Sponsored message
Logged in as
Audience-funded nonprofit news
radio tower icon laist logo
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Subscribe
  • Listen Now Playing Listen
  • Listen Now Playing Listen

The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • CA report notes six deaths and strained resources
    A large low, beige building behind a barbed wire fence. In front of the building is a dirt lot.
    The California City Detention Facility, formerly known as the California City Correctional Facility, in California City in 2014.


    Topline:

    Six people died in California immigration detention centers over the past year as the crowded sites struggled to provide basic medical care, according to a new state investigation detailing conditions inside the facilities.

    The findings: The 175-page report released Friday offers the most detailed look to date inside the detention centers that are often in remote areas of the state and hard to access for attorneys, families, and advocates. It documents the highest death toll since the state began conducting inspections of the centers seven years ago. In 2024, there were zero deaths in California detention centers, according to the American Immigration Lawyers Association's list of Immigration and Customs Enforcement press releases tracking them, and the Attorney General’s office.

    Six deaths this year: In California, four of the deaths occurred at the Adelanto ICE Processing Center in San Bernardino County. Two other people died at the Imperial Regional Detention Facility near the U.S.-Mexico border in Calexico. In all four of the Adelanto cases, families of the deceased allege the facility failed to provide adequate medical care, the report states. Eighteen people have died in facilities this year across the country, around one person a week

    Go deeper: 'Being here breaks people': Inside solitary confinement at Adelanto

    Six people died in California immigration detention centers over the past year as the crowded sites struggled to provide basic medical care, according to a new state investigation detailing conditions inside the facilities.

    The 175-page report released Friday offers the most detailed look to date inside the detention centers that are often in remote areas of the state and hard to access for attorneys, families, and advocates.

    It documents the highest death toll since the state began conducting inspections of the centers seven years ago. In 2024, there were zero deaths in California detention centers, according to the American Immigration Lawyers Association's list of Immigration and Customs Enforcement press releases tracking them, and the Attorney General’s office.

    The deaths occurred as the Trump administration carried out a mass deportation campaign — starting in Los Angeles — that drove up the population inside detention centers by more than 150%.

    Eighteen people have died in facilities this year across the country, around one person a week. Since the start of the Trump administration, 48 people have died in detention. A study published last month in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that the current rate is nearly seven times higher than fiscal year 2023 levels at 88.9 per 100,000 people.

    In California, four of the deaths occurred at the Adelanto ICE Processing Center in San Bernardino County. Two other people died at the Imperial Regional Detention Facility near the U.S.-Mexico border in Calexico. In all four of the Adelanto cases, families of the deceased allege the facility failed to provide adequate medical care, the report states.

    The inspections by the California Department of Justice are required under a 2017 law enacted in response to concerns about conditions. Investigators and medical experts did two-day site visits at each facility and interviewed 194 people from more than 120 countries.

    Last year, inspectors focused on lapses in mental health care across the six facilities operating in California in the early months of the second Trump administration. This year, state investigators drilled in on how the dramatic surge in detainee populations strained conditions and access to medical care at all of the facilities now operating across California.

    Some detainees described only having beans and bread to eat, which gave them diarrhea, and extremely cold temperatures that caused them to try to turn their socks into extra arm sleeves. At one facility, investigators documented not enough toilets to serve the population, with detainees reporting dirty bathrooms.

    Several detainees cried as they relayed the conditions of their confinement in California City to state investigators. Most of the people detained have not been convicted of any crime.

    “This is cruel, inhumane, and unacceptable,” said California Attorney General Rob Bonta, adding that his office “worked tirelessly to shine a light” on the conditions.

    State investigators wrote that the detention centers had not increased medical staffing to match the dramatic rise in the number of detainees. At a new detention center that opened in a former state prison in California City last year, investigators described “crisis-level” medical staffing that contributed to delays in care. At the time, the center had only one physician for nearly 1,000 detainees.

    All of the detention centers are managed by private companies under contracts with the federal government. State investigators wrote that the companies and the federal agency are failing to meet their own standards of care.

    CalMatters reached out to ICE and the three private prison companies that operate facilities in California.

