The claim that “legitimate businesses are terrified of immigration enforcement” is a common talking point, yet it collapses under the slightest scrutiny. Companies that actually follow the law have virtually zero reason to lose sleep over ICE workplace raids.
1. The Law Is Simple and Narrow
Federal law (8 U.S.C. § 1324a) only prohibits knowingly hiring or continuing to employ unauthorized workers. Honest mistakes are not criminalized. Civil fines kick in only when an employer shows a pattern of negligence or willful blindness. A single forged document that reasonably appeared genuine almost never triggers penalties if the I-9 was filled out correctly.
2. ICE Does Not Raid Compliant Employers
In the past decade, ICE’s worksite enforcement actions have overwhelmingly targeted:
• Companies with blatant, large-scale unauthorized workforces (hundreds of violations)
• Industries with documented exploitation (e.g., meatpacking, agriculture subcontractors)
• Employers who ignored final orders or committed document fraud
Random “gotcha” visits to compliant restaurants, tech firms, or construction companies simply do not happen. ICE has neither the budget nor the interest.
3. E-Verify + Proper I-9 = Near-Total Shield
Businesses that use E-Verify (free, instant, voluntary in most states, mandatory in others) and retain I-9 forms correctly receive a rebuttable presumption of compliance. In the rare event of an audit, they hand over the files and the matter ends there. ICE’s own data show that over 97% of I-9 audits result in either no fine or minor paperwork corrections.
4. What People Call “Fear” Is Usually Guilt
When business owners or industry groups complain about “fear of enforcement,” they are almost always referring to one of two situations:
• They have been knowingly hiring workers “off the books” or accepting obviously fake documents.
• They rely on layers of subcontractors who do the above, giving them plausible deniability.
That is not fear of legitimate enforcement; that is fear of getting caught breaking the law.
5. Real-World Numbers
• FY 2023: ICE conducted only 1,083 I-9 audits nationwide (down from 6,456 in FY 2013).
• Criminal arrests of employers/managers: 49 for the entire year.
• Compare that to roughly 5.5 million private employers in the United States.
The odds of a law-abiding business facing anything beyond a polite records request are statistically negligible.
Bottom Line
If a business verifies work authorization in good faith—whether through E-Verify or careful I-9 scrutiny—it faces no meaningful risk from immigration enforcement. At worst, an auditor shows up, reviews paperwork, and leaves. The “climate of fear” narrative is not about legitimate businesses; it is for those who knowingly break the rules and hope no one notices.