Inside the Georgia Hyundai Raid: A Leaked ICE Memo, a Charter Flight, and the Visa Gap

What we found

A leaked internal document from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) indicates that at least one South Korean contractor detained in the September 4 worksite raid at Hyundai’s Ellabell, Georgia battery project held a valid B1/B2 visa and, according to the agent’s notes, had not violated it. Yet he was processed for “voluntary departure.” That contradicts public statements that all ~475 detainees were violating immigration law.

Why it matters

  • Rule-of-law and due process: Detaining a documented worker risks unlawful imprisonment claims and will invite court scrutiny of ICE procedures.
  • Allied supply chains: The Hyundai–LG Energy project is part of a multi‑billion‑dollar allied manufacturing build‑out. Blunt worksite tactics can slow factory commissioning and undermine U.S. industrial policy goals.
  • Diplomacy: Seoul dispatched a chartered Korean Air 747‑8i to repatriate hundreds; it is also seeking a streamlined U.S. visa path for short‑term specialists so projects aren’t starved of expertise.

Follow the money

Every week of delay on a giga‑project carries seven‑figure costs across contractors and financing. “Voluntary departures” minimize re‑entry bans, but still force companies to backfill scarce skills fast, at premium rates.

What to watch

  1. Whether DHS publicly reconciles the leaked memo with its statements.
  2. Movement in Congress or agencies toward an allied‑specialist visa (and whether Koreans get a tailored track).
  3. Follow‑on audits and raids at other EV/battery sites and whether documented visitors are again swept up.

Sources

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