The woman is screaming. Her husband is on the ground, pinned by armed federal agents in tactical vests. Just moments earlier, they were walking out of their Los Angeles apartment, preparing to meet with their pastor, when masked ICE agents descended with zip ties and arrest warrants. Within minutes, both are in custody. The woman, visibly shaken, collapses into a panic attack and is rushed to UCLA Medical Center in a government vehicle. Her only crime? Fleeing religious persecution in Iran and seeking asylum under U.S. law.
Want to Know Your Rights?
Download a free digital copy of the U.S. Constitution—the same document Trump is trying to bulldoze. Learn exactly what he's breaking… and how to fight back.
📬 Stay Informed. Stay Loud.
Subscribe to The Coffman Chronicle for no-BS political analysis, action guides, and weekly truth bombs you won’t get from corporate media.
This isn’t a scene from a dystopian film or a country ruled by fear. It happened on a quiet Tuesday in West Los Angeles. And the people being hauled away weren’t criminals. They were Christians, Farsi-speaking converts who left behind a life of fear in the Islamic Republic of Iran. They came here legally through the U.S. government’s own asylum system. They were following the rules.
And yet, in full view of their neighbors and church community, they were treated like enemies of the state.
In an era of mass deportations and revived immigration crackdowns, the federal government has crossed a chilling new line: arresting people of faith who sought refuge in the very country that once promised to protect them. The arrests, filmed by a stunned local pastor, have gone viral, sparking moral outrage, legal challenges, and urgent questions about what America stands for when it treats the persecuted as pariahs.
Fleeing Iran’s Theocracy for Religious Freedom
In the Islamic Republic of Iran, converting from Islam to Christianity is not only dangerous; it’s potentially deadly. While Iran’s constitution nominally recognizes certain religious minorities, in practice, the regime draws a hard line between tolerated ethnic Christianity and convert Christianity, especially converts from Islam, who are often treated as traitors to the state and enemies of the faith.
House churches are illegal. Bibles in Farsi are banned. Known converts are routinely harassed, detained, and tortured. Some face charges like “acting against national security” or “apostasy,” punishable by long prison sentences or worse.
According to advocacy groups like Open Doors and Article18, Iran ranks among the worst nations on Earth for Christian persecution. In 2024 alone, over 120 Iranian Christians were reportedly arrested during house church crackdowns.
Faced with these threats, many flee. Some make it to the United States through legal channels like the CBP One app, seeking asylum under a system that promises protection for those with a well-founded fear of religious persecution.
But in 2025, even following the law isn’t enough to escape suspicion.
Lawful Status, Unlawful Treatment
What makes these arrests especially jarring isn’t just the force used; it’s the fact that the individuals taken into custody were not undocumented. They entered legally through CBP One, appeared at their port-of-entry appointments, and were paroled into the U.S. to pursue asylum. They checked in with ICE. They filed paperwork. They obeyed the law.
And still, they were dragged off the street like fugitives.
DHS offered a vague explanation: the couples were “flagged as national security concerns.” No evidence. No charges. No due process. Just a label.
Legal experts warn this marks a dangerous erosion of refugee protections. Under both U.S. and international law, asylum seekers cannot be punished or detained arbitrarily while their claims are pending. But under Trump’s DHS, “national security” is being redefined into a catch-all for racially profiled and politically inconvenient migrants.
But following the law no longer guarantees safety, not under this administration.
ICE’s Shifting Strategy: From Deterrence to Domination
These arrests are not aberrations. They are the product of a revived and radicalized enforcement strategy, one focused on optics over law and punishment over policy.
ICE agents now use routine check-ins and residential surveillance to arrest the very people their own systems invited in. This isn’t about evasion. It’s about escalation.
Across the country, vulnerable populations—Afghan interpreters, Haitian earthquake survivors, Palestinian students—are suddenly being reclassified as threats, their paperwork discarded like old receipts.
“This isn’t enforcement, it’s intimidation,” said Pastor Ara Torosian, who filmed one arrest. “We opened our church to people who were fleeing for their lives. Now they’re being hunted in the streets by the very government they trusted.”
The tactics are deliberate. Agents wore masks. Pastors were sidelined. And the message was clear: we can take you at any time.
But the harm didn’t stop with those arrested.
Silencing the Church: Spiritual Leadership Under Siege
Pastor Ara Torosian never expected to go viral, but when he filmed a congregant collapsing during an ICE arrest, he did what any shepherd would: he bore witness.
The consequences came fast. He says his phone was tapped. ICE agents revisited his church. Other pastors called to say they were backing off refugee support out of fear.
“We teach forgiveness,” he said. “But how do you preach peace when your government treats prayer like provocation?”
Across the country, sanctuary churches are going quiet, not because they’ve lost faith, but because the state has made compassion a liability. Some have stopped hosting migrants. Others now demand legal waivers before offering shelter. A few are reverting to the underground models their members fled from in places like Tehran or Damascus.
