QUICK ANSWER
Community videos, immigrant advocacy groups, and a widely circulated Newsweek investigation report that ICE agents have been seen monitoring, questioning, or detaining Latino day laborers in and around Home Depot parking lots. Home Depot denies coordinating with ICE, but immigrant communities say the retailer has failed to take proactive steps to protect vulnerable individuals.
As ICE escalates enforcement under the current administration, boycott movements—including #HomeDeport—are spreading nationwide. Immigrant families and mixed-status couples are increasingly seeking legal guidance on whether Home Depot is a safe place to visit.
If you or a loved one feel at risk of enforcement exposure:
[Schedule a Consultation]
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/book-consultation/

FAST FACTS
- Newsweek published a widely shared story on ICE activity near Home Depot:
Newsweek: Home Depot ICE Involvement - Viral videos on TikTok, Instagram Reels, and WhatsApp groups show alleged ICE monitoring of day laborers.
- Home Depot’s corporate response: “We do not collaborate with ICE.”
- Latino and immigrant communities dispute this, citing historical patterns and repeated incidents.
- Boycott calls accelerated after HLG’s investigative content:
- ICE has increased public-space operations in 2025–26, including retail zones and transit hubs.
- Ohio (Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati, Dayton, Akron, Toledo, Youngstown) is a national search hotspot for “Home Depot ICE.”
INTRODUCTION: A RETAIL GIANT AT THE CENTER OF AN IMMIGRATION FIRESTORM
A growing number of immigrant customers, day laborers, and mixed-status families are accusing Home Depot—America’s largest home-improvement retailer—of allowing, tolerating, or failing to prevent frequent ICE presence in and around its parking lots.
A viral Newsweek article put these concerns on the national stage:
Newsweek: ICE & Home Depot Allegations
Online, thousands of posts document:
- unmarked vehicles allegedly used by ICE
- plainclothes agents approaching laborers
- coordinated arrests near store entrances
- questioning of individuals perceived to be Latino
Home Depot strongly denies cooperating with ICE. But denials alone do not satisfy communities who say:
- enforcement keeps happening,
- fear keeps rising, and
- Home Depot provides no visible protection.
This is happening during a period of heightened ICE enforcement driven by the administration’s “Integrity” campaign and a surge in ICE–USCIS–CBP data fusion.
HLG has documented these trends extensively:
Immigration attorney Richard Herman notes:
“Whether Home Depot invited ICE or not, these repeated incidents show one truth: immigrant families feel unsafe. Corporations that serve diverse communities must do far more than issue denials.”
SECTION 1 — WHAT THE NEWSWEEK REPORT ACTUALLY FOUND
Key Findings From the Newsweek Investigation
- Immigrant customers repeatedly reported ICE activity near Home Depot.
- Videos document what appear to be officers monitoring day laborers.
- Advocacy groups claim ICE uses Home Depot lots as “soft targets” for detentions.
- Boycott calls surged immediately after publication.
Link:
Newsweek: Home Depot ICE Involvement
Call-Out Box: Additional Media Coverage
Other media outlets covering similar patterns across the U.S.:
- AP News — retail-sector ICE monitoring
- Reuters — enforcement in public commercial spaces
- Univision — interviews with day laborers in Texas & California
- Telemundo — viral footage of parking-lot detentions
- NPR — “ICE enforcement increasingly visible in everyday retail spaces”
- Cleveland.com — immigrant safety concerns in Ohio retail zones
These reports reinforce the credibility and pervasiveness of the allegations.
SECTION 2 — WHY HOME DEPOT IS A DAY-LABOR MAGNET
Why Day Laborers Gather at These Stores
- Contractors know workers gather here.
- Parking lots are open, accessible, and unregulated.
- Tools, materials, and supplies are immediately available.
- Workers can find jobs quickly and safely—until ICE arrives.
Why This Matters
Day laborers—many undocumented—are disproportionately targeted during public-space enforcement. Home Depot’s high visibility makes it a prime location for federal surveillance.
Related HLG Analysis
SECTION 3 — HOME DEPOT’S OFFICIAL RESPONSE
What Home Depot Says
- “We do not collaborate with ICE.”
- “We do not provide information or assistance.”
- “We cannot control law enforcement in public spaces.”
What Critics Say
- Denials are not equivalent to protection policies.
- Home Depot refuses to post “No ICE cooperation” signage.
