Irvine — The city’s Director of Public Safety and Police Chief, Michael Kent, told the City Council on July 22 that Irvine Police Department officers responded to two incidents in which U.S. Border Patrol agents were conducting enforcement operations within the city.
Kent said the first incident occurred on Saturday, July 19 at approximately 7:45 a.m. in the area of Main Street and Executive Park, where a passerby reported a Border Patrol operation. Officers contacted a vehicle with a single occupant who reported she had been a passenger when Border Patrol arrested the driver and left her in the vehicle; at the time of the contact she was in the care of a family member, Kent said.
The second incident occurred July 20 and involved a separate Border Patrol operation in the Irvine Spectrum area, Kent said. Both incidents were recorded on cell phones and shared on social media; Kent said the U.S. Border Patrol confirmed to the Irvine Police Department that Border Patrol agents had been present and that the operations were targeted enforcement actions, but the agency provided no additional information to IPD.
“No additional information was provided to the Irvine Police Department,” Kent said in his council report. The chief’s briefing did not identify any arrests made by local officers or any formal local enforcement action beyond IPD’s initial responses and assistance to contacted individuals.
Why it matters
Members of the public raised concerns during the meeting about targeted federal enforcement near Irvine and about the treatment of people in those incidents. Council members and city staff did not announce any immediate policy changes; the chief’s report was informational.
What’s next
Chief Kent said IPD would continue to monitor the situation and that the department had confirmed Border Patrol involvement through the agency’s own contact; the Irvine Police Department did not report further details about the operations during the meeting.