An oak leaf in the afternoon sunshine, takes on an autumnal glow, on Wednesday, November 19, 2025 along Durham-Chapel Hill Blvd. in Durham, N.C.
Robert Willett
rwillett@newsobserver.com
Here’s a curated selection of moments across North Carolina as captured through the lens of The News and Observer visual journalists. This feature can be seen in Sunday’s newspaper, as well as in our online Edition. See it at eedition.newsobserver.com.
A Border Patrol agent gives a man a thumbs up after checking his identification on Fox Ridge Drive in Southeast Raleigh, N.C. Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2025. The man was not taken into custody. Scott Sharpe ssharpe@newsobserver.com
More than 100 Durham School of the Arts students stage a walkout Thursday, Nov. 20, 2025, to protest recent immigration enforcement arrests carried out by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in Durham. The walkout lasted less than an hour. Travis Long tlong@newsobserver.com
A security guard operates an automatic sliding door while watching the parking lot outside the International Foods grocery on New Hope Church Road in Raleigh on Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2025, after federal immigration enforcement agents were seen circulating the area in unmarked SUVs. Immigrant rights groups said federal agents detained at least 12 Triangle residents on Tuesday, including in Raleigh, Durham and Cary. Travis Long tlong@newsobserver.com
Visitors tour the North Carolina Chinese Lantern Festival during a preview event at Koka Booth Amphitheatre in Cary on Friday evening, Nov. 14, 2025. The festival opens to the public Nov. 15 and runs nightly through Jan. 11, featuring more than 40 new handcrafted lantern displays created by visiting Chinese artisans. Highlights include a 164-foot floating installation on Symphony Lake and interactive designs celebrating the festival’s 10th year. Travis Long tlong@newsobserver.com
N.C. Central head coach LeVelle Moton calls a time-out as he steps away from North Carolina guard Jonathan Powell (11), who reacts after sinking a three-point basket in the first half on Friday, November 14, 2025 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com
N.C. State’s Tre Holloman defends VCU’s Nyk Lewis during the first half of the Wolfpack’s game on Monday, Nov. 17, 2025, at the Lenovo Center in Raleigh, N.C. Kaitlin McKeown The News & Observer
U.S. Border Patrol began making rounds in Charlotte on Saturday morning.
This follows recent Border Patrol activity in Chicago that made headlines, with some reports alleging agents violated people’s rights.
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A Charlotte woman released video footage of her arrest during a protest at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement office, and said that the government lied about the felony charge she faces.
The arrest happened Sunday morning, Nov. 16, at the ICE office on Tyvola Centre Drive in Charlotte.
Federal prosecutors said in a news release that 44-year-old Heather Morrow approached an agent from behind while he tried to arrest someone else, grabbed his shoulders and attempted to jump on his back. She and others were there in an “apparent effort to impede law enforcement movement on the property,” prosecutors said.
She has been charged with felony assault, resist, or impede a federal officer.
Morrow’s attorney, Xavier T. de Janon, told The Charlotte Observer that she suffers from fibromyalgia, shingles and arthritis, and that she would not be able to physically do what prosecutors accused her of.
She is a Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools bus driver, he said.
The video tells a different story than the one an FBI agent wrote in a criminal complaint against Morrow earlier this week, de Janon said.
U.S. Attorney Russ Ferguson’s office did not comment on the video or Morrow’s claims. ICE spokesperson Lindsay Williams also did not respond when The Charlotte Observer shared the video with him.
Since federal Border Patrol agents arrived in Charlotte and began making arrests Nov. 15, activists have hit the streets, tracked and reported their movements and pushed back in other ways.
While ICE is a different agency than Customs and Border Protection, both fall under the federal Department of Homeland Security and enforce immigration law.
What video shows
The 49-second video opens with someone in a police vest telling protesters in the parking lot to “get out of the way.”
A protester puts their hands on the front of a pickup truck moving in the lot, then pushes against it, as if trying to stop it.
“Name and badge number, now!” someone shouts at the agents. “Name and badge number!”
The camera quickly moves to the right as someone out of view shouts, “Come here, motherf***er!”
Then, someone in a green hoodie — seemingly a federal police officer — struggles and spins in the lot with the person who pushed on the truck. Another agent joins in, and they hold that protester against a different vehicle.