- Stores are not trained to recognize or prevent profiling.
- Security teams may be inconsistently enforcing rights protections.
HLG Perspective
Corporations often “over-comply” with law enforcement out of fear, lack of knowledge, or perceived obligation—creating de facto cooperation even without formal agreements.

SECTION 4 — WHY THE #HOMEDEPORT BOYCOTT IS EXPLODING
Momentum Sources
- TikTok creators documenting ICE sightings
- Latino influencers promoting #HomeDeport
- Advocacy groups sharing HLG investigations
- Newsweek amplification
- Rising fear in mixed-status families
- Increased ICE operations at retail stores
Key HLG Resources Fueling Boycotts
Economic Reality
Latino and immigrant consumers represent trillions in annual spending. Boycotts can:
- shift corporate policies
- force public commitments
- drive national media coverage
- reshape political pressure
SECTION 5 — SAFETY GUIDE: WHAT IMMIGRANTS SHOULD KNOW BEFORE VISITING HOME DEPOT
Know Your Rights in Parking Lots
- You do not have to answer questions.
- ICE needs a judge-signed warrant to detain inside private spaces.
- You can record ICE encounters.
- You can leave unless detained.
- Do not run, flee, or present false documents.
For Mixed-Status Families
- Travel together
- Keep documents digital + accessible
- Avoid large day-labor gatherings if anxious
- Identify safe exit routes
- Share trip plans with loved ones
For Day Laborers
- Avoid working with unknown individuals offering “too good to be true” jobs
- Watch for unmarked vehicles
- Travel in pairs
- Document suspicious activity
HLG Guides
SECTION 6 — LEGAL BREAKDOWN: WHEN CORPORATE COOPERATION BECOMES ILLEGAL
Corporations cannot:
- Share customer data without a lawful request
- Provide footage without subpoena
- Allow ICE into private back-of-house areas
- Facilitate racially targeted questioning
- Enable detentions without legal basis
Corporations may inadvertently cooperate when:
- Security teams provide access without understanding warrant rules
- Managers misunderstand ICE’s authority
- Staff feel pressured to comply without verification
HLG’s position: Ignorance is not neutrality.
SECTION 7 — THE RISE OF IMMIGRANT ECONOMIC POWER & CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY
Latino & Immigrant Consumer Impact
- Over $2.5 trillion in national spending power
- Billions in Midwest retail spending
- A growing economic bloc with political influence
Boycott Effectiveness
Past boycotts forced major changes at:
- Amazon
- Tyson
- Koch Foods
- 7-Eleven
- GEO Group-associated vendors
HLG’s investigations continue to expose corporate behavior:
SECTION 8 — WHY THIS MATTERS FOR OHIO IMMIGRANT COMMUNITIES
Ohio cities have:
- Rapidly expanding Latino populations
- High construction-sector employment
- Day-laborer hubs at home-improvement stores
- Increased ICE visibility
- Strong immigrant-rights advocacy networks
Search spikes for “Home Deport,” “Home Depot ICE,” and “retail ICE sightings” are highest in:
- Cleveland
- Columbus
- Cincinnati
- Dayton
- Akron
- Toledo
- Youngstown
HLG is the leading Ohio-based immigration law firm with 30+ years of experience protecting immigrant families.
EXPERT QUOTES BY RICHARD HERMAN
“Corporations must not be neutral when immigrant customers feel unsafe. Silence is not safety. Silence is complicity.”
“When a mixed-status family is afraid to buy a hammer or a light bulb, something has gone terribly wrong with our enforcement priorities.”
OHIO VS. NATIONAL IMMIGRATION LAWYERS (COMPARISON TABLE)
| Key Area | Herman Legal Group (Ohio-Based, National Reach) | Many National Firms |
|---|---|---|
| ICE enforcement experience | 30+ years | Limited or regional |
| Mixed-status family defense | Highly specialized | Often generic |
| Marriage green cards | Deep experience | Varies widely |
| Emergency ICE response | Local + rapid | Call center routing |
| Presence in Ohio metros | Strong | Often none |
Schedule a consultation:
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/book-consultation/
EXPANDED FAQ — Home Depot, ICE, and Immigrant Safety in 2025–26
A. HOME DEPOT & ICE ALLEGATIONS
1. Did Home Depot actually cooperate with ICE?
Home Depot denies any formal cooperation with ICE. However, immigrant communities have reported repeated sightings of ICE agents near store entrances and parking lots.
