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Racist Neighbors from Hell

Bessie T. Dowd by Bessie T. Dowd
January 26, 2026
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Racist Neighbors from Hell

‘It’s like they’re hunting’: US citizens and legal residents report increase in racial profiling by ICE

Trump administration’s immigration crackdown has led some people to take drastic measures to ensure their safety

It was a normal Tuesday morning for Mohamed when he left his San Diego, California, house for his daily exercise in mid-January. But as he walked around the Colina del Sol park, four US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents approached and encircled the middle-aged father, who is using a pseudonym out of fear of retaliation from federal agents. The officers, Mohamed said, who wore jackets with ICE emblazoned on them and balaclavas that obscured their faces, asked for his green card before they began drilling him with questions about what he was doing in the park.

“I was terrified,” Mohamed, a lawful permanent resident from Somalia, said through a translator. The ordeal ended shortly thereafter, but the experience has left a lasting impact on him. “I have high blood pressure,” Mohamed said about the encounter he believes was based on racial profiling. “I used to do my daily exercises; now I don’t even do that any more because I’m scared.”

The Guardian spoke to several US citizens and legal permanent residents who said that they were racially profiled by ICE and US Customs and Border agents in recent weeks following the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown that has swept the nation. The incidents have led to lasting stress, they said, with some of them taking drastic measures to ensure their safety including sleeping with their passports, or only traveling at night. They feel they have little recourse to hold the agents accountable for what they perceive as mistreatment.

child wearing plaid shirt and blue stands in front of car

Community organizers told the Guardian that federal agents have targeted the Black and brown neighborhoods that they serve in Minnesota, New York, Washington state, California and Illinois. And immigration enforcement agents have patrolled Home Depot stores, mosques, daycares, street vending areas and construction sites. As a result, organizations have increased training to prepare people if they are detained, have equipped businesses with signs attempting to ward off ICE and have offered whistles to residents so that they can alert their neighbors when federal agents are nearby.

In recent weeks, the Trump administration has focused its immigration-enforcement efforts on Somalis. About 2,000 ICE officers and 800 US Customs and Border Protection agents have been deployed in the Minneapolis area, which has the largest Somali population in the US. The Trump administration also began arresting immigrants in Maine this month, with a focus on the thousands of Somalis who have settled in the state beginning in the early 2000s. Additionally, it announced that in March it would end the temporary protected status designation for Somalis in the US, which has provided work authorization and protection from deportation for migrants from the country.

The main recourse for challenging racial profiling is through the Federal Tort Claims Act, which allows people to sue the federal government for harm caused by federal employees, said Thomas A Saenz, the president and general counsel at the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund. But a recent supreme court ruling may have complicated how racial-profiling allegations are handled. In September 2025, supreme court justices allowed immigration enforcement agents in southern California to interrogate anyone who they thought may be in the country illegally, and noted that perceived race or ethnicity can be a relevant factor along with others.

In recent months, the amount of people held in detention reached an all-time high. As of 8 January 2026, ICE held 68,990 people in detention, according to data published by the agency. “Anytime you impose a target for a number of arrests and detention, you’re going to encourage the use of unconstitutional shorthands like racial profiling,” Saenz said. “It’s not at all clear that this administration cares whether they’re in compliance with the constitution or not.”

“Allegations that ICE engages in ‘racial profiling’ are disgusting, reckless and categorically FALSE. This type of garbage is contributing to our officers facing a more than 1,300% increase in assaults against them,” said Tricia McLaughlin, the Department of Homeland Security’s spokesperson, in an email to the Guardian. “A person’s immigration status makes them a target for enforcement, not their skin color, race or ethnicity. Law enforcement uses ‘reasonable suspicion’ to make arrests, as allowed under the fourth amendment to the US constitution. The supreme court has already vindicated us on this position.”

‘Anybody could snatch him off the street’

Last month, Fernando was driving on a two-way street in Nebraska when he said that he was pulled over by ICE agents in the morning. They told Fernando, a US citizen who is only using his first name out of fear of retaliation, that he fit the description of a Hispanic male whom they were looking for. The four officers interrogated him over the course of an hour, he said.

“As soon as it happened, I kind of laughed it off,” Fernando said. “I was kind of like, ‘This is pretty funny.’ You don’t expect it to happen to you until it does.” But after he gave them his Real ID, he said they became visibly irritated and insinuated that it was fake. A veteran, Fernando shared his name, rank, branch of service and social security number, but he said the officers were unfazed. They demanded that he step out of the car, Fernando said, and as he did so, they threw him to the ground and laid their body weight on top of him. They yelled that he was interfering with an investigation, as Fernando continued to ask what they were looking for. Not long after, he said that the agents stood up, threw his ID to the ground, flipped him off and drove away.

