(WASHINGTON, D.C.) Mount Pleasant residents in Northwest Washington spent the weekend replacing anti-ICE protest signs and covering sidewalks with chalk messages after federal agents were filmed tearing down a banner in Lamont Park on Friday, August 15, 2025. The neighborhood action, now repeated daily, has become a visible stand against President Trump’s federal takeover of the District and an aggressive immigration enforcement drive that has swept across the city.
Surveillance video from a neighbor’s Ring camera shows agents, identified by residents as ICE, removing a pro-immigrant sign that read “No deportations in Mount Pleasant. No a la migra [No to ICE]” and “Chinga La Migra — Mount Pleasant Melts ICE.” After the sign came down, agents left behind a sex toy (dildo) that had been hidden behind the banner, an act widely viewed in the community as a deliberate provocation.

Within hours, residents and nearby shop owners put up a new sign with the same message, then chalked the park and surrounding blocks with phrases like “Keep DC free” and “No police, no ICE.” Organizers held events and rallies through the weekend to show solidarity and to support immigrant neighbors.
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, the Mount Pleasant response is part of a broader backlash citywide. The historically Central American enclave—long a hub for immigrant families—has become a focal point of anti-ICE and anti-federal occupation protests. Residents say they will keep replacing torn-down signs and expanding their presence in public spaces as long as the crackdowns continue.
Escalating federal presence and arrests
City officials and community observers report that arrests have surged since the takeover began.
- As of Saturday night, August 16, 2025, more than 300 people had been arrested in the citywide sweep, including 135 undocumented immigrants.
- Federal agents also cleared 44 homeless encampments from federal property.
- The Trump administration has deployed hundreds of federal agents and up to 800 National Guard troops to the District, with additional reinforcements pledged from several states.
- The National Guard, while not making arrests, is reportedly armed and providing support to law enforcement at key locations.
The White House has framed the push as a public safety measure. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said agents are targeting “undocumented immigrants with suspected gang affiliation” and pledged that the administration would “make D.C. safe again.” The deployment has proceeded even as official data show the city’s violent crime rate at a 30-year low, fueling debate over the need for such sweeping action.
Mayor Muriel Bowser, in a late Friday email to constituents, called the situation a “crisis” and praised residents for unity and resilience. Local business owners and long-time residents of Mount Pleasant have publicly condemned the federal actions as “an abuse of power” and a violation of community rights. Many say the agents’ removal of the Lamont Park sign—and the object left behind—crossed a line and escalated tensions in a neighborhood known for its immigrant roots and civic life.
Legal concerns, community organizing, and what comes next
Civil rights groups and immigrant advocates have moved quickly to challenge the federal presence. Lawsuits are underway contesting the federal takeover and enforcement tactics, arguing they suppress protest activity and violate constitutional limits on federal power in the District.
The friction has sparked a wave of mutual aid and community support:
- Neighbors pooling funds for legal help
- Volunteers offering translation and transportation
- Legal-observer teams staffed at protests
- Business owners offering walls and windows for messages of support
Organizers say public demonstrations will continue, and replacement banners will keep going up in Lamont Park and along the main corridor as often as needed. Residents describe a feedback loop of enforcement and response: each time a sign disappears, a new one is raised—often larger and higher—while chalk messages spread across sidewalks and storefronts.
Families report practical changes in daily life:
- Checking on older neighbors and coordinating school pickup plans for children in mixed-status households
- Workers weighing the risk of leaving for early shifts
- Younger residents carrying copies of phone numbers for legal aid teams
The Lamont Park footage—shared widely online—gave these fears a face and a specific place. It is why the park, even more than before, is now the neighborhood’s gathering point.
How the conflict is changing public life
The conflict is reshaping how people move and interact in public space. With National Guard troops backing federal agents, residents say they plan more cultural events in open areas, aiming to keep parks filled with families and music on weekend afternoons.
Organizers stress peaceful actions and careful documentation. Legal volunteers brief newcomers on how to film safely and where to send footage if officers attempt to stop recording. The sign at Lamont Park now hangs higher, with spare banners stored nearby. People heading home from work stop to take photos, while children walk past chalked messages in two languages that call for dignity and calm.
“We will keep replacing torn-down signs and expanding our presence in public spaces as long as the crackdowns continue.”
Official sources and tips for encounters
For official enforcement updates and agency statements, readers can check ICE’s website at https://ice.gov. Community organizers caution that people should rely on verified sources and avoid sharing unconfirmed rumors that may spread fear.
Residents and advocacy groups point to several immediate steps for people who may face direct encounters with agents or who plan to protest:
- If confronted by ICE:
- Know your rights: You do not have to answer questions or open your door without a warrant signed by a judge.
- Call local legal aid for immediate help and next steps.
- Document encounters when it is safe to do so, noting time, location, and the officers involved.
- For protesters:
- Stay peaceful and follow instructions from trained marshals when present.
- Record interactions and share footage with legal teams.
- Coordinate with organizers for rapid response and support networks.
Outlook and context
As operations continue, residents expect more confrontations and arrests, especially with reinforcements on the way and legal challenges still pending in court. Organizers are planning larger demonstrations and, some say, potential civil disobedience.
Mount Pleasant’s history adds weight to this moment. The area’s Central American immigrant roots run deep, a point neighbors repeat when asked why the signs keep going up. Gentrification has changed storefronts and rents, but the identity of the place remains tied to migration stories, family networks, and public squares where people gather without fear. The current standoff tests that identity and the promise that residents can speak out without having their words pulled down.
As of August 18, 2025, the standoff shows no signs of easing. Residents vow to keep replacing protest signs and expanding mutual aid, while federal agents extend their presence and step up arrests. The gulf between the administration’s public safety message and the lived reality on Mount Pleasant streets remains wide, with legal fights and larger protests looming in the days ahead.
This Article in a Nutshell
Mount Pleasant residents replaced a torn anti‑ICE banner after August 15, 2025 footage showed agents removing it. Community organizers chalked sidewalks, mounted legal support, and vowed daily replacements. With over 300 arrests citywide and up to 800 National Guard troops deployed, neighbors emphasize peaceful resistance, documentation, and mutual aid amid escalating federal enforcement.