(MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE) Memphis Mayor Paul Young said the city joined a federal task force that includes Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the National Guard to reduce violent crime while limiting harm to immigrant families. He stressed the joint effort is designed to focus on people responsible for shootings and other serious offenses, not to carry out broad immigration arrests.
“Our team with Memphis Police Department has been working with them to ensure that they have the opportunity to help us… bring to justice [those] that would help make our community safer,” he said.

City officials said the deployment will last at least 30 days, with about 700 federal agents and 150 National Guard members supporting Memphis Police Department (MPD) operations. Young argued that keeping the federal team busy with MPD on violent crime cases will reduce the time they spend on immigration enforcement.
“The busier we can keep them with MPD, the less time they will have to focus on immigration,” he said, framing the partnership as a way to steer outside resources toward the city’s most urgent safety needs.
Concerns from County Leaders and Community Advocates
Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris and community advocates warned about the risk of racial profiling and the potential for fear across Latino and immigrant neighborhoods as the task force moves through Memphis.
Harris called the National Guard’s role unconstitutional and said families are already afraid — parents worried about work and children hesitating to go to school. He said the county is weighing legal options to protect residents’ rights while still supporting real efforts to lower violent crime.
Focus on Violent Crime and Limits on Immigration Enforcement
Memphis leaders said the partnership grew out of a spike in violent crime and public pressure to act quickly. They described a narrow mission: target those suspected of serious offenses, and do it in a way that does not expand immigration arrests.
Officials said they’re pushing daily for a focus on major offenses and are tracking impacts on local systems, including jail capacity.
City-stated priorities include:
– Locating and arresting suspects linked to violent crime alongside MPD detectives
– Avoiding broad immigration sweeps — Mayor Young said these are not the goal
– Monitoring jail space and court flow to keep attention on the most serious offenders
– Coordinating arrests to reduce harm to neighborhoods and limit unnecessary disruptions
Mayor Young said the city’s strategy is to keep federal agents working hand-in-hand with MPD so the mission stays tight. By directing attention to shootings, carjackings, and other violent offenses, he said the city aims to reduce daily fear and avoid actions that could separate families over civil immigration status.
Officials also emphasized transparency. They said they will continue to inform the public about the operation’s scope and invited feedback from community groups, faith leaders, and immigrant service providers.
Coordinated, timely communication helps lower fear during multi-agency operations, especially when immigrant families worry that routine tasks—like school drop-off or a commute to work—could lead to contact with federal officers.
(Reported by VisaVerge.com)
Community Fears, Legal Options, and Civil Liberties
Mayor Harris said he shares residents’ concerns that a surge of outside officers could heighten racial profiling, especially in diverse neighborhoods. The county is reviewing legal steps to guard civil rights and is talking with local lawyers and advocacy groups.
He also noted reports of children afraid to attend school and workers staying home — signs that trust is fragile.
Both mayors said they want to bring down violent crime without causing new harm. They urged residents to:
– Report suspected criminal activity
– Contact nonprofit groups for legal help if they have questions about their rights
City and county leaders said they are pushing for clear rules on:
– Arrests
– Data collection
– Handling of complaints
so families know what to expect and where to seek help.
Key points officials and advocates highlighted:
– No broad immigration sweeps planned, according to Mayor Young
– Constitutional concerns raised by Mayor Harris over National Guard deployment
– Potential racial profiling and community fear identified by advocates
– Possible legal action under review to protect residents’ rights
– Transparency and community input promised by city leadership
Advocates requested public reporting on arrests during the operation, including:
– The number of arrests linked to violent crime
– Any immigration detainers that follow
They said this data will help the community judge whether the task force is meeting its stated purpose. City officials said they are watching the strain on local systems closely and will continue to press for a focus on the most serious offenders.
What Residents Should Know During the 30-Day Surge
City leaders said the current phase will continue for at least one month, and they will assess results and community impact as it unfolds. Officials urged calm and asked families to keep kids in school and continue daily routines.
They emphasized the federal presence is meant to reduce shootings and make streets safer, not to create fear in immigrant households.
Practical advice for residents:
– Document any misconduct and note badge numbers when possible
– File complaints through local channels if needed
– Keep emergency plans up to date, including contacts for relatives and trusted friends
– Workers worried about identity checks should consult a reputable legal aid group or private attorney for tailored advice
For official information about ICE enforcement, see the agency’s overview page: Enforcement and Removal Operations. Community groups stress that reading official sources can help families understand how immigration enforcement works and what officers are authorized to do in different settings.
The Test for City and County Leadership
Mayor Young and Mayor Harris agreed public safety and civil rights must move together. Young described the partnership as an attempt to use federal resources to bring down violent crime while pulling those same resources away from immigration arrests that could harm trust. Harris said constitutional questions remain and that the county stands ready to defend residents’ rights if needed.
As the operation continues, leaders will be judged on whether arrests align with the stated aim: the swift pursuit of people linked to violent crime, not mass checks of immigration status.
Community reactions are mixed:
– Some residents hope the extra manpower will lower gunfire on their block.
– Others fear increased police stops and a higher risk of detention for loved ones who lack status.
City officials said they hear both concerns and will keep working with neighborhood groups to limit harm.
The next weeks will show whether this Memphis experiment — bringing federal muscle into local work with a narrow target — can reduce shootings without breaking trust.
The core promise from City Hall remains simple: keep the task force on violent crime and keep families together. If the operation stays within those lines, leaders say, it could ease fear while making communities safer. If it strays, they say they’re prepared to act.
This Article in a Nutshell
Memphis has partnered with a federal task force that includes ICE and the National Guard to address a recent surge in violent crime. The operation will last at least 30 days and deploy roughly 700 federal agents and 150 National Guard members to work with the Memphis Police Department, with officials emphasizing a narrow focus on shootings, carjackings and serious offenses rather than broad immigration sweeps. County leaders and community advocates expressed concern about potential racial profiling and community fear, prompting consideration of legal action and demands for transparency, public reporting, and safeguards to protect civil rights and minimize disruption to immigrant families.