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Federal immigration agents arrested at least 81 people in Charlotte within the first day of a new surge operation, according to a top Border Patrol official. The operation, part of a wider Trump administration push into Democratic-led cities, has drawn fierce objections from local leaders and sparked street protests.

Gregory Bovino, a Border Patrol commander, announced the arrest numbers on Sunday. The effort has been dubbed “Operation Charlotte’s Web.”

The operation marked the first time ICE agents entered a house of worship.

On X, Bovino posted that agents had made over 80 arrests, writing, “From border towns to the Queen City, our agents go where the mission calls.” He also posted a highly-edited video showing uniformed officers handcuffing people.

The operation, which began Saturday, was highly visible. In one reported incident, agents detained a man on the property of a place of worship in east Charlotte while community members, including children, were nearby.

The Trump administration has boosted the presence of ICE and Border Patrol agents in several major cities with large immigrant populations, including Chicago, Los Angeles, and Portland, citing a need to combat crime.
Bovino, who is leading the Charlotte operation, previously oversaw a similar effort in Chicago. That operation led to a federal lawsuit from protesters and press groups accusing agents of indiscriminately firing riot weapons into crowds.
The recent surges follow the administration’s decision to rescind a long-standing policy that generally prohibited enforcement actions at “sensitive locations,” such as schools, hospitals, and places of worship.

In response to the federal presence, hundreds of demonstrators marched in Charlotte over the weekend to protest the operation. Officials in other states, such as California and Illinois, have accused the federal government of deliberately trying to incite violence with these deployments to justify crackdowns.