Neighbors React to ICE Raid at San Diego Italian Restaurant: 'It Could Happen Anywhere'
"I think it just puts a lot of fear in people—especially the hard-working people who are doing nothing wrong."

Danielle Nozzi wasn't there when heavily armed Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents swarmed her favorite Italian restaurant, arrested four employees, and fired off flash-bang grenades at protesters who tried to stop them.
But in the days since the raid at Buona Forchetta, in the cute and trendy South Park neighborhood of San Diego, she's been thinking about how she would explain the incident to her kids. She has yet to come up with a satisfactory answer for herself.
"I have no idea what I would say to them. 'Oh, they're taking away bad people.' They're not," Nozzi, a 41-year-old mother of two, tells me as she waits to pick up a pizza on Wednesday night.
Like other workplace raids carried out in recent weeks by ICE, this one seems to signal a shift in the Trump administration's tactics and an escalation of its deportation efforts. The White House has reportedly ordered ICE to expand its targets beyond gang members and violent criminals and to go after day laborers and other workers peacefully trying to earn a living despite their lack of legal status. That means more confrontations like the one that happened here—and more difficult questions about why immigration enforcers are busting into a restaurant in riot gear and face masks.
"They made a public show of it, and I think they're doing it for a reason—to try to incite people and try to get a reaction," says Nozzi.
Buona Forchetta is buzzing and crowded on Wednesday night, with a steady stream of patrons waiting for tables on the awning-covered patio or picking up orders from the to-go window around the corner. Everyone I spoke with had heard about the raid and seen footage of it on the news or social media, and many said they'd come to Buona Forchetta as a show of support for the restaurant—a low-key form of resistance, it would seem.
That includes Diana Ashhab, 43, who was waiting for a table with Brian Atkins. She plans to attend one of the larger protests planned for Saturday and says raids like the one that happened here should underline the importance of speaking up.
"Just because they are illegal doesn't mean they are criminals," Ashhab says. "It's such a waste of taxpayers' money when there are real problems to solve." Atkins chimes in that politicians who break the law aren't hauled out of their workplaces and arrested on the street.
The four people arrested in the raid at Buona Forchetta were servers and dishwashers, according to local news reports. The warrant authorizing the raid accused the restaurant of "knowingly employing both illegal immigrants and individuals not authorized to work in the United States," and cited a tip to federal authorities from November 2020. A follow-up investigation launched in January 2025, just after President Donald Trump took office, ultimately led to the raid after officials from the Department of Homeland Security determined that some workers at the restaurant were using counterfeit green cards, The San Diego Union-Tribune reported.
Photos and videos posted to social media show the raid and its aftermath, including ICE agents detonating flash-bang grenades to clear the crowd that gathered to oppose the arrests. The incident went viral shortly afterward when Sean Elo-Rivera, a Democratic San Diego city councilman, posted a photo of the ICE agents with the word "terrorists" scrawled across it, and White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller responded by hurling an accusation of "leftwing domestic terrorism" at Elo-Rivera.
In a statement, San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria, a Democrat, said "Federal actions like these are billed as a public safety measure, but it had the complete opposite effect."
On Wednesday night, there are lingering remnants of the raid and the subsequent protest. An electrical box on the sidewalk outside the restaurant now sports a prominent "Fuck ICE" sticker. A poster attached to a post across the street offers legal assistance to anyone affected by the raid.
But those things seem somewhat out of place amid the craftsman homes and manicured landscaping of the South Park neighborhood. On the three street corners opposite Buona Forchetta sit a yoga studio, a boutique gym, and a cocktail bar. Families with children and numerous dogs are out and about on this Wednesday night. Nothing about the neighborhood suggests that it is besieged by criminal gangs or the sort of violence that might require the heavy hand of federal law enforcement.
Given those surroundings, it's probably not a surprise that nearly everyone I spoke with was dismayed or upset by the Trump administration's immigration crackdown.
"I think it just puts a lot of fear in people—especially the hard-working people who are doing nothing wrong," says Alyssa Ashmore, a 28-year-old software engineer who is waiting for a to-go order.
"It kinda feels distant when you see it on the news sometimes, but then when you see it in a place where you live," she says. "It reality checks."
But that opinion was not unanimous.
"If you're illegal or you overstayed your visa, it's time to go," said Dillen Roman, a 32-year-old member of the Navy who has lived in the area for eight months. "That's just the way it is."
Nozzi said she was surprised to see the raid happening here, in a neighborhood she described as a "quintessential melting pot" full of families and small businesses.
"If it could happen in South Park, it could happen anywhere," she says, "and probably it is happening anywhere."
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Danielle Nozzi wasn't there when heavily armed Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents swarmed her favorite Italian restaurant, arrested four employees, and fired off flash-bang grenades at protesters who tried to stop them.
But in the days since the raid at Buona Forchetta, in the cute and trendy South Park neighborhood of San Diego, she's been thinking about how she would explain the incident to her kids.
Good God. Fuck you.
