❓WHAT HAPPENED: Federal agents and federalized Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) officers conducted a crackdown on delivery drivers in Washington, D.C., seizing mopeds and arresting individuals.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Metropolitan Police Department, delivery drivers, and pro-illegal immigrant groups.
📍WHEN & WHERE: August 2025, Washington, D.C.
💬KEY QUOTE: “It’s very clear ICE is targeting delivery drivers because they’re outdoors, which makes it easier to do warrantless arrests. It’s a population that ICE is aware is very immigrant-heavy.” – Michael Lukens, Amica Center for Immigrant Rights
🎯IMPACT: The crackdown highlights issues with bosses exploiting illegal immigrants for cheap labor.
Federal agents and officers from the federalized Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) recently conducted a joint operation in Washington, D.C., targeting delivery drivers across the city. Witnesses say officers in tactical gear seized scooters and mopeds, loading them into trucks already filled with impounded vehicles.
The MPD says the operation is part of an effort to address unsafe driving. According to officials, more than 1,200 scooters have been impounded and 139 arrests have been made since the initiative began. However, the department did not address the visible involvement of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
“It’s very clear ICE is targeting delivery drivers because they’re outdoors, which makes it easier to do warrantless arrests. It’s a population that ICE is aware is very immigrant-heavy. And frankly, it’s easy for ICE to go after them,” said Michael Lukens, executive director of the Amica Center for Immigrant Rights. He added that many of those arrested are recent Venezuelan immigrants and could be subject to fast-tracked deportation.
The crackdown has led to a noticeable drop in the number of delivery drivers on city streets. Videos circulating on social media show agents detaining drivers, tackling one outside a coffee shop.
A growing number of food delivery workers in the D.C. area are illegal immigrants, especially from Venezuela, who often lack work permits, insurance, and vehicle registration. Many of these workers use unregistered mopeds and scooters while waiting for legal asylum or work authorization. Locals have expressed concern about reckless scooter driving.
So far, major food delivery platforms such as Uber Eats, Grubhub, and DoorDash have not commented on the arrests or the broader issue of illegal alien workers on their platforms.
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