At a barbershop in Los Angeles, only one of the 10 chairs was occupied on what would ordinarily be a busy evening. In San Francisco, a middle school student’s erroneous information about seeing an immigration officer on a city bus prompted the school district to send parents a warning.
In Chicago, a mistaken report that immigration agents showed up at a school set off panic that rippled across the country. At a church in Charlotte, N.C., more than a third of the usual congregants were absent from a recent evening service. Hotlines set up by advocates for immigrants to report enforcement activity have experienced a spike in calls.
“The hysteria is out of control,” said Patrick Garcia, executive director of Embrace All Latino Voices, a group in Charlotte, N.C.
After taking office last week, the Trump administration began highlighting what it has characterized as a new and more aggressive effort to target illegal immigration and deliver on a key campaign pledge to carry out mass deportations. So far, the enforcement efforts have been primarily individual arrests, rather than sweeps of factories, farms or other large-scale sites. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has reported on social media more than 5,000 arrests in around a week’s time.
An estimated 14 million undocumented immigrants live in the United States, according to demographers and other experts. The number includes people with no legal status as well as people who have some form of temporary status that is being contested in court or has been threatened with termination by the Trump administration.
Arresting and deporting even a small share of the population with no status or contested status is all but impossible. But stirring anxiety and uncertainty among those millions of people appears to be far easier, stoked by sharp rhetoric from Mr. Trump and his top aides and fed by news footage of federal agents massing in communities from Seattle to New York.
Even schools, churches and hospitals, places long considered insulated from immigration enforcement, have become fair game after the Department Homeland Security’s recent announcement that such locations were not off limits to agents.
Denver Public Schools recorded a decline in attendance of 10 percent or more over the last week at some schools that have a large number of students from migrant families. An undocumented woman named Martha, 60, said she had stopped volunteering as a crossing guard and cafeteria worker at the school in her neighborhood in nearby Aurora, Colo., as raid rumors swirled. “My kids are grown up now, but they still need their mother by their side, and my biggest fear is that I will be picked up and taken away from them,” she said.
Thomas D. Homan, Mr. Trump’s border czar, said that allowing immigration agents to have access to sensitive sites gave them the ability to pursue targets wherever they want, in line with other law enforcement agencies.
“It’s not like we’re walking in and arresting everybody in the building, so the institution shouldn’t be afraid. The criminal alien should be afraid,” Mr. Homan said in an interview.
In San Francisco, Karen Rodriguez rushed to pick up her 7-year-old son from school after parents were notified by a worker there that ICE agents had been spotted in the area. “Fear is definitely a feeling we all have,” said Ms. Rodriguez, a 30-year-old Colombian. She said that she, her husband and their son had crossed the border and were planning to apply for asylum.
Most undocumented immigrants have been in the country at least a decade. They work in large numbers in construction, agriculture and other sectors, and they often have children who were born in the United States. Many have felt that if they stayed out of trouble with the police, they would be relatively safe here.
No more.
Even in Los Angeles and San Francisco, cities that have passed laws to protect their immigrant communities, people are altering their routines.
At the Park Plaza Barber Shop in Los Angeles, there was only one customer at 5:15 p.m. on Tuesday. Ordinarily, most or all 10 chairs would be occupied, with more patrons waiting, said the owner, José Anguino. But in a neighborhood flush with immigrants, many were laying low, he said.
“Everyone is terrified, and they don’t want to spend money because they don’t know what could be coming,” said Mr. Anguino, who has owned the business for three decades.
Next door, at First Bargain, which sells an array of Mexican foods, just a handful of customers roamed the aisles. Sales have dropped about 30 percent since last week, said James Kang, the owner of the supermarket.
“It hasn’t been as bad as this since Covid-19,” he said. “My customers are staying home.”
Across the country, in Charlotte, N.C., Apolo Santos, the pastor of an Assembly of God Church, which ministers to the area’s fast-growing Brazilian community, said that his congregants were scared when President Trump was last in office, “but not with this intensity.”
“People think ICE is everywhere,” he said, which is hurting church attendance.
“Stay alert if you’re heading toward Gastonia,” said a message in Portuguese in a WhatsApp group on Wednesday, relaying a supposed sighting on a road to that North Carolina town.
And Mr. Garcia, of Embrace All Latino Voices, the advocacy group, said that some people were starting to talk about returning to their home countries.
Self-deportation, or the idea that undocumented people will just leave, has been promoted by proponents of highly restrictive immigration policies to achieve attrition through enforcement.
Indeed, Mr. Homan, the border czar, said he hoped people would decide to abandon the country.
“It’d be wiser for people that are in the country illegally to simply go home and come back the right way. Absolutely,” he said.
John Sandweg, a senior Homeland Security official in the Obama administration, said the strategy was clear. “The administration is creating a climate of fear as part of a self-deportation plan,” he said.
Details about the arrests that have been made have been extremely limited, which has made it difficult to assess the extent to which the recent operations were more expansive than the day-to-day enforcement efforts by ICE.
To calm nerves and debunk misinformation on TikTok, other social media platforms and in tabloids, the consulate of Mexico in Los Angeles, home to the largest Mexican population in the United States, released a video this week.
“We see no evidence of massive raids, of people arrested randomly in the streets or of operations in churches or schools,” Carlos González Gutiérrez, the consul general, said in the two-minute video posted on Facebook, Instagram and X.
He explained that 17 Mexican men who had “prior history with law enforcement” had been detained last weekend, a number that is not unusual.
“For now, there is no reason for you to refrain from your usual activities,” Mr. Gutiérrez said.
Yet the specter of federal agents and the spigot of rumors on social media have created anxiety that can be hard to allay. The erroneous report by a middle school student in San Francisco of seeing an ICE agent on a public bus took on a life of its own.
A screen shot of a text message sent by a social worker at the school to colleagues said ICE agents “were in a black car, had dogs and entered the 29 bus. They introduced themselves as ICE. Then, they questioned passengers and detained several adults and school-age children.”
An Instagram post by a popular local photographer included a similar account that was shared more than 9,000 times. The school district sent an email to families warning them that agents might be in the vicinity of the bus route.
But there was no ICE action on any bus that day, according to the city’s police chief, William Scott, who said he had confirmed that with Homeland Security. He said the student most likely saw police officers board the same bus to look for a lost child and mistook them for ICE agents.
The next day, a rumor spread that ICE agents had entered five downtown office buildings searching for janitors to deport. That, too, was shared widely on social media. Hundreds of janitors failed to report for their shifts that night, according to Olga Miranda, president of the local janitors’ union.
It turned out that the agents were in two of those buildings with an arrest warrant and were not targeting janitors, she said.
Lorena Melgarejo, who takes calls on a hotline for Faith in Action Bay Area, a social justice group in Northern California, said that there have been “ghost sightings” of ICE agents everywhere.
“There are so many that it’s almost impossible to follow them,” she said.
She has been telling people to call immediately if they witness a raid firsthand, but otherwise to double-check first. Her advice is that people remain vigilant while keeping up their routines — attending doctor’s appointments, sending children to school and showing up for work.
“We cannot be frozen by fear already,” she said. “It’s only been days!”
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