ICE Agents’ 10-Car Raid Ends in LA Schoolyard Urine Ballet, Feds Investigate

ICE agents, caught on camera at Ruben Salazar High in Pico Rivera, arrived in eight to ten vehicles and left behind a morning tableau of public urination just steps from an elementary school. Trending queries like “What happens if ICE enters a school?” and “Can ICE agents be prosecuted for public urination?” now collide with video evidence and a school district demanding answers. School officials wrote, “At no time was a legal or legitimate reason offered or provided as to why ICE agents entered and remained on school grounds.”
After the surreal parking lot spectacle, district staff confirmed ICE agents relieved themselves near storage containers from 8:54 to 9:04 a.m.—a time when children played nearby. “Is public urination a felony in California?” and “Are ICE raids legal on school property?” now surge among local searches. LA county supervisor Janice Hahn deadpanned, “It’s not enough that they’ve spent weeks violently ambushing people, now ICE and CBP agents are allegedly entering school campuses, pulling down their pants and urinating on playgrounds.”
Ten federal agents, no warrants, and a full minute-by-minute urination timeline—8:54 to 9:04 a.m.—have left LA parents contemplating if bladder control is now part of homeland security protocol.