    A spokesperson for MTC, which operates the site in Imperial County, said the company takes the report seriously and is conducting a review of its findings. "Our focus is on the people in our care, the Imperial-specific findings, and the continued work of providing safe, humane, and standards-compliant care," said MTC spokesperson Emily Lawhead.

    Christopher V. Ferreira, a spokesperson for the private prison company GEO Group, in a written statement said detainees have access to "around the clock" medical care and other services.

    "In all instances, our support services are monitored by ICE, including by on-site agency personnel, and other organizations within the Department of Homeland Security to ensure compliance with ICE’s detention standards and contract requirements regarding the treatment and services ICE detainees receive," he said.

    Ryan Gustin, a spokesperson for the private prison company CoreCivic, said "all our immigration facilities where we provide healthcare adhere to federal detention standards, including staffing."

    Diminished civil rights protections

    State investigators also described in their report how the Trump administration rolled back federal protections for detainees.

    Since January 2025, the federal government has defunded legal programs to inform people of their rights, shut down Department of Homeland Security civil rights oversight offices, and stopped protections for transgender detainees, the report states.

    Immigration and Customs Enforcement stopped including congressionally mandated data on transgender people in its biweekly statistical reports in February 2025, the report says. The agency also removed from its website a policy memo that committed the agency to creating a safe environment for transgender people.

    Loba, a transgender woman from El Salvador who was detained at California City for six months in 2025, told CalMatters she experienced traumatizing sexual harassment and intimidation from guards while being housed in the male dorms. She asked CalMatters to only identify her by her first name because she fears retaliation for speaking about the conditions and for her safety in her home country.

    The situation was so stressful, she said, that she finally decided to sign her voluntary departure paperwork to go back home to El Salvador.

    “That is absolutely the reason,” she said. “I have been fighting my immigration case for two years, and then after not being around my community and the lack of support for the LGBTQ+ community inside detention centers, and then being a victim of harassment, it was really intimidating. It was very traumatizing.”

    The report also looked into other complaints raised by detainees and their families.

    During one incident at Adelanto, a person reported to state inspectors that guards deployed pepper spray in a confined room holding about 50 people.

    At the Otay Mesa Detention Center in San Diego, investigators flagged concerns about strip-searching. The report states Otay Mesa is the only facility in California that has a policy of strip-searching detainees after every visit they have with someone who is not a lawyer.

    Women described the searches as “humiliating” and “denigrating” after being searched in front of male officers, sometimes even while menstruating. Both males and females described feeling “violated” by the practice. One person told inspectors they had stopped visiting their family altogether to avoid the searches.

    The Central Valley Annex in McFarland on July 8, 2024. Photo by Larry Valenzuela, CalMatters/CatchLight Local

    Two new detention centers

    At the time of the investigators’ visits, 6,028 people were held in immigration detention in California. That was up 162% from the 2,300 held during inspections in 2023. California has the third highest ICE detainee population, behind Texas and Louisana. 

    California is also home to two of the seven largest facilities nationwide. Detainees in California were mostly from Mexico, India, Guatemala, El Salvador, China, Russia, Cuba, Colombia, Venezuela, and Honduras.

    California Democrats during both of Trump’s terms have adopted policies that were meant to block the detention centers from operating. In 2019, California tried to ban private for-profit detention centers from operating in the state, but GEO Group successfully sued to stop it. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the ban violates the Constitution’s Supremacy Clause by preventing the federal government from conducting immigration enforcement.

    ICE opened two detention centers in California over the past year, first the one in California City and then one in McFarland called Central Valley Annex. It began receiving detainees in April 2026 while the report was being finalized, but the state says it will begin monitoring that detention center as well. Both of the sites were previously used to hold state prison inmates under contracts with California’s corrections system.

    This year California Democrats are carrying a range of bills to push back against the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown. One by Assemblymember Matt Haney, a San Francisco Democrat,  would tax detention facilities, with the funds going towards immigrant rights groups, effectively making it unprofitable to keep detention centers in the state.

    This article was originally published on CalMatters and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.

