Federal officers are leaving Louisiana immigration crackdown for Minneapolis, documents show

Federal officers are leaving Louisiana immigration crackdown for Minneapolis, documents show

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Federal immigration officers are pulling out ofa Louisiana crackdownand headingto Minneapolisin an abrupt pivot from an operation that drew protests around New Orleans and aimed to make thousands of arrests, according to documents obtained by The Associated Press.

The shift appeared to signal a wind-down of the Louisiana deployment that was dubbed "Catahoula Crunch" and began in December with the arrival of more than 200 officers. The operation had been expected to last into Februaryand swiftly raised fearsin immigrant communities.

The Trump administration has been surging thousands of federal officers to Minnesota under a sweeping new crackdown tied in part toallegations of fraud involving Somali residents. More than 2,000 officers are taking part in what the Department of Homeland Security has called the biggest immigration enforcement operation ever.

The officers in Minneapolis have been met with demonstrations and anger after an ICE officerfatally shot a womanon Wednesday.

Documents obtained by the AP indicated that federal officers stationed in Louisiana were continuing to depart for Minneapolis late this week.

"For the safety of our law enforcement, we do not disclose operational details while they are underway," DHS said Friday in response to questions about whether the Louisiana deployment was ending in order to send officers to Minnesota.

In December, DHS deployed more than 200 federal officers to New Orleans to carry out a monthslong sweep in and around the city under Border Patrol Cmdr.Gregory Bovino, who was also the face of aggressive operations inChicago, Los Angeles andCharlotte, North Carolina.Bovino has been seen in Minneapolis this past week.

"Catahoula Crunch" began with a target of 5,000 arrests, the APfirst reported. The operation had resulted in about 370 arrests as of Dec. 18, according to DHS.

The operationheavily targetedthe Hispanic enclave of Kenner just outside New Orleans, leading immigrant-run businesses to close down to protect customers and out of a fear of harassment.

Documentspreviously reviewed by APshowed the majority of people arrested in the Louisiana crackdown's first days lacked criminal records and that authorities tracked online criticism and protests against the deployment.

Republican Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry welcomed the crackdown. But New Orleans' Democratic leaders called the5,000-arrest target unrealisticand criticized videos that showed agents arresting or trying to detain residents, including a clip of aU.S. citizen being chaseddown the street by masked men near her house.

New Orleans' Democratic leaders have been more welcoming of aNational Guard deploymentthat President Donald Trump authorized after Landry asked for help fighting crime. The troops arrived just before the New Year's Day anniversary of a truck attack onBourbon Streetthat killed 14 people.

Associated Press writer Rebecca Santana contributed to this report from Minneapolis.

Brook is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative.Report for Americais a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

 

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