After a 15 -year -old boy who suffers from a disability outside a local secondary school by federal agents this week in a wrong identity, education leaders fear that many families will keep their children away from the fear of immigration raids.
This incident reveals at about 9:30 am on Monday, just a few days before more than half a million students from Lausd students returned to the classroom. According to the director of the Los Angeles Unified School Alberto Carvalho, the student – who is attending San Fernando Secondary School – went to Arlita Hai with his grandmother to accompany a relative of lessons.
The fearful boy was removed from the car and placed on handcuffs, although after the school staff and the Los Angeles Police administration intervened, he was released.
“The issuance will not be released from what he lived,” Carvalho said during a press conference. “The shock will continue. It will not stop. It is unacceptable, not only in our society, but anywhere in America.”
In a statement issued on Tuesday, officials of the Internal Security Ministry said that they were in the area to detain Salvadori with relations with the violent MS-13 gang and that “the allegations that the border patrol targeted the wrong Arlita School is wrong.”
Education leaders gathered from many educational areas in southern California this afternoon to reassure angry parents that their children are safe at school.
“No child can learn if he lives in fear,” said Stephanie Castaneda, Chairman of the Centenle County and Valley Secondary County. “Our schools must be safe havens.
Doris Martins, one of the parents of a child at Lusd School, told KTLA that she considered what happened to the 15 -year -old boy as a shame by federal officials.
One of the parents, who was only identified as iPhone, chanted the feelings and said that the alleged wrong identity was annoying.
“I was very upset because our children should not go through this and their fear of coming to school,” she explained.
District officials who attended an event on Tuesday said they intended to fight to keep federal agents away from the campus and southern California school, while Lausd officials stated that when the classes begin on Thursday, the school police, employees and volunteers will establish a safe area around many universities.
During the Tuesday event, the legislator in the state pledged at least, Al Muratsuchi, to protect students.
“California School Acts, Huffles [is] He said: “To keep the ice outside our schools, all students, regardless of the state of immigration, have the right to general education.”
In the next fall, Lausd explained that they are providing online lessons to any students who are afraid to return to the campus.