An LA day laborer was deported to Mexico. His dog was left behind

On September 25, Fernando Salazar, a 60-year-old day laborer, arrived at the Pomona Economic Opportunity Center as he had for years — with his two dogs, El Chapo and Pancho, trotting at his side. They were a familiar sight at the work center, where for decades Salazar found jobs along with other immigrant laborers, all shaping lives within a community that understood how fragile day-to-day survival could be.

But that morning, his routine collapsed in a matter of seconds.

As Salazar stepped onto the center’s grounds with the dogs, federal agents moved in. A video provided by Ana Martinez, the Day Labor Coordinator at PEOC, shows agents encircle Salazar and force him into plastic flex cuffs. Salazar was a man who had weathered recessions, shifting immigration policies, and who had watched generations of day laborers cycle through the center was suddenly gone—and his dogs, left behind,…

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS