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In Pasadena, the community meets together for a 14-year-old traffic officer

It was 8 in the morning and 500 tamales Christopher Luna Garcia was hoping to sell were less than.

Nearly the hungry people stuck in a food cart near the Villa Park Pasadena, where the floodway were about two weeks ago on June 21.

The clay flows into cart and the smell of MASA is drawn in the air like Chris, 14, reaches the tamales.

“There is so much,” says a public answer. “But thank you for.”

Chris said he took his mother’s street selling her road after immigration.

Her mother, Carmen Garcia, 44, a resident of legal, said three of his three buyers were arrested during the park. But immigration agents did not take her out of stock.

“I was very scared after that,” he said. “I have scriptures, but I still fear me, I am very scared.”

It did not resulted in Chris, a tall teenager, struggling to make sales, sometimes to bring less than $ 100 daily – even a really bad day. But on Friday, the Tamples were immediately selling. So much that her aunt joined helping to fulfill the high demand for the second crop.

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The side of the diet is studying "The most beautiful tarmales in the city."

1. Christopher Luna Garcia, 14, sells tamales to a customer from her mother near Villa Parke Pasadena. (Luke John Johnson / Los Angeles Times) 2. The side of the cart proudly means its content. (Luke John Johnson / Los Angeles Times)

Friday event was organized by Alex “Tio Joker” Murillo, the actor and the public activist who stumbled over Chris one afternoon and shared his video on social media.

“I want to help Latino’s youths,” said Murillilla. “This snow thing is bad, but also changed it was a good thing.”

He took the video between Pracangament Trashdown, Guided employees and migrants accused of living in the country in local land, cars cleaning and roads.

The wave of sweeping population last month has encouraged some American born kids to take businesses in the street in the name of their parents.

Working in Villa Parke produced Pasadena City officials to enlighten swimming lessons and entertainment programs in the park with two other.

The child's blackrait with short black hair.

Christopher Luna Garcia says she took her mother’s road and symmetermined her road after immigration.

The decision came after the latest Pasadena Act. Of one attack, Federal Agents They are not arrested by people At the Orange Grove Boulevard bus stop and Los Robles Avenue in June 18. And citizens showed last month outside the AC Hotel, where the Federal Trion agents. Both occur under the miles from Villa Parke.

Murillilla said he decided to help a family when he learned that Chris came up to sell his mother because they were sweeping and because they crossed behind the debt.

So Murillillo took the Instagram, calling her followers and others to shed on Friday to buy tamales. He also said he would sell food to raise Chris to take Chris and the children of a Day of Disneyland bus stop.

Eji Chung, 47, who lived a resident and a member of the Pasadena Tenants Union, was one of the first people to show and bought tamales. He said it was important to show support for those affected by the crack.

People are arranged to buy food to street wagon.

People were organized as Christopher Luna Garcia, 14, sells tamales in her mother’s cart on Friday near Villa Parke Pasadena.

“I think that excessive scary know is that there are armed people, with maskets run around, they wake up fears and snatches people on the street,” he said. “Not only people are unregistered. It is US citizens and anyone who put them into music.”

Yun Ey Ramos-Vega, 22, and Janert Ramos-Vega, 21, from Monrovia to support Chris after learning about his story. They said they were related to his situation because they helped relatives prepared.

The couple said they knew at least two people who were arrested by the representatives of human export. At least one is released in Mexico while the other resides in a detention center.

Laura Ruvalka, 40, of Pasadeha, came up with her husband and eight years.

“We saw Chris’s story and we would be here,” he said. “We are about supporting the public, especially young.”

He said you were happy to see a long customer line.

“It’s amazing,” he said. “Whatever we can do to help and meet well.”

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Man takes place for some money.

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Business cards sit on top of the Tamale cart.

1. Christopher Luna Garcia collects money after selling tamales in her mother’s cart. (Luke John Johnson / Los Angeles Times) 2. Business cards live on top of tamale Cart. (Luke John Johnson / Los Angeles Times)

American citizens, Rulalca said the immigration assembly left.

“It’s not anything else without my skin color,” he said. “I’m afraid to go out sometimes.”

He said he began to carry a copy of the US citizen’s certificate last two weeks, as well as his son’s birth certificate. He tells his 18-year-old daughter to be careful when they go out.

“Now, you don’t just understand bad things,” she tells her daughter. “Looked at people in uniforms.”

The event is Friday morning and released the lymphers, which are investigating as old Speakers of explosive school speakers, encouraging people to be happy and take videos and their mobile phones.

It was nearing 9am in the morning tamales from both chariots that were gone, bringing more than $ 1,500 Chris and his family to use billing and hiring.

His brother, Erick Garcia, 20, said his mother and his aunt had gone to cook lots of tamales hoping for the rest of the sale.

Tired, Chris sat on a person’s only temporary seat, allowing a murmuring of relief and strengthening his eyebrows with his fingers. He had come up from 4am and he was tired, said he wanted to take action because his mother helped to raise him and his siblings.

“He has no more support,” he said. “I want to help her.”

A food chariot with an umbrella.

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