Newsweek’s investigation documented these allegations:
Newsweek: Home Depot ICE Involvement
Whether or not Home Depot formally cooperated, the frequency of incidents has created a widespread perception of complicity.
2. What exactly did the Newsweek article say?
Key highlights from the Newsweek report include:
- Eyewitness accounts of ICE presence near Home Depot stores
- Video evidence circulating online showing unmarked vehicles
- Concerns that Home Depot’s parking lots have become “soft enforcement zones”
- Boycott movements growing on TikTok and X
- Home Depot refusing to provide detailed responses to questions
This article triggered a national conversation that is still unfolding.
3. Why are immigrant communities alarmed?
Because Home Depot is a major hub for day laborers, particularly workers from Latino and immigrant communities. ICE visibility in such spaces feels like targeted profiling, especially during a period of heightened enforcement.
4. Is this the first time Home Depot has been linked to an ICE controversy?
No.
HLG has previously documented patterns of corporate silence, ambiguity, and community mistrust, including analysis in:
5. Does Home Depot have an anti-ICE policy?
No clear policy is published.
Home Depot does not publicly state that:
- ICE is not allowed on private areas of its property, or
- customers will be protected from profiling
Many immigrant-serving retailers (e.g., supermarkets in Latino areas) do publish such policies, which is part of the reason activists say Home Depot is behind.
6. What has Home Depot said in response to the allegations?
Their core message has been:
- “We do not collaborate with immigration enforcement.”
- “We cannot prevent law enforcement activity in public spaces.”
- “We respect all customers.”
Critics say the response is vague, non-committal, and does not address safety concerns.
7. Is Home Depot legally required to allow ICE onto its property?
No.
If ICE does not have a judicial warrant, Home Depot can legally:
- Ask ICE to leave private areas
- Prevent them from entering staff-only zones
- Restrict access to surveillance equipment
- Require proper documentation
Home Depot has not clarified whether they take any of these steps.
8. Are these incidents happening nationwide, or only in certain states?
Reports exist in:
- California
- Texas
- Georgia
- Florida
- Illinois
- Arizona
- Ohio
- New York
This is a national pattern, not a localized one.
9. Are there videos of ICE activity at Home Depot?
Yes. Videos appear across TikTok, IG Reels, and WhatsApp. Some show:
- Unmarked cars
- Plainclothes agents
- Questioning of workers
- Arrests in parking lots
While video authenticity varies, the volume and consistency across platforms is notable.
10. Are Home Depot employees involved?
There is no documented evidence of formal involvement.
However, some workers have been accused (online) of warning ICE about day-laborer congregation patterns. These claims remain unverified.
B. BOYCOTTS & COMMUNITY RESPONSE
11. Why is it called “Home Deport”?
“Home Deport” is a viral nickname implying that Home Depot functions as a de facto deportation zone due to frequent ICE sightings.
12. Why are boycott calls growing?
Because communities believe:
- Home Depot is not protecting immigrant customers
- ICE uses parking lots strategically
- Corporate silence increases risk
- Day laborers are disproportionately targeted
HLG’s boycott guides have also accelerated awareness:
Black Friday ICE Boycott Guide
13. Do boycotts actually work?
Yes.
Past boycotts forced major companies (including food processors and retail chains) to:
- Change leadership
- Issue public statements
- Implement worker-safety policies
- Provide transparency reports
Consumer pressure is one of the most effective tools for immigrant communities.
14. Are other companies facing similar boycotts?
Yes.
See HLG’s full list:
Which Companies Are Facing Boycotts for ICE Links
15. Are Latino influencers involved in promoting the boycott?
Yes. Influencers, activists, community organizers, and immigrant journalists have been crucial in spreading this movement across:
- TikTok
- X
- Facebook groups
- WhatsApp communities
16. Is Home Depot losing business because of the boycott?
It is too early to know conclusively, but social-media analytics show significant shifts in sentiment, especially among Latino audiences.
17. Could Home Depot reverse the backlash?
Yes — with a clear, enforceable policy against cooperating with ICE.
But they have not yet taken that step.
C. RIGHTS & SAFETY IN RETAIL SPACES
18. Can ICE legally approach someone in a parking lot?
Yes, if it is a public area and the individual is not detained.
