Federal prosecutors in Arizona have filed immigration-related criminal charges against 323 individuals during a massive week-long enforcement operation in June. The crackdown, part of a broader nationwide Department of Justice initiative, featured high-speed vehicle pursuits and the discovery of over a dozen illegal immigrants hidden away in a sweltering motel room.
Operation Take Back America
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Arizona filed criminal immigration charges against 323 people during a single week of intense enforcement operations running from June 6 through June 12, 2026. According to official federal records, the government filed 151 cases against individuals for illegally re-entering the United States, alongside 144 cases for illegal entry. Another 23 cases were leveled against 28 people accused of running human smuggling operations within the state.
A wide net of federal law enforcement agencies teamed up to handle the surge in cases. The operations relied on field work and referrals from U.S. Border Patrol, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) branches including Homeland Security Investigations and Enforcement and Removal Operations, the FBI, the DEA, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and the U.S. Marshals Service.
Several volatile incidents stood out during the week’s operations. On June 8, Border Patrol agents at a checkpoint on State Route 86 ordered driver Carlos Lorenzo-Oliveras to stop his vehicle. According to court documents, Lorenzo-Oliveras refused to pull over, avoided a tire deflation device, and sped away from the scene.
The ensuing chase saw agents pursue the vehicle with lights and sirens blaring until Lorenzo-Oliveras stopped briefly to let four passengers jump out and run into the desert. While some agents chased the fleeing passengers on foot, others followed the vehicle until the driver finally stopped and surrendered. The four passengers, identified as citizens of Mexico and Guatemala without legal status, were also captured. Lorenzo-Oliveras faced formal charges the next day for transporting an illegal immigrant for profit and placing lives in jeopardy.
Just a day later, a tip from a concerned citizen led authorities to a motel where temperatures outside hovered past 100 degrees Fahrenheit. The witness reported seeing multiple people lying down in the back of a parked Jeep for more than two hours. When Border Patrol agents arrived, they found the Jeep empty, but noticed the rear seats had been completely removed to make room for a pile of blankets and sleeping bags.
Investigators linked the vehicle to Steven Garcia, who was registered at the motel. Inside Garcia’s room, agents uncovered 13 undocumented migrants from Mexico, Vietnam, and Nicaragua. Federal prosecutors note that Garcia transported the group to the room but provided them with no food or water. Garcia was charged on June 11 with transportation and harboring of an illegal immigrant.
Original reporting: Tampa Free Press — read the source article.