved and how out of step punitive policy has become.
America at a Fork in the Road
The last two days’ developments — the courts defending constitutional boundaries, a tragic death on a rooftop, communities quietly shielding their members, and a public increasingly embracing immigration — offer a stark choice.
Will America continue down a repressive, exclusionary path? Or will we align our laws with our values of dignity, fairness, and opportunity?
The answer lies not only in the courts and legislatures but in our collective will to demand better.
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Bibliography:
“Cal State L.A. Allows Online Classes, Excused Absences as Students Express Fear amid ICE Raids.” Los Angeles Times, July 10, 2025.
“Cal State LA Lets Professors Move Classes Online Due to Student Fears over ICE Immigration Enforcement.” Fox News, July 11, 2025.
“California Bishop Dispenses Migrants from Mass Obligation Due to Raid Fears.” Vatican News, July 10, 2025.
“‘There Is a Real Fear Gripping Many in Our Parish Communities’.” Washington Post, July 11, 2025.
“One California Worker Dead, Hundreds Arrested after Cannabis Farm Raid.” Reuters, July 12, 2025.
“Worker Dies Following Immigration Raids on California Cannabis Farms.” Al Jazeera, July 12, 2025.
“Judge Blocks Trump’s Order Revoking Birthright Citizenship.” Politico, July 10, 2025.
“Judge Blocks Trump’s Birthright Citizenship Order after Supreme Court Ruling.” Reuters, July 10, 2025.
“New Trump Rule Immediately Bans Undocumented Immigrants from Head Start Child Care.” Los Angeles Times, July 10, 2025.
“US Widens Public Benefit Restrictions for Undocumented Immigrants.” Al Jazeera, July 10, 2025.
“Surge in U.S. Concern About Immigration Has Abated.” Gallup, July 11, 2025.
“Record‑High 79% of Americans Consider Immigration Good for the Country, Poll Finds.” Washington Post, July 11, 2025.
“Federal Judge Slaps Down ICE ‘Roving’ Arrests in Southern California.” Politico, July 11, 2025.
“Judge Orders Halt to Indiscriminate Immigration Operations in California.” Washington Post, July 11, 2025.
“Supreme Court Refuses to Allow Florida to Enforce New Anti‑Immigration Law.” Washington Post, July 9, 2025.
Troops turned on US citizens. ICE thugs chasing immigrants causing the death of one. Several people are presumed dead and still missing in the Texas flood. Thousands of government workers are losing their jobs. Whole swaths of government are shutting down. Or they're being crippled to the point of becoming dysfunctional. And t-Rump wants us to forget the Epstein files. The media has chosen to ignore the reality. But the world is watching. While the body count continues to climb.
Are immigrants welcome as fellow citizens, friends and neighbors or are they really just cheap and easily exploitable labor?
Anyway, ICE raids are cruel and inhumane.