  • A book argues it connects us
    A man uses an exercise machine alongside a pensioners' playground in Hyde Park in London.

    Topline:

    "The Playful Way: Creativity, Connection, and Joy Through Everyday Moments of Play" makes the case that humans are socialized away from play as they enter adulthood but that approaching life in a playful manner with fluidity, curiosity and aliveness can help you live a better life with deeper connections and more moments of joy

    What’s in the book: The author collects intimate stories, research and practices to help promote what she says is a playful way of life, and how it contrasts against a “pressured way” of living.

    The author: Piera Gelardi is a self-described creative entrepreneur who cofounded the digital media site Refinery 29.

    Read on ... to read Gelardi's tips for alleviating the pressures of daily life through play and learn how others incorporate play.

    Somewhere between childhood and the corner office, a lot of us are taught that play is something that you outgrow.

    But what if that trade-off is actually draining us and leaving us feeling stuck? That's the topic of a new book called The Playful Way: Creativity, Connection, and Joy Through Everyday Moments of Play.

    Author Piera Gelardi argues that reclaiming a sense of curiosity, fluidity and aliveness isn't just fun. It's a path to deeper connection, stronger creativity and even a way to move through hard things like grief. Gelardi spoke with LAist’s Austin Cross on AirTalk on her theory of fun and how to be more playful in life.


    What made you want to write this book?

    Gelardi: I had the privilege of growing up in a really playful family, so I got to see what playfulness looked like in adulthood as my parents built businesses, grew their family, navigated grief and illness, and life-lifeing, and I also had really playful grandparents.

    So playfulness was something that was really woven into my life from a young age. As a grade-schooler, our family's favorite activity was doing business brainstorms around the kitchen table, but they would be really wild, really absurd. So we would be saying, "Oh, let's start a kids' karaoke club," and then my dad would say, "Ooh ooh, we can call it kidio-ke."

    The cover art of a book which has a blue background and a multi-red colored ribbon design. It reads The Playful Way in capital letters.
    "The Playful Way" by Piera Gelardi
    (
    Courtesy HarperOne
    )

    Moving through my life, I really brought that into building my own business. I brought it into my personal life. And during the pandemic, I was in this big period of transition where I was leaving my company that I'd been at for 15 years. I was navigating the identity transformation of becoming a mom. I was feeling really stuck. What I ended up doing was leading these play workshops for adults throughout the pandemic on Zoom.

    It was the most aligned and alive thing I've ever done. People were telling me, "This is helping me with my anxiety, this is helping me with my depression, this is helping me connect to my mom who's on another continent."

    I just became fascinated by why that was, and I did so much research about the power of play in adulthood, and I realized that I was creating this space that was giving adults permission to play.

    She worried no one would take her seriously

    Gelardi: But... I was worried I wouldn't be taken seriously if I dedicated this chapter to play.

    I asked the universe for a sign, and I went for this walk, and first I saw a playground, but it looked like a medieval torture device, and so I decided, "Sorry, universe, not my sign."

    I walked down to the river's edge, and I heard a clinking noise, and I looked down at my feet, and there was a message in a bottle, and I fished it out of the river.

    I couldn't believe it. It was a message from this 7-year-old, Eliano, and he talked about his love of play.

    Cross: That's a sign, right? If ever there was one.

    Gelardi: If ever there was one. His mom's email was on the letter, so I emailed her, and actually, this message in a bottle was a project they did during the pandemic to connect with people through play at a time when we were all so isolated.

    Listeners called in to LAist's AirTalk to share how they incorporate play into their daily lives.

    "I play a lot of music with my friends. We're all kind of hobbyist, amateur level. What we like to do is we project a guitar tab onto a wall or put it up on the TV so we can all follow along together. Our sessions tend to be fairly unserious and loose and goofy, and we just kinda have a lot of fun toughing our way through different songs, and it's a blast." —Doug in Los Feliz
    "Growing up, it was all about getting out into nature. I'm actually taking my camper van — I've got the refrigerator plugged in, picking up some groceries, and then I'm gonna go rock scrambling. I just turned 68, but you know what? I've still got it. All it takes for me is taking those beginner eyes out in nature to reignite the joy and the purpose and the reason in life, just getting away from the day to day." —Donna in Pasadena

    Are we in a play recession?