Parking lots are considered “public access zones.”
19. Do I have to answer ICE questions?
No.
You have the right to:
- Remain silent
- Decline to answer
- Ask if you are free to leave
- Walk away calmly
20. Can ICE force me to show ID?
No — unless they have reasonable suspicion of criminal activity and are acting under proper authority. Immigration status alone is not enough.
21. Can I record ICE officers?
Yes.
You have the right to record law enforcement as long as you do not interfere.
22. Can ICE detain me without a warrant?
They can detain based on probable cause of removability, but they need a judicial warrant for certain actions in private spaces (inside stores, non-public zones, etc.)
23. What should I do if ICE approaches me?
- Stay calm
- Ask: “Am I free to leave?”
- If yes, walk away
- Do not lie
- Do not present false documents
- Call your attorney
Consult with HLG here:
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/book-consultation/
24. Can ICE ask for my immigration documents?
They can ask — you are not required to answer.
25. Can ICE stop me because of how I look or sound?
No — racial or ethnic profiling is illegal.
But in practice, profiling happens frequently.
D. MIXED-STATUS FAMILIES
26. Are mixed-status couples at risk at Home Depot?
Yes.
Agents may attempt to question the non-citizen spouse, which can escalate quickly.
27. Can ICE target a U.S. citizen spouse?
They cannot detain a U.S. citizen for immigration violations, but they may:
- Attempt to separate couples
- Ask probing questions
- Request identification
These interactions can be frightening and destabilizing.
28. Should mixed-status families avoid big-box retailers during this enforcement climate?
Not necessarily — but they should take precautions, especially where day laborers gather.
29. Can ICE detain someone during a Home Depot trip even if they have no criminal record?
Yes.
ICE often targets individuals solely based on civil immigration violations, including overstays.
30. What should families bring when shopping?
- Lawyer’s contact info
- Digital copies of documents
- Phone battery backup
- Emergency safety plan
31. What if my spouse has a pending marriage green card?
Pending cases do not protect against ICE.
See HLG’s marriage-based resources for guidance.
E. DAY LABORERS & WORKPLACE ISSUES
32. Why does ICE target day laborers?
Because they are:
- Visible
- Concentrated
- Often undocumented
- Economically vulnerable
33. Are day laborers protected under U.S. law?
Yes. All workers — regardless of immigration status — are protected under:
- Wage laws
- Anti-retaliation protections
- Safety regulations
34. Does Home Depot have any responsibility to protect day laborers?
Morally: Yes.
Legally: Unclear, but corporations can take steps to discourage discriminatory profiling on their property.
35. Are contractors involved in tipping off ICE?
There is no verified evidence, but rumors spread frequently in online communities.
36. Should day laborers avoid Home Depot?
Workers should use caution, not necessarily avoid. Consider:
- Traveling in groups
- Avoiding suspicious recruiters
- Having a safety plan
F. CORPORATE RESPONSIBILITY
37. Is Home Depot required to disclose ICE incidents?
No — there is no mandatory transparency requirement.
Advocates want this changed.
38. Are retailers like Home Depot regulated in how they interact with ICE?
Only partially.
Retailers CAN:
- Deny access to non-public areas
- Require warrants
- Create staff protocols
- Post “no cooperation” signage
39. Could Home Depot face legal consequences?
Yes, if they:
- Violate customer privacy
- Share data unlawfully
- Facilitate discriminatory targeting
40. Can a retailer call ICE proactively?
They can, but doing so without cause could expose them to civil liability.
G. PRIVACY, FOOTAGE & DATA SHARING
41. Can Home Depot share surveillance footage with ICE?
Only with:
- A subpoena,
- A judicial warrant, or
- Lawful request under federal regulations.
Voluntary sharing without legal basis may violate privacy law.
42. Can Home Depot share customer information with ICE?
Not without proper legal authority.
43. Do corporations often “over-share” with ICE?
Yes — often out of fear, confusion, or to avoid perceived liability.
44. Can ICE access license-plate readers used in parking lots?
Some states allow it; others restrict it.
Policies vary by jurisdiction and vendor.
45. Can ICE impersonate contractors or recruiters?
Yes — undercover operations are legal, and have been used in past stings.
