Dozens reportedly arrested in Charlotte, North Carolina, amid immigration crackdown [View all]
Source: The Guardian
Sun 16 Nov 2025 15.13 EST
Last modified on Sun 16 Nov 2025 15.16 EST
A top border patrol commander touted dozens of arrests in North Carolinas largest city on Sunday as Charlotte residents reported a surge of encounters with federal immigration agents near churches and apartment complexes. The Trump administration has made the Democratic-led city of about 950,000 people its latest target for an immigration enforcement crackdown it says will combat crime, despite fierce objections from local leaders and the fact that crime rates in the city are steadily declining. Some businesses in Charlotte chose to stay closed at the weekend and many areas that would often be bustling on a Saturday afternoon were quiet as people stayed home in fear of anti-immigration raids and sweeps.
Gregory Bovino, who led hundreds of US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents on a similar operation in Chicago, took to social media to document some of the arrests he said had reached more than 80. He posted pictures of people the Trump administration commonly dubs criminal illegal aliens as a damning characterization for people living in the US without legal permission who have alleged criminal records. That included one of a man with an alleged history of drunk driving convictions.
We arrested him, taking him off the streets of Charlotte so he cant continue to ignore our laws and drive intoxicated on the same roads you and your loved ones are on, Bovino wrote on X. The latest effort by federal law enforcement has been labeled Operation Charlottes Web as a play on the title of the childrens book but conjuring an image of people caught in a trap.
At Camino, a nonprofit group that offers services to Latino communities, some said they were too afraid to leave their homes to attend school, medical appointments or work. A dental clinic the group runs had nine cancellations on Friday, spokesperson Paola Garcia said. Latinos love this country. They came here to escape socialism and communism, and theyre hard workers and people of faith, Garcia said. They love their family, and its just so sad to see that this community now has this target on their back.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/nov/16/charlotte-north-carolina-immigration-crackdown