    Gelardi: I think we're in a play recession. As we grow up, we get this messaging that ... play is frivolous, that it's unserious, that it's the opposite of work.

    "As we grow up, we get this messaging that ... play is frivolous, that it's unserious, that it's the opposite of work."

    We start to pack away those playful qualities, and what that does to us in adulthood is that it makes us less resilient, it makes us less connected, it makes us less joyful. We become play deprived. It's at the root, I think, of a lot of burnout.

    Don't pack away your play

    Gelardi: I was sitting in meetings. I didn't ask a question because I didn't want to be seen as not knowing. I didn't float big ideas because I didn't want to look unrealistic. I didn't make a joke because I didn't want to seem like a joker. And as I did that, I started to lose intrinsic motivation.

    I started to lose the connection to the people around me, and I started to lose the joy in the day-to-day. So it wasn't until I realized that I was overworked and underplayed that I started to weave play back into my day-to-day, that I saw the power of those qualities in my work and in my life.

    Think about your child self

    Gelardi: I often tell people to go to the lost and found — think about the child version of you.

    What made you lose track of time? What were you so passionate about? And then what might be an adult version of that? For me, it was beachcombing as a child, and now I walk around New York City doing wonder wanders with those beginner's eyes looking for delight.

    This transcript has been edited for length and clarity.

  • Sponsored message
  • City controller releases searchable database
    People are standing across the street from a large apartment tower during the day. One of the floors near the bottom of the tower is charred black from a fire.
    Barrington Plaza after a fire on Jan. 29, 2020.

    Topline:

    The Los Angeles city controller has published a searchable database highlighting the city’s “top 100 problem rental properties,” ranked by the number of housing violation complaints they’ve received since 2014. That means tenants have complained landlords at these buildings have illegally increased rent, evicted renters, harassed tenants or cut services.

    Who made the list?: The top of the list includes some buildings where tenants have mounted significant organizing campaigns against evictions and rent increases:

    1. Hillside Villa in Chinatown, where renters went on strike, earned the top spot with 192 housing violation cases.
    2. Barrington Plaza in Sawtelle, where a judge ruled the landlord couldn't use the Ellis Act to evict more than 100 remaining tenants, came in second. It had 166 housing violation cases, according to the City Controller’s Office.
    3. Toluca Hills Apartments by Avalon, a 1,150-unit apartment complex in the Hollywood Hills, with 113 housing violation cases.

    Search your address: The full searchable dataset includes all cases of illegal evictions, illegal rent increases, harassment and more. It includes more than 115,000 violations citywide and was compiled based on Los Angeles Housing Department data from December 2013 through November 2025.

    It also notes building code citation violations and recent ownership history. L.A. renters can use the database to search for reported housing violations at their own address.

    Why now?: City Controller Kenneth Mejia said until now, it’s been difficult for the public to search for housing violation history by address. He said few tenant complaints of harassment and illegal eviction result in real enforcement. For example, out of more than 23,000 tenant harassment complaints submitted to the city, only one landlord has faced criminal charges, according to the Controller's Office.

    Mejia said he hopes the new database “will help renters and organizers document patterns of harm, as well as put pressure on both landlords and the city to act.”

    Check out the dashboard at the following link: https://prp.lacontroller.app/

  • Long Beach announces events for World Cup
    A large screen inside a stadium reads "26 FIFA Los Angeles."
    The FIFA World Cup 2026 Los Angeles logo is displayed during a media event for the upcoming FIFA World Cup at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood.

    Topline:

    Long Beach, in collaboration with LA Galaxy, will host a series of free watch parties in downtown Long Beach for the early stages of the FIFA World Cup this summer.

    Watch parties and more: Starting June 12, the city will begin holding live match viewings along with various events that will include two free soccer clinics at Lincoln Park, giveaways, limited-edition merchandise offerings and appearances by current and former Galaxy players along with soccer clinics.