The incident rattled Fernando. He said he becomes anguished whenever he sees a Dodge Durango with tinted windows – the same car that stopped him that day. Now he tries to only travel at night so that he won’t be targeted by agents during the day.

“It feels like a slap in the face. I gave nine years of my life to a country for me to be racially profiled and be questioned about my citizenship. It makes me emotional. It makes me feel like all of that was in vain,” Fernando said. “One of the guys that stopped me was a younger Hispanic guy, and it was like, ‘Hey, we’re supposed to be on the same team. I don’t understand why you would become the aggressor.’”

Over the past few weeks, he said that he’s called the US Department of Homeland Security office in Nebraska or ICE every couple of days to try to report the incident, but that he’s never received a call back. “It makes it a lot more difficult to report,” Fernando said, “than it does to actually try to chase down a ghost.”

In Tampa, Florida, Sara, who is of Persian descent, said that she believes ICE officials followed her because they perceived her as Latina. In March 2025, Sara, a US-born citizen who is using a pseudonym out of fear of being further targeted, said that a white SUV followed her car upwards of 15 times for a month. “It was extremely rattling,” Sara said, “to the point where I carried our passports with us everywhere and then even started to sleep with them. I felt very fearful because of what was going on in Tampa and what it seemed like was racial profiling and me looking like I’m of Hispanic background.”skip past newsletter promotion

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Sara said she eventually stopped being followed, but that the experience greatly affected her mental health – as it was happening, she couldn’t sleep or eat, and her hair began falling out. “I do worry about our nation and about the rights of people,” Sara said. “How things are being approached with such violence, that’s very frightening to me.

a person wearing a badge

In Maryland, the threat of immigration enforcement led one family to change their daily routine to ensure their children’s safety. Kate, a European woman who is a US citizen and is using a pseudonym, is the guardian of four Guatemalan teens. During the winter and spring of 2025, she began walking the youngest child, a fifth grader, to school because she feared that he might be targeted by immigration enforcement agents due to his appearance.

“[ICE agents] were threatening to come to schools and to come into neighborhoods and I was really worried for a while,” Kate said. “At that time he was 11. He’s a little kid. Anybody could snatch him off the street.” Now that he’s in sixth grade, Kate said that she allows the child to walk to school with his older cousins. But she’s still worried that the children’s biological family could be detained by ICE.

Organizations throughout the nation have come to refugees and immigrants’ aid by offering them support in areas where federal agents have been known to patrol. Any Huamani, an immigration defense coordinator at the Brighton Park Neighborhood Council in Chicago, said that her non-profit has hosted more than 50 “know your rights” trainings in the area since Trump took office last year. Since ICE launched Operation Midway Blitz, its immigration crackdown in Chicago last fall, Huamani said that she has seen an uptick in racial profiling of Black and brown community members. In October, she said that she witnessed two Spanish-speaking people be abducted by ICE back-to-back within a couple of minutes.

The organization has set up a table outside of Home Depot to help day laborers by offering them information about what to do if they’re detained, as well as hand warmers, toe warmers and whistles so that they can warn people when they see ICE.

In Minnesota, the sound of whistles wafts through the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood, as community members alert their neighbors that ICE agents are patrolling the area. Volunteers in green vests are stationed near mosques and Somali-owned businesses in the area, which has a large Somali population, said Suleiman Adan, the deputy executive director at Cair Minnesota, a Muslim civil rights organization.

Adan said that community members have also shared that ICE has patrolled the Karmel Mall, where many Somalis frequent. “It’s like you’re looking for game,” he said about ICE’s tactics. “It’s like you’re hunting; who can I prey on today?”

“Right now, it’s like ‘to hell with the constitution’,” said Adan. “Freedom for whom is really the question.”

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Lionel Richie Once Befriended a Racist Neighbor in Tuskegee: ‘Talk to People with Assumptions About You’

The Grammy winner and ‘American Idol’ judge recalls a tense discussion with a man from “down the hill” that led to a long friendship in new memoir ‘Truly’

By 

Janine Rubenstein

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Lionel Richie Memoir
Truly by Lionel Richie, Lionel Richie.Credit : HarperOne;Dennis Leupold

NEED TO KNOW

  • Lionel Richie’s new memoir Truly shares never-before-told stories of his life before and after fame
  • He writes that one of his white neighbors in Tuskegee, Alabama admitted to having negative views of Black people
  • Richie details what he did to change this neighbor’s mind and how that moment changed both of their lives

Lionel Richie has always wanted to make peace and spread love.

