
After entering a construction site in Tallahassee, federal and state officials asked workers for identification and separated them into two categories, witnesses told the Phoenix.
Some were free to go; others were handcuffed and led onto white buses with metal-covered windows to be transported away from the worksite, escorted by the Highway Patrol. Officials on the scene declined to provide information about the operation.
Construction workers whoโd been allowed to leave told the Phoenix that law enforcement officers had surrounded the site on West Gaines Street in FSUโs College Town before the raid began at about 9 a.m.
Agents surrounded dozens of workers in line for the bus.
An ICE public information officer in Tampa told the Phoenix Thursday afternoon: โU.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcementโs Homeland Security Investigation served multiple search warrants as part of an ongoing investigation in the Tallahassee region.โ
A social media post from Homeland Security Investigations called it a โtargeted enforcement operation.โ
Homeland Security Investigations Tampa posted on social media that it arrested โmore than 100 illegal aliens (some of which were previously deported and others with criminal backgrounds).โ Those arrested are from Mexico, Guatemala, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Colombia, and Honduras and other countries, the agency said.
Calls to the U.S. attorney and U.S. district court yielded no warrant information. The Leon County Sheriffโs office did not return a call asking whether the detainees were delivered to their detention facility.
Bystanders protesting the raid told agents they should be ashamed of themselves, criticized them for wearing masks, and told them they are all descendants of immigrants.
Standing with them were workersโ family members, trying to communicate with their loved one who had been detained, asking where they were being transported to.
A man who identified himself as the manager of the construction site told the Phoenix โthereโs no informationโ about the raid.

โSo, the state trooper was kind of doing a perimeter check around the apartment buildings itself and I was curious to know what was going on, and I started to notice more of a police presence โ people in camo outfits and people in masks and state troopers. I didnโt know what departments they were working for, I couldnโt tell from my apartment,โ she said.
โBut I started to see dozens of people at that point in handcuffs getting walked to the opposite side of the construction site and I saw them all lined up behind the prison bus and I stood out there for a while and there were more people showing up and being detained.โ
Griffith said she saw law enforcement officers from a variety of agencies: the U.S. Marshals Service; the FBI; and โlots of state troopers.โ
Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com.
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This article appears in May 29 – Jun 4, 2025.