    No official fan zone in Long Beach: Long Beach will not have an official FIFA Fan Zone because the city withdrew its bid following a series of talks with organizers. That means the city’s events this June will not feature FIFA’s logo or the term “World Cup Fan Zone.” They will be able to show live games through the partnership with Major League Soccer’s LA Galaxy.

    Read on... for the full schedule.

    Long Beach, in collaboration with LA Galaxy, will host a series of free watch parties in downtown Long Beach for the early stages of the FIFA World Cup this summer.

    Starting June 12, the city will begin holding live match viewings along with various events that will include two free soccer clinics at Lincoln Park, giveaways, limited-edition merchandise offerings and appearances by current and former Galaxy players along with soccer clinics.

    An event map is still being finalized, but the games will be shown on a big screen set up along Pine Avenue, said city spokesperson Laath Martin.

    LA Galaxy will host free soccer clinics at Lincoln Park on June 12 and June 19 for children aged 6 to 14. You can find more information and register for the clinics here.

    Traffic on Pine Avenue will be closed between Broadway and Third Street from June 12-27, while Broadway between Pine and Pacific avenues will be shut down only on the seven event days.

    Long Beach will not have an official FIFA Fan Zone because the city withdrew its bid following a series of talks with organizers. That means the city’s events this June will not feature FIFA’s logo or the term “World Cup Fan Zone.”

    They will be able to show live games through the partnership with Major League Soccer’s LA Galaxy.

    Here’s a schedule of the games that will be shown:

    DATE
    EVENT TIME (PT)
    GAME(S) SHOWN
    KICKOFF TIMES (PT)

    Thursday,

    June 11

    11 AM – 2 PM
    Mexico vs. South Africa
    2 PM

    Friday, 

    June 12

    5 PM – 8 PM
    United States vs. Paraguay
    6 PM

    Saturday,

    June 13

    11 AM – 8 PM
    Qatar vs. Switzerland
    Noon
      Brazil vs. Morocco
    3 PM
      Haiti vs. Scotland
    6 PM

    Sunday,

    June 14

    9 AM – 5 PM
    Germany vs. Curaçao
    10 AM
      Netherlands vs. Japan
    1 PM
      Ivory Coast vs. Ecuador
    4 PM

    Monday,

    June 15

    8 AM – 5 PM
    Spain vs. Cape Verde
    9 AM
      Belgium vs. Egypt
    Noon
      Saudi Arabia vs. Uruguay
    3 PM

    Tuesday,

    June 16

    11 AM – 8 PM
    France vs. Senegal
    Noon
      Iraq vs. Norway
    3 PM
      Argentina vs. Algeria
    6 PM

    Wednesday,

    June 17

    9 AM – 6 PM
    Portugal vs. DR Congo
    10 AM
      England vs. Croatia
    1 PM
      Ghana vs. Panama
    4 PM

    Thursday,

    June 18

    2 PM – 8 PM
    Canada vs. Qatar
    3 PM
      Mexico vs. South Korea
    6 PM
      Turkey vs. United States OR Paraguay vs. Australia
    7 PM

    Friday,

    June 19

    11 AM – 7:30 PM
    United States vs. Australia
    Noon
      Scotland vs. Morocco
    3 PM
      Brazil vs. Haiti
    5 PM

    Saturday,

    June 20

    9 AM – 7 PM
    Netherlands vs. Sweden
    10 AM
      Germany vs. Ivory Coast
    1 PM
      Ecuador vs. Curaçao
    5 PM

    Sunday,

    June 21

    8 AM – 8 PM
    Spain vs. Saudi Arabia
    9 AM
      Belgium vs. Iran
    Noon
      Uruguay vs. Cape Verde
    3 PM
      New Zealand vs. Egypt
    6 PM

    Monday,

    June 22

    9 AM – 7 PM
    Argentina vs. Austria
    10 AM
      France vs. Iraq
    2 PM
      Norway vs. Senegal
    5 PM

    Tuesday,

    June 23

    Noon – 9 PM
    England vs. Ghana
    1 PM
      Panama vs. Croatia
    4 PM
      Colombia vs. DR Congo
    7 PM

