โŒ

Normal view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.
Today โ€” 6 December 2025Main stream

DHS agents target the Vietnamese community in New Orleans

5 December 2025 at 22:04

A DHS immigration enforcement operation dubbed "Operation Catahoula Crunch" began earlier this week in New Orleans, Louisiana, with a goal of 5,000 arrests over two months.

Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino, who is leading the operation, arrived in the city earlier in the week.

CBP has posted videos on social media showing arrests. One video shows agents pulling roofers from a job in Kenner, Louisiana, west of New Orleans.

This focus on New Orleans comes after similar high-profile operations in cities like Chicago and LA, as part of the Trump administration's crackdown on illegal immigration.

Target are largely in Democrat-led states and cities identified as sanctuary jurisdictions.

RELATED STORY | 'Swamp Sweep' immigration crackdown to bring 250 Border Patrol agents to New Orleans and Mississippi

U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, who is from Louisiana, said Thursday he supported the operation.

"Democrats' sanctuary city policies have failed making our American communities dangerous. The people of our GREAT city deserve better, and help is now on the ground," Johnson wrote.

On the ground, communities are on edge. Streets and businesses are empty in cities with high concentrations of Hispanic residents and Vietnamese communities.

Many of those Vietnamese residents in particular endured waves of displacement to the U.S. at the end of the Vietnam war, after the fall of Saigon in 1975.

Some have spent the past half century building lives and deep roots in New Orleans.

Thi Bui, a resident who was born at the end of the war, came to the U.S. as a refugee at age 3 and lives in New Orleans. She told Scripps News this DHS operation feels like a betrayal for the community that has sought refuge here and has had a significant cultural impact on cities like New Orleans.

"The folks who came here in the 70s were allies of the U.S. in a proxy war that the U.S. got involved in, you know, probably shouldn't have gotten involved in, but because the U.S. was there, now the refugees of that war have to come here," she said. "And they rebuilt their lives from scratch, and now this is their home. It's been over 50 years that the Vietnamese have been in the U.S. and in New Orleans. They've raised families, opened businesses, become part of the culture, the fabric of this country. And now they're getting ripped apart. Their families are getting torn apart. They are in a constant state of dread. And it's really hard to live like that."

Before yesterdayMain stream

'Swamp Sweep' immigration crackdown to bring 250 Border Patrol agents to New Orleans and Mississippi

1 December 2025 at 22:10

A federal immigration crackdown branded Operation Swamp Sweep is set to begin this week, with 250 Border Patrol agents expected to be deployed to New Orleans and Mississippi. The mission is part of President Donald Trumps broader immigration enforcement strategy.

Similar operations have already rolled out in cities such as Chicago, Los Angeles and Charlotte, North Carolina. Unlike those locations, Louisianas Republican governor is welcoming the federal involvement.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT | DHS plans to deploy 250 border agents to Louisiana in major immigration sweep, AP sources say

Officials say the operation aims to arrest about 5,000 people in southeast Louisiana and Mississippi. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has confirmed at least four arrests so far in Gretna, Louisiana.

In an interview with Scripps News, Jordan Bridges, organizing director for the New Orleans Workers Center for Racial Justice, expressed concern about the impact on the citys immigrant community.

New Orleans is a beautiful city and that has a history of resistance, Bridges said. And so, I'm seeing exactly that.

I can tell you that groups are organizing, he added. I can tell you that individuals that are directly impacted are organizing.

Louisiana State Rep. Matthew Willard said Border Patrol has not been forthcoming with local officials about operational details.

"Our police chief here in the city of New Orleans has had conversations with Border Patrol. The information that has been provided is not reassuring and not really many details being provided, Willard said. So we're really in the dark.

RELATED STORY | Immigrant population in the US has started to decline for the first time in years

New Orleans Mayor-elect Helena Moreno shared legal resources on Instagram and urged residents to know their rights.

My first priority is keeping our community safe, Moreno wrote. The reports of due process violations and potential abuses in other cities are concerning. I want our community to be aware and informed of the protections available under law. We must demand accountability and that peoples rights are not violated.

The Department of Homeland Security told Scripps News that it enforces federal laws daily but declined to discuss specifics of future or ongoing operations. It remains unclear how long Operation Swamp Sweep will last.

โŒ
โŒ