Over 300 Workers Return to South Korea After Immigration Raid, but Damage to Trade Relations Is Already Done
“As things stand now,” South Korean President Lee Jae Myun said, “our businesses will hesitate to make direct investments in the United States.”

Over 300 South Korean workers flew home on Thursday after a week in immigration detention following a factory raid near Savannah, Georgia, last week. The incident has jeopardized America's relationship with one of its closest allies and could chill many of President Donald Trump's domestic manufacturing goals.
The group, which included 316 South Korean nationals, 10 Chinese nationals, three Japanese nationals, and one Indonesian, boarded a chartered Korean Air flight and will arrive in South Korea late Friday afternoon. The flight, originally scheduled to leave on Wednesday, was delayed by Trump, who wanted to discuss with Korean officials whether the workers should stay in the U.S. to complete the electric vehicle battery plant at which they were detained. South Korean Foreign Minister Cho Hyun thought it best for the workers to return home, due to their shock and exhaustion, and consider reentry at a later date, a South Korean official told NBC News.
Cho met with Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Wednesday to secure the release of workers and negotiate their voluntary departures, rather than deportations, which would block their ability to reenter the U.S. for up to 10 years. During his visit, Cho proposed the creation of a new visa for South Korean workers. The foreign minister also objected to U.S. officials transporting the workers from the immigration detention center to Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson Airport in handcuffs, saying they weren't criminals.
Although Cho said Rubio provided assurances that South Korean workers would be able to return to the U.S. for future work without restrictions, concerns remain around the country's heavy investments in U.S. manufacturing. South Korean President Lee Jae Myung warned on Thursday that if problems, such as obtaining visas, continued, it would have a "major impact" on future investments.
The raid took place at the construction site of an electric vehicle battery factory, a joint venture between Hyundai Motor Group and LB Energy Solutions, on September 4. Touted as the "largest single-site enforcement operation in the history of Homeland Security Investigations," 475 foreign workers were ultimately detained by immigration agents.
While immigration officials claim the workers were detained for offenses ranging from crossing the border illegally to overstaying their visas, one South Korean official told The Wall Street Journal that many of the South Korean nationals were working as instructors and had the appropriate visas, like the B-1 Temporary Business Visitor visa. Leaked documents also reveal that immigration agents were aware that at least one South Korean worker was detained despite having a valid visa, adding to the growing list of mistakes immigration agencies have made while trying to meet Trump's mass deportation goals.
News of the raid shocked South Korean officials and investors and may have significant consequences for relations between America and one of its largest foreign investors—which recently pledged hundreds of billions of dollars worth of investments in U.S. projects and energy purchases. In a news conference on Thursday, Lee said the South Korean workers detained "were there not as long-term or permanent workers but as technicians who helped install facilities and equipment." Workers with specific skills are required to build the factory, "but you can't find them in the United States. Nor does it give visas for them to stay and work," Lee continued.
"As things stand now," Lee said, "our businesses will hesitate to make direct investments in the United States."
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Since when did Reason writers decide that our "entangling alliances" had suddenly become a good thing? Is this an example of situational principles? Although I do not support any of Trump's actions as President, pissing off our "allies" is in no way the thing that I worry about. Since my principle-based opinion is that we should have no allies and that there should be no Federal laws, rules or regulations concerning private investments or trade or manufacturing or employment, I could not care less whether South Koreans invest in the United States. I oppose mass roundups and summary deportations on both principle and pragmatism, but this article misses the libertarian principle thingie by a very wide margin.
Fatass Donnie raised taxes on imports to (supposedly) encourage US manufacturing but foreign investors are finding that the US can no longer be counted on as a reliable business partner.
We aren't reliable business partners because we insist that only legal immigrants work at factories in the United States? That doesn't even make any sense. Does south korea allow illegals to work in their factories
It’s so unreasonable to follow the rules like everyone else.
Rules-worshitters worshit rules, no matter HOW silly, even evil, and harmful the rules are? Rules say "hate the ferriners", so we MUST obey?