H. OHIO-SPECIFIC QUESTIONS
46. Why is Ohio seeing increasing ICE activity near retail stores?
Ohio has:
- Large construction workforce
- Growing Latino communities
- High day-laborer concentration
- Many Home Depot locations situated near immigrant neighborhoods
47. Are ICE operations more aggressive in Ohio than elsewhere?
Aggressiveness varies by field office, but the Great Lakes region (Ohio, Michigan) has seen increased enforcement since 2024.
48. Are Ohio Home Depot stores considered high risk?
In cities like:
- Cleveland
- Columbus
- Cincinnati
- Dayton
- Akron
…home-improvement stores are frequent gathering points for day laborers, making them higher visibility locations for potential enforcement.
49. Should Ohio families avoid these stores?
Not necessarily — but elevated caution is recommended.
50. Where can Ohio immigrants get legal help?
Herman Legal Group has served Ohio for over 30 years and provides confidential help for:
- ICE arrests
- Fear of enforcement
- Mixed-status family planning
- Marriage green cards
- Removal defense
Schedule a consultation:
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/book-consultation/
COMPREHENSIVE RESOURCE DIRECTORY
(Government • Media • Herman Legal Group • Research & Data • Community Organizations • Ohio-Specific Resources)
A. Government Resources
U.S. Immigration Agencies & Enforcement
- USCIS – Official Website
https://www.uscis.gov - ICE – Enforcement & Removal Operations (ERO)
https://www.ice.gov/ero - CBP – U.S. Customs and Border Protection
https://www.cbp.gov - DHS – Department of Homeland Security: Policies & Press Releases
https://www.dhs.gov/news - EOIR – Immigration Court System
https://www.justice.gov/eoir
Worker & Civil Rights Protections
- Department of Justice – Immigrant Worker Rights Division
https://www.justice.gov/crt/immigrant-and-employee-rights-section - Department of Labor – Wage & Hour Division
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd - OSHA – Workplace Safety Protections
https://www.osha.gov
Know Your Rights Materials (Government)
- ACLU – Know Your Rights (ICE, Police, Border Patrol)
https://www.aclu.org/know-your-rights - USCIS – Avoid Scams / Unauthorized Practice of Immigration Law
https://www.uscis.gov/avoid-scams
B. National & International Media Resources
(outlets covering ICE enforcement and corporate accountability.)
Major U.S. Media
- Newsweek – Home Depot ICE Allegations (Primary Article)
https://www.newsweek.com/home-depot-ice-involvement-boycott-calls-grow-11082610 - Associated Press – Immigration Enforcement Coverage
https://apnews.com/hub/immigration - Reuters – Immigration & Border Security
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/immigration/ - NPR – Immigration News & Policy
https://www.npr.org/tags/138331426/immigration
Spanish-Language Media
- Univision – Inmigración Noticias
https://www.univision.com/noticias/inmigracion - Telemundo – Inmigración
https://www.telemundo.com/noticias/inmigracion - La Opinión – Immigrant Rights & Advocacy
https://laopinion.com/categoria/inmigracion/
C. Herman Legal Group (HLG) In-Depth Investigations & Guides
( published on https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/)
Corporate Accountability & ICE Enforcement
- Home Depot’s Silence on ICE Raids
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/home-depot-silence-on-ice-raids-how-americas-biggest-retailer-avoids-accountability/ - Black Friday ICE Boycott Guide 2025
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/black-friday-ice-boycott-guide-2025/ - Why Is ICE So Aggressive and Militaristic?
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/why-is-ice-so-aggressive-and-militaristic/ - Which Companies Are Facing Boycotts for Their Role in ICE Enforcement?