While the person who touched the truck is spinning around with an agent, Morrow appears to reach out and touch the agent’s shoulder. A third agent in a police vest tackles her to the ground. She is held down and handcuffed.
De Janon, her attorney, said the video captures all physical interaction between Morrow and the agents.
“The conclusion I reach is that (agents) started arresting someone,” he said. “Ms. Morrow got concerned and walked towards there. She does move her arm towards the officer, and then she gets immediately tackled to the ground. There is no jumping. There’s no grabbing of shoulders.”
What an FBI agent wrote
FBI Special Agent Michael Gregory wrote in a criminal complaint against Morrow that she and others were “attempting to block the entrance” to the ICE office with their bodies and cones.
When an agent driving the pickup truck arrived, they kept him from pulling in, the complaint said. So, the complaint said, he used his PA system five or six times to tell them they would be arrested if they did not move.
Another agent arrived, according to the complaint.
He approached the protesters, pulled out his pepper spray and warned that he would spray and arrest them if they did not leave, the complaint said.
“Please don’t spray me,” Morrow said as she turned away, according to the complaint.
More agents arrived, and the protesters moved enough that the truck was able to get through, the complaint said.
That’s when the complaint said that someone started pushing against the truck, and when it stopped, someone punched the window.
From there, the struggle seen in the video played out.
But the FBI agent’s account claims that one of the agents felt “jolted” from Morrow grabbing his shoulders. One of the agents said that they witnessed Morrow “attempt to jump on the back of (an agent) by placing both of her hands (the agent’s) shoulders while she had one foot off the ground.”
Morrow also said, “Don’t arrest my friend,” and “I’m a U.S. citizen. You can’t arrest me,” the FBI agent’s account said.
Ryan Oehrli covers criminal justice in the Charlotte region for The Charlotte Observer. His work is produced with financial support from the nonprofit The Just Trust. The Observer maintains full editorial control of its journalism.
Barbara Morrow waits for her daughter, Heather Morrow, to be released from Charlotte’s federal court on Monday, Nov. 17, 2025. JULIA COIN jcoin@charlotteobserver.com
This story was originally published November 20, 2025 at 5:11 PM.
Julia Coin covers courts, legal issues, police and public safety around Charlotte and is part of the Pulitzer-finalist team that covered Tropical Storm Helene in North Carolina. As the Observer’s breaking news reporter, she unveiled how fentanyl infiltrated local schools. Michigan-born and Florida-raised, she studied journalism at the University of Florida, where she covered statewide legislation, sexual assault on campus and Hurricane Ian in her hometown of Sanibel Island. Support my work with a digital subscription
Ryan Oehrli writes about criminal justice for The Charlotte Observer. His reporting has delved into police misconduct, jail and prison deaths, the state’s pardon system and more. He was also part of a team of Pulitzer finalists who covered Hurricane Helene. A North Carolina native, he grew up in Beaufort County.
Durham Public School Strong, Durham For All and other organizers built “School-Based Care and Protection Teams” to gather outside Durham schools Wednesday through Friday mornings when students arrive. In Wake County, people volunteered to do the same.
The Durham sign-up sheet said teams will “hold signs, lead chants and songs and be prepared to mobilize safe-to-school parades if Durham does become targeted.”
The Wake County N.C. Association of Educators and other groups organized a training Tuesday evening to help school employees and community volunteers learn how to reassure students and families fearful of the federal immigration operation.
The ultimate goal, said Wake NCAE President Christina Cole, is to keep people safe.
“People should have the dignity and the ability to live in our country and their community and to not be afraid of getting kidnapped going to school or going to work and being terrorized,” Cole said in an interview.
The Wake training event nearly filled Raleigh’s Pullen Memorial Baptist Church, Cole said. Experienced activists provided information about how to identify and interact with federal agents who might show up at or near a school.
The crowd then broke into groups, depending on their role in the community. Parents and others talked about “safety patrols” around schools to watch for federal agents and help parents and children feel welcome.
Meanwhile, school employees talked about steps they might take, such as preparing lesson plans for absent students or getting additional emergency contacts should a family member be detained.
“We talked a little bit about mutual aid,” Cole said. “Can we deliver food or groceries or whatever to our families if they’re afraid to leave their homes?”