EVIL rules-worshitters worshit rules... MORE news at 6:66!!!
If you read the article you will see the workers had correct visa for the work they are doing. This was just stupid and seems to be par for the course with the Trump 2.0 administration.
This remains false. They can not do construction work on a B1. Thrse visas are only valid for company employees, not sub co tractors to do the work. They can only act as supervisors. Over half were on non work tourist visas.
The corporation literally admitted they committed fraud.
Stop. Lying.
turd, the ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
Autumn if Korean relations is really your gig you may want to go outside & ride a bike or something ...
Weird how Korean neighborhoods had started popping up in that area, since they were not going to be there long and all.
THEY IS EATING OUR CATS AND DOGS!
turd, the TDS-addled ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
Are you a total fucking retard or a complete fucking retard, Shrike?
Trump licks genocidal Zionist ball sacs but rags on loyal Koreans. Go figure.
Were you born a Nazi shit, or did it take many years of training, asswipe?
Teen Feelingz magazine
How about if instead South Korean businesses hesitate to blatantly violate American law?
Once again:
Good! Anyone who can figure out how to bypass idiotic federal employment laws has my full support! I'm only disappointed that they couldn't get away with it longer. Meanwhile, Trump who promised to deregulate business during the campaign pivoted to protecting union jobs and American manufacturing no matter how bad and expensive they are.
Shocking. The idiot believes foreigners don't have to respect us laws. No way that advantages then over citizens.
This isnt as retarded as your Kirk statement earlier, but close.
The below link shows that electro-chemistry of the latest car batteries and the machines to make them is VERY customized and complex, and there is an ABSOLUTE NEED for expert labor to get this shit started! ICE bureaucrats have TONS of regulations and nit-picking paper-work with which to stand in the way of GETTING SHIT DONE! Now how many foreign nations are going to want to set up here in the USA, after THIS clown parade? WHERE is the patience and flexibility of overpaid ICE bureaucrats, when it might take a year or two for Korean worker expertise to be sufficiently passed on to American workers? I have worked technical engineering job(s), at least 1, where it took me 2-3 years to get REALLY up to speed. ... Oh, yes, I know, all of your evil PervFect Experts About Everything are SOOOO much smarter than me!!! YOU fuckers go take those jobs, now!
See https://news.yahoo.com/finance/news/hyundai-raid-could-upend-trump-165858389.html ... And out-take from there is... "Immigration lawyers said that most of the workers were here with permission.
The 300 Korean workers who were building the plant for Hyundai’s subcontractors were under the impression they were here legally, Kuck said. They had received clearance from U.S. immigration officials to be at the plant, he said, and reported their whereabouts and the reason for traveling to the U.S. Many of them, he said, had obtained B-1 visas that allow limited business activities.
Other immigration attorneys say many of the several dozen workers from other countries who were detained at the plant had permission to work in the U.S."
Also…
“The president is being poorly served by zealous advisers unable to distinguish between enforcement theater and the value of deepening our economic relationships with firms and countries pouring a lot of investment into our economy,” he said.
Neither one of your links proves your claim that the Korean workers were being mistreated.
Hey, dumbass, it has nothing to do with treatment, it has to do with their visa status (or lack thereof). Why don't you get a tourist visa, work in a country, and then see what happens when you get caught, fatfuck?
It would be interesting to find out how so many foreign nationals managed to get all the way to Georgia without the feds noticing. Alas, we'll never know, because today's journalists only do opinion based news stories (newsitorials).
So it's a horrible proposition that companies actually follow the law? Does this apply to all laws or just those you personally take umbrage with because you can't be bothered to think beyond a proggy bumper sticker?
Weren't these same people screaming "nobody is above the law" just a few months ago, where did that go?
"As things stand now," Lee said, "our businesses will hesitate to make direct investments in the United States."
So if the Koreans must obey US laws in the US, they won't do business here? M'kay...