Federal and local agents are fanning out across Atlanta in a coordinated crackdown known as Operation Lockdown, a months-long push to grab people accused of violent crimes before this summer’s FIFA World Cup puts the city under an international spotlight. Officials say the task force has already pulled more than a dozen of its initial targets off the streets, including suspects wanted in homicide cases, after a string of predawn raids and tense barricade standoffs in neighborhoods across the city.
According to FOX 5 Atlanta, investigators first zeroed in on 37 fugitives they consider especially dangerous and have arrested 13 of them so far, four of whom are wanted in connection with homicides. FBI Assistant Special Agent Shawn Matthews told the station that the Violent Crimes Task Force is backing up the Atlanta Police Department with surveillance, warrants and other investigative tools, and he cautioned, “It’s not going to be 37 and done.” Federal teams plan to keep the pressure on alongside local officers for at least the next month.
Channel 2 Action News rode along as the operation ramped up in mid May and, in reporting by WSB-TV, noted that an earlier tally put the list at 35 targets with 12 arrests at that point. FBI officials told the station they are zeroing in on “the worst of the worst” and said the timing lines up with World Cup security planning, even as they insist the sweep would be happening regardless. Agents are relying on cellphone tracking, confidential sources and newer technologies to confirm locations before they knock on any doors.
Notable Arrests And Standoffs
According to WSB-TV, 34-year-old Aldemetrius Brown, who is wanted in an August 2025 killing, barricaded himself in an attic for hours before finally surrendering. An FBI official told the station that as officers moved through the house, “we came to realize he was actually hiding in the attic.”…