In early May, drivers in South Nashville noticed something unusual—state troopers weren’t the only ones pulling people over. For about a week, Tennessee Highway Patrol officers were joined by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, turning routine traffic stops into immigration sweeps. As reported by The New York Times, the joint operation resulted in nearly 200 arrests and has since ignited fierce backlash in the city.
Federal officials framed the effort as a targeted operation focused on public safety. ICE said that nearly half of the 196 people detained had prior convictions or pending criminal charges. But to many Nashville residents—especially in the city’s immigrant-heavy southern neighborhoods—it felt more like a dragnet. Local advocacy groups, including The ReMIX Tennessee, quickly mobilized, documenting enforcement activity, issuing alerts on social media, and operating hotlines to warn residents in real time.
Cathy Carrillo, co-founder of ReMIX, emphasized the significance of the operation’s location to The New York Times. “Anyone who’s from Nashville knows those areas are densely immigrant, Hispanic, Latino areas,” she said. “If we weren’t out there documenting everything they were doing, they would be doing double what they were doing.”…