475 people detained in raid by ICE, other agencies at huge Hyundai site in Georgia, officials say
- Federal, state, and local authorities executed a large immigration raid detaining 475 workers at the Hyundai-LG battery plant construction site in Bryan County, Georgia.
- The raid followed a tip from a U.S. politician alleging unauthorized hiring at the plant, which is central to Georgia’s $7.6 billion economic development plan promising 8,500 jobs.
- Most detainees were South Korean nationals held at an ICE facility, prompting South Korean diplomatic efforts and a pledge to repatriate them on a chartered flight.
- Hyundai and LG are cooperating with authorities while construction remains paused, and the plant is not scheduled to start operations until late 2025 or early 2026.
- The raid exposed tensions over job promises and triggered online harassment of the politician who reported it, raising questions about immigration enforcement and the regional economy.
59 Articles
59 Articles
Nearly 500 workers were taken in a raid at Hyundai’s battery plant. In a quiet Georgia town, the silence is deafening
If you drove into Ellabell, Georgia, on State Route 204 – past a few double-wides, a couple of churches and a Dollar General – you’d never guess a massive automobile complex sits just a few miles away.
'Almost certainly a lie': Trump's justification of latest raid slammed by analysts
Analysts roundly criticized President Donald Trump's explanation on Sunday night of why immigration officials raided a Hyundai electric car battery plant in Georgia. On Friday, Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials detained 475 South Korean workers who were helping set up with battery plant in Georgia. In 2023, the company announced it would spend $2 billion to build the plant. Trump justified the move on Sunday in a post on Truth Social…
Homeland Security Investigations: Workplace raid nets 475 migrants
Federal agents raided the construction site of Hyundai Motor Group Metaplant America in Georgia and arrested 475 migrants on Thursday, according to Homeland Security. Steven Schrank, the special agent in charge of DHS Investigations in Georgia and Alabama, announced the arrests of mostly South Korean nationals at the site. President Donald Trump’s administration described it as “the largest single-site enforcement operation” in the history of DH…
The raid took place at a production site where the Korean car manufacturer makes electric vehicles.
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