    Wednesday,

    June 24

    11 AM – 8 PM
    Switzerland vs. Canada OR Bosnia vs. Qatar
    Noon
      Scotland vs. Brazil OR Morocco vs. Haiti
    3 PM
      Czechia vs. Mexico OR South Africa vs. South Korea
    6 PM

    Thursday,

    June 25

    Noon – 9 PM

     

    Ecuador vs. Germany OR Curacao vs. Ivory Coast
    1 PM
      Japan vs. Sweden OR Tunisia vs. Netherlands
    4 PM
      Turkey vs. United States OR Paraguay vs. Australia
    7 PM

    Friday,

    June 26

    11 AM – 10 PM
    Norway vs. France OR Senegal vs. Iraq
    Noon
      Uruguay vs. Spain OR Cape Verde vs. Saudi Arabia
    5 PM
      Egypt vs. Iran OR New Zealand vs. Belgium
    8 PM

    Saturday,

    June 27

    1 PM – 9 PM
    Panama vs. England OR Croatia vs. Ghana
    2 PM
      Colombia vs. Portugal OR DR Congo vs. Uzbekistan
    4:30 PM
      Algeria vs. Austria OR Jordan vs. Argentina
    7 PM
  • The event comes to Olvera Street on Saturday.
    A group of women and their children at the Queer Mercado.
    Marisa Salgado and her wife Alicia Lopez are enjoying a family outing with their children and friends.

    Topline:

    Queer Mercado started as a monthly pop-up event at the East L.A. Civic Center in the summer of 2021. Now, the community marketplace is launching a new residency at the historic Olvera Street plaza in downtown L.A. Its founder, Diana Diaz, says the goal is to promote culture and inclusivity, and to empower marginalized communities in the area.

    The origins: Diaz is a handbag designer and high school counselor based out of East L.A. She’s been vending with her family since she was a young girl and started a community marketplace called the Goddess Mercado back in 2021 to reconnect with friends and other local vendors after the pandemic. One of her students gave her the idea to create a similar space for the queer community.

    Why Olvera Street? Diaz has her own kiosk at Olvera Street and says foot traffic has been down in recent months, in part due to fears of immigration raids. But she said the event is a chance to create a more inclusive space and to reflect more of the diverse, cultural fabric that exists within Los Angeles.

    Event details: Queer Mercado will be held at Olvera Street, Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. through at least June.

    Queer Mercado started as a monthly pop-up event at the East L.A. Civic Center in the summer of 2021. Now, the community marketplace is launching a new residency at the historic Olvera Street plaza in downtown L.A.

    The event will feature local queer-owned businesses, makeup tutorials, live artist paintings, drag performers and a fashion show.

    Queer Mercado's founder, Diana Diaz, said the goal is to promote culture and inclusivity, and to empower marginalized communities in the area.

     You're gonna see a lot of culture, fashion, a wide range of ages and genders, and performers that really reflect the landscape of LA,” she said.

    Diaz is a handbag designer and high school counselor based out of East L.A. She’s been vending with her family since she was a young girl and started a community marketplace called the Goddess Mercado in 2021 to reconnect with friends and other local vendors after the pandemic. One of her students gave her the idea to create a similar space for the queer community.

    “He told me, 'Miss, this is great that you're doing for the women of East L.A., but what about the queer community? I'm tired of going to the West Side. I don't fit in,'” she said.

    Diaz has her own kiosk at Olvera Street and said foot traffic has been down in recent months, in part due to fears of immigration raids. But she said the event is a chance to create a more inclusive space and to reflect more of the diverse, cultural fabric that exists within Los Angeles.

    “ It's full of history and love and positivity, and it gave birth to a lot of businesses and movements,” Diaz said. “And it's a site of celebrations and rituals and protests.”

    Event details: Queer Mercado will be held 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Olvera Street every Saturday through at least June.

    Secret menu: Stop by Juanita's Cafe, and ask for the “queer combo.” It’s not on the menu, but you’ll get a free drink.