Have I relayed the story of how, 3-4 yrs. ago my kids' HS went on lockdown because a student brought an unloaded BB gun in his backpack and students and staff were given up to 3 days of 'Mental Health Leave' even though it was an accident, the kid didn't draw or point the weapon, and it was an unloaded BB gun; and 1-2 yrs. later an actual violent felon, a murder suspect, evaded police on a nearby highway, the school went on lockdown, and the felon's Instagram page gained something like 300 followers from the HS with kids telling him to give himself up so they could get out of school?
Fuck your "I wasn't there and I don't know what I would tell my kids if I were." Karen bullshit.
Nozzi said she was surprised to see the raid happening here, in a neighborhood she described as a "quintessential melting pot" full of families and small businesses.
"If it could happen in South Park, it could happen anywhere," she says, "and probably it is happening anywhere."
It could be coming to the gay wedding pizzeria in a quintessential melting pot near you!
This is getting to be so 1984 it's not even funny.
I don't recall so many affluent hipster doofuses in 1984.
The story is generally from Winston's POV, as a freethinker/nonconformist monitored by Thinkpol for years (allegedly), he obviously doesn't spend a lot of time in the crowd of doofuses who worry about what they would tell their kids if they ever discovered there was a freethinking in their midst.
Seems very much like the same kind of person who wouldn't know what to tell their kids if they said, "I think I'm a member of the opposite sex." Just waiting for something to go slightly less than 100% according to their expectations so that they can browbeat and traumatize their children with it.
Yeah, doesn't seem like a hard one to explain. Even if you don't like the immigration laws, they are the laws and there are people whose job it is to enforce those laws.
""They made a public show of it, and I think they're doing it for a reason—to try to incite people and try to get a reaction," says Nozzi."
Did you see the way those swat guys were dressed? They're practically asking for it, those teases.
to try to incite people and try to get a reaction
That reaction being surrendering to authorities or self-deportation. The headline should have been:
Ask Fallacious Questions, Expect Nonsense Answers
My personal favorite: "Just because they are illegal doesn't mean they are criminals,"
For fuck's sake, Boehm, under 8 U.S. Code § 1325 any illegal US border crossing is a federal crime and anyone who has committed that crime is a criminal. Are you or are you not a fucking journalist with a responsibility to not report lies without context.
And even so, they are still subject to deportation under the law. I don't even agree that all of these people need to be deported. But I'm not going to act all surprised and outraged when laws that lots of people want to see enforced get enforced.
Can't really make sense of "I don't even agree that all of these people need to be deported." What do you know that the authorities do not know.
Atkins chimes in that politicians who break the law aren't hauled out of their workplaces and arrested on the street.
I've got 10:1 odds that Atkins is talking about anyone named Biden or Newsom and I've got 2:1 odds that he hasn't seen Trump's mugshot which parlays to 5:1 odds that he has seen it but has forgotten about it. Any takers?
I have a Marion Berry on line 1 for you, Mr. Boehm. He wants to talk to you about printing a correction.
Who was the guy with the cash in his freezer? It should happen a lot more, but politicians do, from time to time, get hauled away from their jobs in handcuffs.
Here in Illinois it's practically a politician retirement plan.
Yeah, that's really not specific enough, is it? It was US Rep. from somewhere in the south if I recall correctly.
Louisiana.
https://www.sgvtribune.com/2009/11/13/former-congressman-who-hid-cash-in-freezer-gets-13-years/
Yeah, Jefferson, that's the guy.
Right but, again, I'm pretty sure this guy isn't saying Biden should've been hauled out of office in handcuffs even though he contributed to this mess and knowingly (inasmuch as possible) violated The Constitution and defied SCOTUS multiple times; and Atkins is either saying Trump should be hauled out *again* or is oblivious to or has memory holed the fact that he's already been booked once (and appeared in court multiple times, impeached multiple times...).
I kinda get that it might be some kind of olive branch but in San Diego, given all the context, it feels like he's actually trying to piss on someone standing upwind.
So the illegals were using counterfeit green cards and the cops were forced to use non lethal force when protesters tried to stop them. The administration has a standing offer of a thousand bucks and free transportation for illegals who self deport with the option of coming back legally. It may be that these raids are intentionally public to encourage other illegals to peacefully leave. And Trump hasn't done anything that Obama didn't do first. And as with all things in South Park, Simpsons did it first.
Trying to stop the police from arresting people (absent few exceptions) is a crime.
"I think it just puts a lot of fear in people—especially the hard-working people who are doing nothing wrong."
I think that is a big part of the point isn't it. Get people to leave on their own so there will be less of this kind of stuff.
Neighbors React to Dogshit on San Diego Sidewalk: 'It Could Happen Anywhere'
"I think it just puts a lot of fear in people—especially the barefoot people who don't pay attention."
"she's been thinking about how she would explain the incident to her kids."
Oh please. They broke-in and squatted on others nation without their permission so they're being removed.
Why's that so hard?
Heck. It just might keep your kids from trespassing, breaking-in and stealing, vandalizing and well being criminals when they grow-up. But no. Dipsh*t parents like this will make up some racist/sexist or any other excuse they can hang themselves on and pretend nothing they CHOSE to do will ever have any consequences.
Oh good lord. Go cry about it at the drum circle. Just wait until you have the stick to speak.