The state may be silencing churches, but it’s also revealing its double standards.
A Tale of Two Refugees: White Evangelicals vs. Middle Eastern Converts
Consider the contrast.
In 2018 and 2023, white South African farmers claiming “reverse persecution” were swiftly welcomed to the U.S., granted visas, housing, and even evangelical sponsorships. Conservative media praised them. Politicians posed with them.
Now compare that to Iranian Christians: brown-skinned, Farsi-speaking, legally present, and arrested.
One group got sanctuary. The other got shackles.
The Trump-era immigration system doesn’t just discriminate by legality. It discriminates by optics and allegiance. If you fit the white evangelical fantasy of victimhood, you’re welcome. If not, you’re a suspect.
“If these Christians were white, blonde, and carried Bibles in English, ICE wouldn’t have touched them,” said Nahid Jabbari, a legal interpreter and former refugee. “Their crime was being the wrong kind of believer.”
That’s not just hypocrisy. It’s apartheid logic, wrapped in bureaucracy.
The Political Machine Behind the Raids & Echoes of a Darker History
These arrests weren’t random. They are the fruit of a political machine, one rebuilt under Trump to punish dissent and criminalize outsiders.
Masked raids. Secret designations. Faith-based persecution under the banner of “security.” We’ve seen this before.
In 1930s Germany, Jews and dissidents were arrested under the guise of “public order.” Churches were co-opted or crushed. Faith became regulated. Surveillance became moralized.
And now, in 2025, we are watching that same blueprint unfold, one redacted DHS memo at a time.
“You don’t wake up in a fascist state,” said historian Eleni Karidis. “You slide into it.”
So, where are the defenders of the persecuted now?
The Moral Crisis: Where Are the ‘Religious Freedom’ Defenders Now?
"When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross." — attributed to Sinclair Lewis
The silence from the Christian Right is deafening.
The very people who built careers crying “war on Christmas” have nothing to say about Christians being arrested outside churches. Why? Because these believers don’t fit the mold. They’re not white. They’re not politically convenient.
This isn’t about religious liberty anymore. It’s about tribalism disguised as faith.
“If your definition of religious freedom excludes Iranian Christians, it’s not freedom — it’s tribalism,” said Rev. Sarah Linton. “This is a moral crisis. And silence is betrayal.”
Silence is not the end of the story. Resistance is already rising.
What Comes Next: Legal Battles, Protests, and Sanctuary Resistance
Attorneys have filed emergency habeas petitions. Church coalitions are mobilizing. Interfaith vigils are planned at detention centers. Bills are being drafted. Protests are being organized.
The pastor’s video has reached over 6 million views.
None of this guarantees justice, but it guarantees a fight. The fight exposes the cracks in the system and the courage of those who refuse to look away.
This is a referendum on what America claims to be.
A Nation of Faith, or Fear?
This is more than an immigration story. It's a moral reckoning.
These arrests reveal who is protected and who is punished, who is welcomed and who is erased.
If America can arrest Christians fleeing religious persecution, outside their homes, in the arms of their pastors, then what does it really stand for?
We must choose.
A nation of faith that protects the persecuted?
Or a nation of fear that punishes the faithful?
The church is watching. The world is watching. And history is already taking notes.
We just hit 17,000 subscribers—thank you!
Get exclusive access for just $1/week or $52 a year.
Get exclusive analysis and fearless reporting you won’t find in corporate media.
Bibliography
“U.S. Arrests 11 Iranians in U.S. Illegally, Homeland Security Says,” Reuters, June 24, 2025.
Andy Olsen, “ICE Goes After Church Leaders and Christians Fleeing Persecution,” Christianity Today, June 26, 2025.
“Immigration Officers Arrest Iranian Asylum‑Seekers in Los Angeles,” Reuters, June 27, 2025.
“Chaos as ICE Arrests Iranian Couple in LA, Woman Suffers Panic Attack,” YouTube video (uploaded by NBC LA, June 25, 2025).
“‘We Fled Because of Our Faith’: LA Pastor Says ICE Detained Iranian Christians Who Fled Persecution,” FOX11 Los Angeles, June 26, 2025.
“At a Basement ICE Detention Facility, Clergy Face Barriers to Visit Congregants,” Christianity Today, July 1, 2025.
The Guardian, “Iranian Woman, Who Has Lived in U.S. for 47 Years, Taken by ICE While Gardening,” June 27, 2025.
Associated Press, “After Decades in the U.S., Iranians Arrested in Trump’s Deportation Drive,” June 29, 2025.
The church as an institution was also too cowardly to stand up to Hitler. Only individual priests did so. Church and dictatorships. That often goes together.
The new three Rs of America: Racism, Religion, ‘n Radicalism