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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
National
Andrea Castillo

How one arrest sent fear through immigrants in Los Angeles and left a family fighting to reunite

LOS ANGELES _ The air-conditioning system pumped cold air even during frigid winter nights on the high desert. To fall asleep under his thin blanket, Romulo Avelica Gonzalez, then 48, wore two pairs of socks, wrapped his feet in bath towels and tried to bring his mind to a warmer place.

In the blur between consciousness and dreaming, he found himself at home in Lincoln Heights, walking through his living room and kitchen, into the bedroom of his three youngest daughters, their breath rising and falling, fast asleep.

He woke up on a bunk bed behind bars.

After 25 years in California, Avelica was stuck in immigration detention, wondering when, or if, he would be reunited with his family.

Until that morning last year, he was part of the largely anonymous army of immigrant workers who are the economic backbone of Southern California _ cooking for nearly minimum wage to support his family's modest life. Then, his arrest made him national news, the subject of protests, vigils, prayers and countless articles.

The ensuing monthslong saga would galvanize a family and spread fear in one of L.A.'s oldest neighborhoods, becoming a very public test case of President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown. Many in Lincoln Heights wanted to know: What would happen to Romulo Avelica Gonzalez?

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