Pets Abandoned and Forgotten: How Trump’s Immigration Raids Are Overwhelming LA’s Animal Shelters
- Teo Drinkovic
- Aug 4
- 3 min read
Abandoned Pets Are Becoming the Silent Victims of ICE Deportations; Shocking Surge in Shelter Animals Exposes Hidden Toll of Immigration Crackdown

Introduction
It appears, unfortunately, that not only have people become victims of the new immigration policy zealously enforced by ICE and the Trump administration. Among the unintended casualties are household pets, completely innocent, but nevertheless caught in the crossfire. According to Reuters, Los Angeles County has faced a new type of problem caused by the wave of arrests, detentions, and deportations carried out by immigration services like ICE. Reuters
Specifically, when immigrant pet owners are detained and sent to facilities such as “Alligator Alcatraz,” their pets often end up abandoned or roaming the streets unsupervised. Since June 10, 2025, the county has taken in 28 additional animals, 22 dogs and 6 cats, beyond the 11 dogs and 2 cats already placed in homes. Reuters
How Agencies and Shelters Are Coping with Abandoned Pets
Christopher Valles, spokesperson for the Los Angeles County Department of Animal Care and Control (DACC), explains that these animals have become collateral victims, guilty of nothing but still caught up in the enforcement actions. Reuters
The situation in L.A. shelters has reached its worst overcrowding in 15 years, with animals suffering abandonment trauma and behavioral challenges that make them difficult to adopt.
To mitigate this, DACC is focusing on humane care, shortened adoption timelines, and collaboration with local organizations.
Their goal: keep pets with community members for as long as possible. Immigrant owners are encouraged not to abandon their pets but instead bring them to any of the seven county animal care centers (Downey, Lancaster, Baldwin Park, etc.), irrespective of immigration status. Assistance includes food, veterinary care, and emergency financial support. Los Angeles County
Even nonprofit organizations like Free Animal Doctor report rising demand for help in caring for pets whose owners are deported. The Guardian
The crisis disproportionately affects large or stigmatized breeds, especially pit bulls, which are notoriously difficult to place in overcrowded L.A. shelters, increasing the risk that they may not find new homes.

The Case of “Chuco,” the Abandoned Pet
One notable incident involved Chuco, a pit bull whose owner was detained and deported during a raid at Home Depot in Barstow. A friend initially took Chuco and left him in a garage, but the landlord removed the dog and placed him in an unregistered shelter, leaving Chuco effectively missing for days.
SPAY(CE), an organization specializing in dog sterilization, called on volunteers via Instagram to help locate Chuco. Esther Ruurda, co‑founder of the group, feared he might be euthanized due to a lack of space.
Fortunately, volunteer Rita Earl Blackwell matched Chuco’s photo to a public DACC database and confirmed he was at the Baldwin Park animal care center. Chuco is now formally “found” and in the shelter system, though, regrettably, as a pit bull, he remains very difficult to adopt.
Rising Numbers and Volunteer Efforts
From June 10 to early August 2025, the number of surrendered pets due to deportations has surged. In Palmdale, surrendered dogs in June more than doubled compared to June 2024; Downey saw a roughly 50% increase.
Community networks in Boyle Heights and East L.A. have formed groups that foster shared care for pets left behind by families fearing deportation. LA County Supervisor Hilda Solis has called for expanding foster‑care programs to house these animals urgently.
Guidance from Animal Authorities
Local animal services agencies advise:
Create a pet biography (bio): include health and dietary history.
Identify trusted caregivers, neighbors, or family who can step in.
Have a backup plan in case of detention, so pets avoid entering the shelter system.
Christopher Valles emphasizes:
“We know these are challenging times, but our goal is that the animal remains with its owner or family, not in a care center.” Reuters
Conclusion
As this situation shows, it’s not only people affected by the latest wave of U.S. immigration enforcement, pets, absolutely innocent, are suffering too. No one foresaw this outcome, and no one can yet predict the long‑term consequences of this immigration approach.
The pet crisis has blindsided Los Angeles shelters, and if this is how animals are treated, who knows what awaits immigrant families in the future if this policy continues?
I adore pets and especially cats❤️
This is wrong on so many levels 😡🤬
I hope that good people will help them and help immigrants too 🙏
Feel free to comment!