Seriously, what is wrong with these people. Illegally crossing the border is a crime. They are criminal. They may be nice people otherwise. They may make a lovely soup. But they are criminals.
Who will pick our cotton now?
A Tesla robot.
What about the jobs that Tesla robots won't do?
"Just because they are illegal doesn't mean they are criminals,"
And there you have it; a clear and concise explanation of why there is no way to "discuss" politics with a leftist.
Just because they are taking your stuff doesn't mean they are thieves.
Just because they are burning down buildings doesn't mean they are rioters.
Just because they are - - - -
Never mind.
There are lots of things that are illegal but not criminal. And technically speaking (as I understand it) overstaying a visa is not a criminal offense, so some illegals are not criminals. And there are statutes of limitations.
But even if it's technically true, it's still a BS distraction as there are a lot of people who recently crossed the border without authorization who have committed a criminal act. A debate about what should be criminal is a good thing. But no sense denying the present reality.
overstaying a visa is not a criminal offense,
It's a deportable offense, meaning if you're found with an expired visa, you must leave or be deported if you refuse.
Canada has been doing this for years in Windsor to U.S. citizens crossing the bridge from Detroit to work. I don't hear anyone crying about it.
Canada did it first. That makes it ok.
You should read about how other countries enforce their borders.
Canada is a second world country and Windsor is a third world city. But Americans still cross the border to do the jobs Canadians won't (can't) do. Sad.
A debate about what should be criminal is a good thing.
For close to 40 yrs. the GOP has been talking about using licenses to verify votes/voters and been rebuffed because Democrats are certain black people are too stupid to know where their local DMV is. For about the same 40 yrs., there's been a refrain of getting the border in shape so that the problem doesn't get worse going forward and we can start to address these issues to whatever varying degree of retroactivity might be appropriate.
We are where we are because half the debate has been "FYTW" to the point where foreign nationals are burning federal buildings, the Governor is abdicating, and the President of their home country is supporting them. This is true across a number of fronts.
Neighbors React to ICE Raid at San Diego Italian Restaurant: 'It Could Happen Anywhere'
"I think it just puts a lot of fear in people—especially the hard-working people who are doing nothing wrong."
Gleefully rubbing my hands together when Americans have to *checks previous ChatDNC rhetoric* "pay a little bit more for their hamburger" because the people working there are suddenly being paid the $20 an hour minimum wage, are subjected to the 'secure scheduling' rules and have to be paid benefits the instant they work over 35 hours in a week.
"Just because they are illegal doesn't mean they are criminals,"
File this under, "Shit you just can't make up."
"It's such a waste of taxpayers' money when there are real problems to solve."
Millions of illegals getting taxpayer funded government handouts isn't a real problem?
But they do the jobs Americans won’t!!!
The only problem with these raids is that they aren't also going after the employers that hire them at the same time. That would kill multiple birds with one stone.
I don't care for the employement system we have. But I have no empathy for those that try and circumvent it and then cry foul when they reap what they sow.
https://www.cpr.org/2025/04/30/ice-fines-colorado-janitorial-companies-unauthorized-workers/
These usually are after the deportation.
At least something is done about the employers.
How heavily armed were they Eric? Did they have scawy black pistols? The one made of ceramic and cost more than you make in a month?
We're the scary black rifles there too?
Most of these guys aren't armed any more heavily than I am on any given day and carry a smaller arsenal that I have at home.
What kind of bigot would go to an Italian restaurant not completely staffed by Italians. Thank you ICE for protecting us from this outrage. Also Mexicans posing as Italians need to be quized on their Italian so we can tell them apart.
"Se non sopporti il calore vattene dalla cucina."
"Si no soportas el calor, vete de la cocina"
You sure it's that easy?
During the first Trump administration, one of my family's Mexican restaurants got raided by ICE based on an anonymous tip, and guess what? No one got arrested or deported. Want to guess why?
Tell us
Nobody obstructed the officers or got physical with them, and oddly, crazily enough, everyone who worked there or owned the place was either born here, a naturalized citizen, or here with a valid work visa.
Yes, even the ones originally from Mexico.
So arrests can happen anywhere?
Boehm swings on Sullum nut sack.
Nothing about the neighborhood suggests that it is besieged by criminal gangs or the sort of violence that might require the heavy hand of federal law enforcement.
The fact that the neighborhood is harboring illegals does.
Why is illegal immigration OK? Border jump or visa overstay, either way. Just, one reason at all.
The left always makes this big show about "criminal gangs" and "violence" (don't fall for it, btw, they want them here too) as if there's a some meaningful distinction between "good illegal alien" and "bad illegal alien" - but you'll notice that's a sidestep from the actual question.
The fact that, per Boehm, a literal crowd of people showed up and attempted to prevent the arrests to the point that ICE was forced to deploy low-yield explosives to create an exit suggests that it is exactly that situation.
It's like complaining about cops not needing MRAP's after a call involving landmines.
JUST THE OPPOSITE FOR ALMOST ALL PEOPLE
When I see Tren de Aragua or MS-13 arrested I am that much HAPPIER !! As is every normal person.