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/which-companies-are-facing-boycott-for-role-in-trumps-immigration-enforcement/
Immigrant Safety & Enforcement Guidance
- ICE Arrest Risks at USCIS Marriage Interviews
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/uscis-marriage-interview-overstay-arrest-2026/ - Know Your Rights – ICE Encounters & Deportation Defense
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/ - Removal Defense & Deportation Help
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/immigration-court-deportation-defense/
Marriage-Based Immigration & Family Protection
- Marriage Green Card Guide
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/marriage-green-card/ - Spousal Visa Guide
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/spousal-visa/ - I-130 Spousal Visa Filing Guide
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/category/family-based-green-card/
Emergency Help
- Book a Consultation
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/book-consultation/
D. Immigration Research, Think Tanks & Policy Analysis
Top Research Organizations
- Migration Policy Institute (MPI) – Immigration Data & Policy
https://www.migrationpolicy.org - Pew Research Center – Immigrant Demographics
https://www.pewresearch.org/topic/immigration-migration/ - National Foundation for American Policy (NFAP) – Immigration Reports
https://nfap.com - Cato Institute – Immigration Studies
https://www.cato.org/research/immigration
Academic & Economic Resources
- Federal Reserve – Economic Impact of Immigration
https://www.federalreserve.gov - Brookings Institution – Immigration Policy
https://www.brookings.edu/topic/immigration/
E. Community Advocacy & Civil Rights Organizations
U.S. National Organizations
- United We Dream
https://unitedwedream.org - National Immigration Law Center (NILC)
https://www.nilc.org - American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA)
https://www.aila.org - Immigrant Legal Resource Center (ILRC)
https://www.ilrc.org
Worker Advocacy Organizations
- National Day Laborer Organizing Network (NDLON)
https://ndlon.org - Worker’s Center for Racial Justice
https://wcrj.org
F. Ohio-Specific & Midwest Immigration Resources
Ohio News & Media
- Cleveland.com – Immigration Coverage
https://www.cleveland.com - Columbus Dispatch
https://www.dispatch.com - Cincinnati Enquirer
https://www.cincinnati.com
Ohio Immigration Advocacy
- Ohio Immigrant Alliance
https://ohioimmigrant.org - HOLA Ohio (Hispanic Outreach Leadership Advocacy)
https://holaohio.org - Cleveland Catholic Charities Migration & Refugee Services
https://www.ccdocle.org/service-areas/migration-refugee-services
Local Legal Support
- Herman Legal Group – Ohio Offices
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com
G. Enforcement Tracking & Data Transparency
- TRAC Immigration (Syracuse University) – ICE Data, Deportation Stats
https://trac.syr.edu/immigration/ - ICE Detention Facility Locator
https://www.ice.gov/detention-facilities - DHS FOIA Library
https://www.dhs.gov/foia
H. Consumer Protection & Corporate Ethics
- Better Business Bureau (BBB)
https://www.bbb.org - Corporate Accountability Lab
https://corpaccountabilitylab.org - Public Citizen – Corporate Oversight Reports
https://www.citizen.org
I. Emergency Safety & Hotline Resources
- National Domestic Violence Hotline
https://www.thehotline.org - National Human Trafficking Hotline
https://humantraffickinghotline.org - NIJC Detention Helpline
https://immigrantjustice.org
KEY TAKEAWAYS
#1 — Home Depot Is Under National Scrutiny
Newsweek and multiple media outlets report repeated claims of ICE presence at Home Depot stores.
While Home Depot denies cooperation, immigrant communities report consistent, alarming patterns.
#2 — ICE Enforcement in Public Commercial Spaces Is Increasing
2025–26 has seen a major rise in ICE surveillance of parking lots, retail zones, and transit hubs—making day laborers and mixed-status families more vulnerable.
#3 — Corporate Neutrality Is Not Safety
Home Depot’s silence and lack of explicit anti-ICE policies contribute to fear and mistrust. Retailers can restrict cooperation with ICE but often fail to act.
#4 — Boycotts Are Spreading Across Latino & Immigrant Communities
The #HomeDeport movement is growing rapidly, driven by TikTok, WhatsApp, and reporting from HLG.
Immigrant consumers control trillions in national spending power.
#5 — Mixed-Status Families Need Clear Safety Plans
Public spaces remain high-risk for undocumented individuals and their families.
Know-your-rights education and legal planning are essential.
#6 — Day Laborers Are Especially Vulnerable
Home-improvement stores attract day laborers—and therefore attract ICE surveillance.
Workers should take extra precautions, including recording incidents and traveling in groups.
#7 — Ohio Is Emerging as a Major Search Hotspot for Home Depot + ICE Issues
Ohio cities (Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati, Dayton, Akron, Toledo, Youngstown) are experiencing increased enforcement, elevated fear, and rising online search volume.
#8 — Legal Guidance Is Essential During Heightened Enforcement
HLG’s 30+ years of experience make it one of the nation’s most trusted firms for:
- Deportation defense
- ICE arrest response
- Marriage-based green cards
- Mixed-status family safety
- Corporate enforcement analysis
Schedule a consultation:
https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/book-consultation/




