Los Angeles Times

Clash caught on video

Images of man flipping street vendor’s cart go viral

- By Ruben Vives

Benjamin Ramirez first noticed the thin, bearded man in late June, standing across the street, staring at him, as he sold shave-ice slushies and Mexican street corn.

Over the next few weeks, on three occasions, Ramirez, 24, said, the man and a woman harassed him about doing business in their Hollywood neighborho­od. They told him that it was illegal and that he was blocking the sidewalk, he said.

When Ramirez — only two months into street vending — told his father about the encounters on Romaine Street and El Centro Avenue, he gave his son a piece of advice.

“I told him: Next time, get it on video,” Alex Ramirez said.

The next time happened last week, and this time Ramirez captured the encounter.

Late Monday afternoon the video exploded on social media, showing the bearded man tipping over Ramirez’s white, wooden cart, spilling ears of corn, bottles of syrup and chips on the street.

The confrontat­ion unleashed public fury at the man, who wore a hat and a Guns N’ Roses shirt, and swelling support for the street vendor.

On Tuesday a small rally was held outside the green apartment complex where the altercatio­n occurred. In an interview for a Spanish morning radio show, Ramirez, a soft-spoken Mexican immigrant, said he appreciate­d the community’s support.

More than 30 people gathered at the location, some from other neighborho­ods.

“It really hurts me that people are being bullied like that,” said Galo Coñote, 46, of Koreatown. “It’s uncalled for … and it hits close to home because I’m Mexican.”

In the hierarchy of immigrant occupation­s, street vending is near the bottom. It’s a job from which you can’t be fired — but it takes long hours every day to make a living. There are few symbols more potent of the slogging work than the pushcart — which, balky as it can be, is a virtual livelihood on wheels.

In Los Angeles, most street vending is illegal, but spurred by President Trump’s tough talk on illegal immigratio­n, city officials moved to decriminal­ize it this year in order to reduce the risk of deportatio­n for vendors who are living in the country illegally.

In the video, recorded July 17, the bearded man is seen standing several feet from Ramirez. The man is walking his dog with a woman who appears to be his girlfriend. After several exchanges, Ramirez tells the man that he has room to pass.

“Move the cart, or I’m going to move it myself,” the man said in Spanish.

“Go ahead,” Ramirez said.

The man then handed the dog’s leash to the woman, and walked toward Ramirez. He held an object in his right hand that Ramirez believed to be a knife. Ramirez said that in self-defense he threw chili powder at the man. Enraged, the man flipped Ramirez’s food cart. Ramirez said it was only after speaking to a Los Angeles police detective that he learned the object in the man’s hand may have been a stun gun.

Shortly after tossing the chili powder, Ramirez grabbed a metal bar to protect himself, apparently causing the woman to step in and warn him.

Ramirez turned the cellphone on himself.

“I’m recording this because this ... racist threw my things,” he said.

“I’m not racist,” the man said from a distance. “I’m Argentinia­n, you retard.”

“You’re impacting someone’s ability to make a living and affecting their ability to get a piece of the American pie, the American dream,” said Ulisses Sanchez, a Boyle Heights community organizer who is planning a happy-hour event to raise money for Ramirez. “Your actions have repercussi­ons.”

The Los Angeles Police Department said it is looking into the matter but did not provide further informatio­n. A city attorney’s spokesman said it is his understand­ing the LAPD is still investigat­ing the incident.

The man who shoved the cart has not been identified by authoritie­s.

Ramirez said all he wants is for the man to pay for the damage he caused and for the food he lost. One by one, residents and neighbors approached him to encourage him to stay strong.

“Don’t you stop coming around here, look around, you have all this support,” a woman yelled at Ramirez, who smiled and replied: “I’m grateful for it.”

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? ALEX RAMIREZ sells shave ice and fruit near where his son, Benjamin, has had run-ins with a man and a woman. “I told him: Next time, get it on video.”
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ALEX RAMIREZ sells shave ice and fruit near where his son, Benjamin, has had run-ins with a man and a woman. “I told him: Next time, get it on video.”
 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? STREET vendor Benjamin Ramirez gets emotional while talking to his sister in Mexico about his run-in.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times STREET vendor Benjamin Ramirez gets emotional while talking to his sister in Mexico about his run-in.

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