Trump's crackdown in DC leaves residents on edge as federal agents set
up checkpoints
[August 22, 2025]
By CHRIS MEGERIAN and JACQUELYN MARTIN
WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal authorities have set up checkpoints around the
nation's capital, sometimes asking people for their immigration status
and detaining them, as President Donald Trump's crackdown ensnares more
residents each day.
Trump claimed that a crime crisis required his Republican
administration’s intervention in the Democratic-led city this month,
brushing aside statistics that showed the problem was already waning.
However, immigration enforcement appears to be a priority, as more than
a third of people arrested in the last two weeks were in the country
illegally, according to the White House.
Hundreds of federal agents and National Guard soldiers have surged into
Washington, leaving some residents on edge and creating tense
confrontations in the streets.
A day care center was partially closed Thursday when staff became afraid
to go to work because they heard about federal agents nearby. An
administrator asked parents to keep their children at home if possible.
Other day cares have stopped taking kids on daily walks because of fears
about encountering law enforcement.
Trump visits cops and troops
The White House said there have been 630 arrests, including 251 people
who are in the country illegally, since Aug. 7, when Trump began surging
federal agents into the city. Trump has been ratcheting up the pressure
since then, seizing control of the D.C. police department on Aug. 11 and
deploying more National Guard troops, mostly from Republican-led states.

On Thursday evening, Trump visited with officers and troops at a U.S.
Park Police facility in the latest show of force from the White House.
“We’re not playing games," he said.
Trump suggested that operations in the city could be drawn out and serve
as a model for others around the country.
“We’re going to make it safe, and we’re going to go on to other places,
but we’re going to stay here for a while," he said.
Soldiers have been largely stationed in downtown areas, such as
monuments on the National Mall and transit stations. However, federal
agents are operating more widely through the city. D.C. Mayor Muriel
Bowser acknowledged the proliferation of traffic checkpoints Thursday.
“The surge of federal officers is allowing for different types of
deployments, more frequent types of deployments, like checkpoints,”
Bowser said.
A crowd of people gathered outside a municipal office building to
protest Trump's crackdown, waving signs and cheering speakers who
denounced the president's plans. Their numbers swelled into the hundreds
until police closed off nearby streets. When the rally ended, many
remained to dance and listen to music.
In other neighborhoods Thursday evening, residents banged pots and pans
on rooftops, front steps and street corners.
Not a normal traffic stop
On Thursday morning, as Martin Romero rode through Washington’s Rock
Creek Park on his way to a construction job in Virginia, he saw police
on the road up ahead. He figured it was a normal traffic stop, but it
wasn’t.
Romero, 41, said U.S. Park Police were telling pickup trucks with
company logos to pull over, reminding them that commercial vehicles
weren’t allowed on park roads. They checked for licenses and insurance
information, and then U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents
came over.

Romero said there were two agents on one side of his truck and three on
the other. He started to get nervous as the agents asked where they were
from and whether they were in the country illegally.
“We just came here to work,” Romero said afterwards. “We aren’t doing
anything bad.”
Two people in his truck were detained and the agents didn't give a
reason, he said. He also saw three other people taken from other
vehicles.
“I feel really worried because they took two of our guys," he said.
"They wouldn’t say where they’re taking them or if they’ll be able to
come back.”
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President Donald Trump speaks with members of law enforcement and
National Guard soldiers, Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025, in Washington, as
Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and Attorney General Pam Bondi
listen. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Romero said he called his boss, who told him to just head home. They
wouldn’t be working today.
Enrique Martinez, a supervisor at the construction company, came to the
scene afterwards. He pondered whether to call families of the detained
men.
“This has never happened to our company before," Martinez said. "I’m not
really sure what to do.”
Checkpoints are legal, to a point
The Supreme Court has upheld the use of law enforcement and government
checkpoints for specific purposes, such as policing the border and
identifying suspected drunk drivers.
But there are restrictions on that authority, especially when it comes
to general crime control. Jeffrey Bellin, a former prosecutor in
Washington and professor at Vanderbilt Law School who specializes in
criminal law and procedures, said the Constitution doesn’t allow “the
government to be constantly checking us and stopping to see if we’re up
to any criminal activity.”
He said checkpoints for a legally justifiable purpose — like checking
for driver's licenses and registrations — cannot be used as “subterfuge”
or a pretext for stops that would otherwise not be allowed. And though
the court has affirmed the use of checkpoints at the border, and even
some distance away from it, to ask drivers about immigration status,
Bellin said it was unlikely the authority would extend to Washington.
Anthony Michael Kreis, a professor at Georgia State College of Law, said
the seemingly “arbitrary” and intrusive nature of the checkpoints in the
capital could leave residents feeling aggrieved.
“Some of the things could be entirely constitutional and fine, but at
the same time, the way that things are unfolding, people are suspicious
— and I think for good reason,” he said.
Lilly Burchfield, 25, said she's seen people in her neighborhood come
out of their homes to yell at federal agents.
“It feels like we’re all coming together as a community and everyone
that I’ve talked to has been outraged by what’s happening,” she said.

From Los Angeles to D.C.
There are few places in the country that have been unaffected by Trump's
deportation drive, but his push into D.C. is shaping into something more
sustained, similar to what has unfolded in the Los Angeles area since
early June.
In Los Angeles, immigration officers — working with the Border Patrol
and other federal agencies — have been a near-daily presence at Home
Depots, car washes and other highly visible locations.
In a demonstration of how enforcement has affected routines, the bishop
of San Bernardino, California, formally excused parishioners of their
weekly obligation to attend Mass after immigration agents detained
people on two parish properties.
Immigration officials have been an unusually public presence, sending
horse patrols to the city’s famed MacArthur Park and appearing outside
California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s news conference last week on
congressional redistricting. Authorities said an agent fired at a moving
vehicle last week after the driver refused to roll down his window
during an immigration stop.
The National Guard and Marines were previously in the city for weeks on
an assignment to maintain order amid protests.
A federal judge blocked the administration from conducting
indiscriminate immigration stops in Southern California but authorities
have vowed to keep the pressure on.
____
Associated Press writers Eric Tucker, Ashraf Khalil, Matt Brown and Joey
Cappelletti in Washington and Elliot Spagat in San Diego contributed
reporting.
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