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'Our message is simple': Charlotte-area leaders speak out on Border Patrol plans

Mary Ramsey, The Charlotte Observer on

Published in News & Features

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Charlotte-area elected officials issued a statement of support for the region’s immigrant communities after reports of planned U.S. Border Patrol operations in the city.

CNN and CBS News reported Tuesday some border patrol agents could be moved to Charlotte and New Orleans for operations expected to begin this month.

The reports of Border Patrol operations in other U.S. cities follow a weekslong campaign in Chicago that’s sparked criticism from some over the agency’s practices, including the use of tear gas and clashes with protestors. A federal judge issued an injunction limiting the use of force during immigration arrests and protests in response to Border Patrol’s behavior in Chicago last week, ABC News reported.

“Our message is simple: Mecklenburg County and Charlotte are communities of belonging. We will stand together, look out for one another, and ensure that fear never divides the city we all home,” Charlotte City Council member-elect JD Mazuera Arias said in a statement shared on his social media accounts late Tuesday.

The letter was also signed by Charlotte City Council member Dimple Ajmera, County Commissioner Susan Rodrguez-McDowell, Charlotte-Mecklenburg School Board member Liz Monterrey Duvall and state legislators Jordan Lopez, Mujtaba Mohammed and Caleb Theodros.

The group said state and local leaders don’t control or direct immigration operations but “will continue working to advance policies that protect Mecklenburg County and North Carolina families and strengthen due process and public trust.” Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police doesn’t have the authority to enforce immigration laws and doesn’t participate in federal immigration operations, they added.

“CMPD officers are not required to ask about immigration status and will only become involved when criminal behavior or warrants fall under their jurisdiction,” the letter said.

Border Patrol officials told McClatchy on Tuesday the agency does not “discuss future or potential operations.”

 

“Every day, DHS enforces the laws of the nation across the country,” Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary of homeland security, said in a statement.

Mecklenburg County Sheriff Garry McFadden, who has clashed with Immigration and Customs Enforcement this year over its practices in the Charlotte area, said in a statement Tuesday no federal officials had informed him or CMPD Chief Johnny Jennings about any plan for a federal immigration operation.

“Given the current climate surrounding immigration and the potential for violence associated with law enforcement operations at any level, Sheriff McFadden respectfully requests that any CBP activities taking place within Mecklenburg County be communicated to MCSO and local law enforcement in advance along with any relevant updates or points of contacts,” the sheriff’s department statement said. “This will help ensure the safety of all parties involved.”

Local immigration attorney Andrés López compared Border Patrol’s actions in other cities to “the wild, wild west.”

“That’s what I’ve been observing, as far as what’s been going on in Chicago or Los Angeles. The thought of that coming to Charlotte is upsetting and disconcerting,” he said.

Immigration-related arrests are already on the rise in Charlotte, a Charlotte Observer investigation found previously. ICE arrested about three times the number of people in the first half of 2025 countywide compared to the same time in 2024, data show.

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©2025 The Charlotte Observer. Visit at charlotteobserver.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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