“Back in the day in Las Vegas, it was really hard to get fresh coconuts or banana leaves or certain fruits and vegetables,” Favela said. “Whenever it was holiday times, I remember, we would go and stock up on things that my mom couldn’t get at the regular grocery store.”
As an adult, Favela said, he has been going to Broadacres at least once a month and was most recently there the night before the closure was announced.
He recalled feeling something was amiss that Friday evening. Crowds in recent weeks had already been noticeably thinner, Favela said, particularly after the raid at the Santa Fe Springs Swap Meet.
“First of all, it was easy to find parking, which is never the case,” Favela said. “Then when I went in, it was maybe a quarter of the people who are usually there. And there was no live music. I knew something was way off.”
Ocampo said he and his family were painfully aware of ICE activity around the country, but the decision to close Broadacres still caught them off-guard.
Vendors were not given notice, with staff members allegedly going booth to booth the morning of June 21 to inform people that the market would be closing that day. Broadacres management did not respond to requests for comment..
“I received a text message from family that morning at around 10 a.m. saying Broadacres was going to close,” Ocampo said. “I thought the worst. I was thinking: Is there an ICE raid happening? What is going on?”
Ocampo’s parents, who spoke on the condition of anonymity and did not want to publicly disclose their immigration statuses for fear of reprisals, said the images from the California raid hit close to home.
The family has lived in the U.S. since 1992. Now, though, in addition to concerns about discrimination and aggressive immigration enforcement, their financial future hangs in the balance.
Translating his father’s Spanish, Ocampo said not much remains of his parents’ booth at Broadacres, where for more than two decades they sold peanuts, pumpkin seeds and various other dry goods. What started as a small peanut stand grew into multiple booths at the swap meet, offering roughly 50 items.
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