Wednesday, June 10, 2026

ICE operation nets 132 in the state, including 7 in Hampton Roads

Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested 132 people for civil and criminal violations earlier this month as part of a state-wide crackdown on undocumented immigration.

Four men were arrested in Newport News. Two Guatemalan nationals who illegally re-entered the United States after a previous removal. They face up to 20 years in prison and will be prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

A third Guatemalan was a fugitive from a final order of removal from a federal immigration judge.

The fourth man was a Mexican national who had two charges of petty larceny.

One arrest happened in Virginia Beach – a Jamaican national with a conviction for driving while intoxicated – and one in Norfolk, a Jamaican national with convictions for possession of marijuana and possession of forged documents.

A man in James County also was one of those arrested. He’s a South African national and was arrested on civil immigration violations, ICE spokeswoman Carissa Cutrell said. He also had pending charges for assault and battery.

The arrests were made as part of ICE’s Operation Eagle’s Shield, which targeted “notable threats to public safety” throughout Virginia and Washington, D.C., according to an ICE news release.

The operation targeted “violent offenders” such as MS-13 gang members and sex offenders, according to the news release.

The operation was conducted by ICE’s Enforcement and Removal Operations of the Washington Field Office. The arrests were made between July 9 and 20. Nine of the suspects have already been deported.

The operation targeted “violent offenders” such as MS-13 gang members and sex offenders, according to the news release. The 131 men and one woman arrested in the crackdown were from nations including Bolivia, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Fiji, Guatemala, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Mongolia, Peru, the Philippines, South Africa and Sudan.

“We set out to locate and detain known, dangerous criminal aliens who are hiding and operating in the neighborhoods we call home,” said ERO Washington field office director Russell Hott. “

The Department of Homeland Security and the FBI shared information with ICE for the purposed of the operation.

Other agencies that provided support in Operation Eagle’s Shield include ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the U.S. Marshals Service and the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

John Mangalonzo
John Mangalonzohttps://wydaily.com
John Mangalonzo ([email protected]) is the managing editor of Local Voice Media’s Virginia papers – WYDaily (Williamsburg), Southside Daily (Virginia Beach) and HNNDaily (Hampton-Newport News). Before coming to Local Voice, John was the senior content editor of The Bellingham Herald, a McClatchy newspaper in Washington state. Previously, he served as city editor/content strategist for USA Today Network newsrooms in St. George and Cedar City, Utah. John started his professional journalism career shortly after graduating from Lyceum of The Philippines University in 1990. As a rookie reporter for a national newspaper in Manila that year, John was assigned to cover four of the most dangerous cities in Metro Manila. Later that year, John was transferred to cover the Philippine National Police and Armed Forces of the Philippines. He spent the latter part of 1990 to early 1992 embedded with troopers in the southern Philippines as they fought with communist rebels and Muslim extremists. His U.S. journalism career includes reporting and editing stints for newspapers and other media outlets in New York City, California, Texas, Iowa, Utah, Colorado and Washington state.

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