Immigration Raid At Hyundai Plant Construction Site Results in Hundreds of Arrests UPDATED

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

Updated at 3:00 p.m. ET with new information on the arrested individuals.


Immigration officials descended on Hyundai’s factory in Georgia yesterday, arresting hundreds of people at the production facility. Agents from the Department of Homeland Security, the FBI, DEA, and Georgia State Patrol arrested around 450 people they say were in the country illegally.

The raid picked up executives and others from South Korean battery manufacturer LG Energy Solution, which is a co-owner of the facility with Hyundai. Neither company confirmed the number of people that were arrested, but the development raised alarm bells in South Korea. A spokesperson for the country’s Foreign Ministry said, “The economic activities of our investment companies and the rights and interests of our citizens must not be unjustly violated during U.S. law enforcement proceedings.” LG said it was working with Hyundai and its home government to get the arrested employees released.


Steven Schrank, special agent in charge of Homeland Security Investigations Atlanta, said, “We are making many arrests of undocumented individuals. We have encountered many lawful employees working here, United States citizens and lawful permanent residents, and they are of course being released.” The Hyundai facility sprawls across 3,000 acres and employs around 1,200 people.


A Hyundai spokesperson said there was no impact to the plant or production. The arrests happened at the automaker’s battery plant construction site, not on a factory floor, and the automaker said it was “cooperating fully with the appropriate authorities regarding activity at our construction site.” Construction on the new facility has been paused while the situation progresses.

Videos of the event show agents in masks approaching, saying, “We’re Homeland Security. We have a search warrant for the whole site. We need construction to cease immediately. We need all work to end on the site right now.” The raid is one of many that have happened over the last few months but is one of the largest to date.


[Images: Hyundai]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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  • Cap65775250 Cap65775250 on Sep 08, 2025

    "Visible minority" is a Canadian thing, I think. In the US Elon Musk is African American since he was born and raised in Africa. Under American law that makes him ineligible to run for president.

  • Jalop1991 Jalop1991 on Sep 08, 2025

    ICE raid on Hyundai battery plant resulted in arrest of 300 Korean nationals


    ICE agents detained 450 illegal migrants at a construction site in Georgia, including hundreds of fly-in Koreans who likely misused B-1/B-2 business tourist visas to take jobs from American construction workers ...

    Hyundai 'is a repeat offender,' Jay Palmer, an immigration expert who works with immigration lawyers, told Breitbart News. Like other companies, including Mercedes, Kia, and Tesla, Hyundai executives use staffing companies to legally shield themselves as they fly airport migrants to job sites, he said...


    These battery plants received massive tax incentives from state governments. Even Republican politicians boasted about them, talking about American jobs and economic prosperity.

    Hyundai seemingly repaid that by hiring illegal Korean workers.


    More:


    'They push the people [job applicants] to staffing agencies, and then they hire them from staffing agencies, and then think they're shielded by the law because they have a master service agreement that states [immigration status] is not their responsibility. This is happening in every industry, especially in meat processing plants …It's just egregious,' Palmer explained.

    The airport migrants are just basic economics for the CEOs, he said. 'Why hire an American worker that might be unionized and you have to pay them $20, $25, $30 an hour, when you can hire a foreign worker and pay them $5, $6, $7, $8 an hour, and you don't have to pay insurance on them?'


    And even more on Twitter:


    Branum said she called ICE after Korean workers came to her and others, explaining they were living like 20 to a house with no money. If true, Hyundai should face serious penalties for paying skilled labor just $20k a year.


    I love this quote:


    If this rumor is true, and if you've lived in places near immigrants you know it's possible, this seems almost indistinguishable from slave labor and trafficking.


    Go on, buy your H/K/G cars and tell me you're not part of the problem.

    • See 3 previous
    • Bd2 Bd2 on Sep 09, 2025

      ^^^ANAL

      Most of those arrested are highly skilled workers re battery manufacturing (which the US does not have expertise or enough of them).; you think TSMC build of a new foundry in AZ doesn't have mostly Taiwanese workers for skilled positions?

      Nothing more than the typical public grandstanding; why not work with these companies to expedite processing H-1B visas (with all the cuts in staffing, there's a huge backlog, as there is to get a new passport, etc., never mind trying to get an appointment with your local social security office).

      But as tyoical, this corrupt admin rather ramp up their base as support has been falling (leading group for job losses - white males due in large part to loss in manufacturing jobs; with American farmers even worse off than the 1st time around with Iowa's GDP shrinking by more than 6% and 1/3rd of Arkansas farmers facing bankruptcy).

      This will not only delay the opening of this and other plants by foreign companies (which provide jobs for Americans), but will put a damper on future investment.

      The irony in all this is that the Mango Mussolini, imported Polish workers (who worked and lived in substandard conditions) to do the demo for tRump Tower and both tRump projects in Vegas and Chicago used Chinese steel and aluminum.

      Maybe we should retroactively deport Melania and Elon as they both worked while on a tourist/student visa?
























  • Kjhkjlhkjhkljh kljhjkhjklhkjh utterly dumb use case .. lets jar, shake, thermally shock, cover in water, hammer, jump and violently vibrate all the things that combust and connect stupid amounts of current.
  • Slavuta Das Kia Visionhttps://www.kia.com/us/en/kia-collective/vision/designing-the-next-chapter.html
  • FreedMike …or maybe Kia actually looked at the thing and said, “my word, that thing is ugly and no one is going to buy it, never mind what it runs on”…
  • Probert Over 30,000,000 EVs have been sold this year. Many in America, sadly for your thesis. Whether the US wishes to participate in this tech moving forward, or not, others are. In essence we have ceded the world to China in this regard, and in yet another field we will be relegated to second rate moribundity. Happy days!!!!Oh - South Korea has halted billions in investment in the US. Investment that could have employed thousands of Americans. Good times!!!!Oh - last year some 4 million people died prematurely from fossil fuel pollution. Party on!!!!!
  • Fred Granted there must be thousands of parts in a car. I'm sure they are designing cars with computers and use a MRP system, so it's all documented. Do a querey and pull it up. Unless you they want to hide something.
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