March 04, 2026
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HSI Worker‑Status Crackdown Hits D.C. Restaurants’ Workforce

Homeland Security Investigations has sent employment‑verification warning letters to multiple Washington, D.C., restaurants, giving owners 10 days to either fire workers flagged over immigration status, obtain updated documents, or face fines of up to $5,724 per employee for a first offense. The Washington Post report, summarized by Fox, says some establishments have already lost dozens of staffers from waiters to managers and are struggling to fill the gaps, prompting the Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington to warn the city’s dining sector is at a 'turning point.' An immigration attorney representing several affected restaurants predicts 'everybody’s going to get one eventually' and calls the enforcement an 'existential threat' in a labor pool where U.S. workers are not lining up to replace those forced out. DHS told the Post that the ongoing investigations target employers who hire undocumented workers and argued that each stolen Social Security number used in such jobs harms a real American facing financial and legal fallout. The campaign comes on top of a four‑day May operation in D.C. that led to nearly 200 immigration arrests, underscoring how the Trump administration is pairing high‑profile raids with quieter paperwork sweeps that can quickly thin staff in immigrant‑heavy industries.

Immigration & Demographic Change Labor and the Restaurant Industry

📌 Key Facts

  • HSI letters give D.C. restaurants 10 days to resolve flagged workers’ status or face fines up to $5,724 per person for first offenses
  • Some restaurants report losing dozens of employees across front‑ and back‑of‑house roles after receiving the letters
  • The Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington says the local industry is at a 'turning point' and needs predictable immigration policies
  • DHS defends the probes as necessary because hiring undocumented workers 'incentivizes dangerous and illegal practices' and relies on stolen Social Security numbers
  • D.C. was the site of a four‑day May operation that arrested nearly 200 undocumented workers, part of the same enforcement push

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