Federal agents began hitting the streets of New Orleans on Wednesday in the Trump administration’s latest immigration crackdown across the U.S., looking to round up immigrants accused of violent crimes, a U.S. Homeland Security official said.

Masked agents patrolled a heavily Hispanic suburb in marked and unmarked vehicles, and a resident told The Associated Press he watched agents arresting men outside a home improvement store in New Orleans — a familiar scene that has played out in several major cities in recent months.

Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino, who led enforcement operations in Chicago, Los Angeles and Charlotte, N.C., met up Wednesday with agents assembling in a Home Depot parking lot.

There are more than 200 Customs and Border Protection and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials working on the New Orleans operation, according to a U.S. official who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly. The objective is to make as many arrests as possible over at least 60 days.

U.S. Homeland Security Department Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement that the New Orleans operation is targeting immigrants who were released after arrests for crimes such as home invasion, armed robbery and rape.

Immigration officials have blanketed big cities and small towns across the nation since January while carrying out U.S. President Donald Trump’s aggressive mass deportation efforts.

A man walking through an aisle of food and snack products at a gas station

U.S. Border Patrol commander Greg Bovino walks through an aisle at a Shell gas station in New Orleans on Wednesday. (Seth Herald/Reuters)

Another operation is expected soon in Minnesota, targeting Somali immigrants.

The enforcement tactics have been met with protests and lawsuits.

The operation in Louisiana is being called “Catahoula Crunch,” continuing Homeland Security’s pattern of assigning region-specific names to the crackdowns. The Catahoula leopard dog is Louisiana’s official state dog. Planning documents obtained by The Associated Press referred to the Louisiana operation as “Swamp Sweep.”

Fear and uncertainty have weighed heavy on the immigrant community in New Orleans — a one-of-a-kind American city known as the birthplace of jazz and for its Mardi Gras celebrations and rich blend of French, Spanish, African and Indigenous cultures.

A witness saw federal agents chase down and arrest people in the parking lot of a New Orleans home improvement store Wednesday morning.

“They tried to run across the street but they caught them,” said Jody Styles, who was at a gas station near the Lowe’s when authorities converged.

A convoy of marked and unmarked vehicles slowly drove past gas stations and a Walmart in Kenner, La., a suburb with the highest concentration of Hispanic residents of any city in the state.

Agents pulled over and spoke with a man mowing a lawn before they continued along. In another neighbourhood, around a dozen agents surrounded a home where a man stood on the roof, waiting for officers to leave. Residents and advocates stood nearby, filming the encounter.

Border Patrol and immigration officials did not immediately respond to messages seeking how many arrests were made on the first day.

A group of buildings in New Orleans, Louisiana

A view of New Orelans, where an immigration crackdown involving federal agents has begun. (Adam Gray/AFP/Getty Images)

Some businesses in heavily Hispanic areas have shuttered, saying they will remain closed until the operation is over. Others storefronts have signs barring federal immigration agents from entering.

Posted on the door of Los Hondureños, a restaurant in Kenner, was a handwritten note saying it was closing until further notice. It ended: “Thank you, The Hondurans.”

Twenty years ago, New Orleans relied on thousands of Latino workers who helped rebuild after Hurricane Katrina. But it has not escaped the escalating tensions over immigration.

Protest of crackdown

Earlier this week, dozens of people took to the streets, despite rain and chilly temperatures, to protest the coming crackdown. On Wednesday, the City Council launched an online portal where residents can report alleged abuse by federal officers.

People protesting against the actions of ICE

Amid rain on Monday evening, protesters gathered in New Orleans to show their opposition to a pending ICE-led immigration crackdown. (Gerald Herbert/The Associated Press)

Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry, a Republican, has singled out crimes in which the suspect’s immigration status is in question, such as the killing of a French Quarter tour guide by a group that included a Honduran man who entered the country illegally.

U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi has accused New Orleans of undermining federal immigration enforcement. The U.S. Department of Justice includes New Orleans in a list of 18 cities it considers to be providing sanctuary to immigrants without legal status.

New Orleans officials deny the city’s policies thwart federal immigration enforcement. City police Chief Anne Kirkpatrick has said she considers it to be a civil matter outside her jurisdiction.

‘Until we get them all’: governor

Louisiana has been preparing for weeks for an immigration crackdown.

The governor, a close Trump ally who has moved to align state policy with the White House’s enforcement agenda, said Wednesday that the crackdown will target the “worst of the worst, criminal illegal aliens that have broken the law.”

A man speaks while standing in front of a microphone, while U.S. President Donald Trump looks on from the background

Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry is a close ally of U.S. President Donald Trump. The photo above shows the governor speaking in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in March 2025, as Trump looked on. (Carlos Barria/Reuters)

“It started today and it’s going to run until we get them all off the street,” Landry said during an interview on the Walton & Johnson radio show.

In addition to the deployment of federal immigration agents, Landry said he expects National Guard members to arrive in New Orleans before Christmas to join the efforts to combat crime.

The immigration operation’s planning documents showed border agents intended to launch a monthslong crackdown in southeast Louisiana and into Mississippi.

The deployment, which aims to arrest 5,000 people, was expected to be led by the Border Patrol, whose agents have drawn scrutiny for aggressive tactics in other cities, including Chicago and Los Angeles.

A Louisiana immigrant rights group asked a judge Wednesday to block a new state law that gives prosecutors wider latitude to charge people accused of delaying, hindering or interfering with a federal immigration enforcement.

New Orleans-based non-profit Immigration Services and Legal Advocacy said the law has had a chilling effect on their freedom of speech. The group said it was worried about running afoul of the law so it halted workshops explaining legal rights during an immigration-related arrest and the rights for bystanders to film or record.