The Grammy-winning American Idol judge, 76, who hails from Tuskegee, Alabama, opens up like never before in his new memoir Truly, out now. Reflecting on life both in the spotlight and in the deep South, Richie describes one instance where he befriended a white neighbor who admitted to having racist views of Black town members, and what they both learned from the meaningful encounter.

“Whenever I needed a reminder of the values that raised me, I went back to Alabama — ­where I was seen as the hometown boy done good,” writes Richie, who after hitting it big with his group The Commodores, purchased a home in Tuskegee with first wife Brenda.

Lionel Richie and Brenda Harvey attend Share Boomtown Party on May 21, 1988 at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium in Santa Monica, California.
Lionel Richie and Brenda Harvey in Santa Monica in May 1988.Ron Galella Collection via Getty

“This modern home, only about five years old, was near the Tuskegee Lake in an area where, rumor had it, members of the Klan were around back in the day,” he notes. “The closest neighbor was Bill — we’ll call him — ­whose little girl always waved at me whenever I came or left.”

Richie describes that late one night, he was returning from California and accidentally set off the alarm at his house. Suddenly Bill and a relative appeared to see what was happening. Both were carrying guns.

“Under normal circumstances, two white guys at 4 a.m. walking up with shotguns would freak my ass out,” he writes, “But in this case, I am happy to see them. Bill and his granddaddy wait as the police officer arrives.”

After the encounter Richie says he and Bill became friendly and he even introduced him to Kenny Rogers, for whom he famously wrote the hit song “Lady.”

Lionel Richie and kenny rogers
Kenny Rogers and Lionel Richie in Las Vegas in April 2012.Ethan Miller/Getty

“Can you even imagine the look on Bill’s face after Kenny Rogers flew to Tuskegee for a visit and we went down and knocked on Bill’s door? I swear to God, Bill just stood there as if Kenny had arrived in a golden chariot sent from heaven. We visited and then Kenny left, and I was now Bill’s most worthy up-­ the-­hill neighbor.”

But one day, Richie got confirmation of Bill’s prejudices.

“I got to talking to him one evening, and because we were getting along so well, I had to ask, ‘Bill, do you know the mayor of Tuskegee?'” writes Richie. “‘Oh, hell no, I don’t know him,’ he said, an indication that this was taboo territory. Going further I asked if he’d ever met any community leaders, like the president of the university. He said, ‘Oh, no, I don’t know anybody up there, Lionel.'”

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With that, Richie, who grew up up-the-hill and graduated from the historically Black university that anchored the town, decided to show Bill what he and those “down-the-hill” had been missing.

One Sunday afternoon the star invited Bill and his daughter, along with the mayor and other Black members of the greater Tuskegee community, for a pool party in his backyard.

Lionel Richie - Tuskegee
Tuskegee Album Cover by Lionel Richie.Courtesy Mercury Nashville

“And we sat there in the pool, the little jacuzzi part, and we were all sitting there laughing and joking, telling stories,” he recalls. Afterwards, once the others had left, he and his neighbor had a deep conversation.

“I looked over at Bill, who had the most puzzled expression. He said, ‘Lionel, I got a problem,'” writes Richie. “‘I had a great time, Lionel…I gotta tell you, I’m a little confused. I feel like I been lied to.'”

Knowing he was referring to the racist beliefs he held, Richie says he responded, “‘No, Bill,’ I said. ‘You haven’t been lied to…You’re just the first of your generation that can see it for yourself and not fall for the stories that you’ve heard about Black folks.'”

Al Jarreau, Lionel Richie, Kenny Rogers, Cindy Lauper, Bruce Springsteen, James Ingram, Bob Dylan, Dionne Warwick, Ray Charles and others sing 'We Are The World', a song written to benefit famine victims in Ethiopia, 28th January 1985
Al Jarreau, Lionel Richie, Kenny Rogers, Cyndi Lauper, Bruce Springsteen, James Ingram, Bob Dylan, Dionne Warwick, Ray Charles and others sing ‘We Are The World’, a song written to benefit famine victims in Ethiopia in January 1985.Mohamed Amin/Camerapix/Getty

It was a powerful moment among friends, that the “We Are the World” co-writer says deeply impacted his outlook.

“This was the dawning of my knowledge of a plan for my life that I’d missed up until now,” he writes. “I saw it with Bill — ­that if you don’t talk to people with assumptions about you, then they can only fall for the stories they’ve been told. If they don’t talk to you, then you will only fall for the stories you’ve been told.”

Truly by Lionel Richie is available now, wherever books are sold.

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