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Los Angeles – A restaurant owner outside Los Angeles opens with her Decision to help the police who were gaseous during riots outside his business on June 7.
Elizabeth Mendoza owns the La Ceiba restaurant, a Salvadoran restaurant Long Beach, Who told Fox News Digital that she had welcomed the police and demonstrators who entered her business to ask for help after being pulverized with pepper this Saturday afternoon.
“I feel sad because my city … it’s a good city,” she said. “My people are honest. My people must work a lot. I am here for 14 years. I know my people, and I feel bad … when I saw the police. The police need my help too, because they are human like me. They feel just like me.
“They must … work,” she said, adding that she had received thanks from the police for helping the officers that day
The anti-ice chaos from one ocean to the other took the camera
Elizabeth Mendoza is the owner of the La Ceiba restaurant, a Salvadoran restaurant in Long Beach, who told Fox News Digital that she had welcomed the police and the demonstrators who stopped by her business in search of help after being pulverized in pepper on June 7. (Derek trembled for Fox News Digital)
Mendoza first said that his restaurant had suffered because the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) The raids and the police presence in the region have made people “frightened” to walk. But now, her business is prosperous due to the positive attention she has received nationally for helping the officers.
She has lived in the United States for over 30 years and is a legal citizen.
The owner of the company said that recent riots and ice raids made her “sad” because immigrants as she wants “peace” and “work” in the United States.
Mendoza said his restaurant had suffered because the immigration and customs application raids and the police presence in the region have made people “frightened” to walk. (Derek trembled for Fox News Digital)
While foreigners have treated what she described as her restaurant “hole in the wall” with respect, Mendoza called the demonstrators to condemn violence against other local businesses.
“Everything is fine. I mean the protest is good,” she said. “But no[t] Something bad – the street, the windows. Please don’t do that. “”
Dozens of anti-ice riots arrested in los an
Mendoza said that she had received thanks from the police for helping police who had been sprayed at pepper on June 7. (Derek trembled for Fox News Digital)
Demonstrations degenerated in the Los Angeles region from June 6 and June 7, when the ice raids began through the county, which led to hundreds of arrests of illegal immigrants. The Department of Homeland Security shared information with Fox News on Some of the most violent offenders arrested By ice these two days.
The riots broke out on the evening of June 7, on Friday, as the agitators were burning cars, launched objects and fireworks to the police, blocked traffic, vandalized of public buildings with graffiti and broke the windows of the siege of the Los Angeles police service in the city center.
The face of a police officer is covered with pepper spray outside the metropolitan detention center in downtown Los Angeles on June 8, 2025, after an immigration raid demonstration. (Jae Hong)
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The riots continued the weekend and the evenings of the following week.