Many parents appear to be keeping their kids home from school while the Border Patrol is active in the Triangle. In Wake County, nearly 19,500 students were absent from school Tuesday, about 67% more than a normal day, according to county officials.
Durham and Chapel Hill-Carrboro schools also reported higher-than-normal absences Tuesday.
Richard Stradling covers transportation for The News & Observer. Planes, trains and automobiles, plus ferries, bicycles, scooters and just plain walking. He’s been a reporter or editor for 38 years, including the last 26 at The N&O. 919-829-4739, rstradling@newsobserver.com.
Near a 1906 statue of a Confederate soldier, a lynching marker will soon rise in downtown Statesville with a message of reconciliation and healing.
The roadside state historical marker will commemorate how Black people and white people, including the mayor, other elected officials and religious and business leaders, gathered to prevent further violence after the 1883 lynching of Charles Campbell, who was Black.
The gathering called for the arrest of members of a mob of 40 to 70 white people who pulled Campbell from a cell in a former downtown Statesville jail and hung him from a nearby bridge, historical accounts show.
Campbell was accused of killing a white man with whom he’d previously feuded in his home county of Alexander. The men encountered each other and fought again during a circus that attracted 10,000 people to Statesville, tripling its population.
No one was arrested in Campbell’s killing, but thanks to the community effort, no further violence occurred, according to period newspaper accounts.
In a split vote, with Mayor Costi Kutteh breaking the tie, Statesville City Council Monday night voted to support the marker by directing its street maintenance department to work with the N.C. Department of Transportation on its placement along Center Street.
Frank Johnson, founding member of the Iredell Community Remembrance Project, urges the Statesville City Council on Monday, Nov. 17, 2025, to approve a marker honoring how Black people and white people came together to prevent further violence after the 1883 lynching of Charles Campbell. SCREEN SHOT OF STATESVILLE CITY COUNCIL MEETING
Johnson told The Charlotte Observer he came up with the marker idea after visiting The Legacy Museum in Montgomery, Ala., in 2022 with his wife, Linda, and two of their grandchildren. The museum “offers a powerful, immersive journey through America’s history of racial injustice,” according to its website.
The marker will lend a different and far more accurate impression of Statesville to visitors on its main street, Johnson said. Restaurants, antique stores and other businesses line South Center Street near the statue.
The effort also began after Statesville saw years of protests calling for the removal of the statue. Iredell County commissioners voted in 2021 to remove the statue outside the Old County Courthouse. The building houses county government offices.
A Superior Court judge, however, ruled in 2022 against a lawsuit that sought to remove a statue of a Confederate soldier in Alamance County. In March 2024, the N.C. Court of Appeals ruled that a 2015 law passed by the legislature, known as the Monument Protection Law, prevented the statue from being removed.
Johnson said he and his wife “put up some seed money so that there would be no immediate financial needs, and we went to work. The research was fascinating. There were four lynchings in Iredell County, and the process dictated we concentrate on just one of those.
“The remainder of our seed money — $2,500 — will be for an essay contest” in conjunction with America’s 250th anniversary celebration, he said.
The marker will cost the city and taxpayers nothing, he said.
“How Statesville comes together in a crisis”
Before Monday’s vote, Johnson urged council members to support the marker.
The Old Iredell County Courthouse includes this 1906 statue of a Confederate soldier funded by the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Matthew Laczko For the Observer
“Some of you may think that this is past and does not need to be memorialized,” Johnson, who is white and a former member of the North Carolina Board of Transportation, told the City Council. “After all, this is an old story. We have had a Black president. There are equal rights now. We don’t need to be reminding people of past unpleasantness.
“Once again, the marker is to highlight how Statesville comes together in a crisis,” he said. “Your approval will carry that forward. This counter pose to the statue is appropriate and necessary to show that Statesville is still a right-thinking place. We know who we are today and can be proud of it.”
Project member Marlene Scott, who is Black, invited City Council members to “celebrate the vision of freedom, the gathering of voices … truth telling, healing and reconciliation and harmony” by approving the marker.
Marlene Scott, founding member of the Iredell Community Remembrance Project, urges Statesville City Council on Monday, Nov. 17, 2025, to approve a marker honoring how Black people and white people came together to prevent further violence after the 1883 lynching of Charles Campbell. SCREENSHOT OF STATESVILLE CITY COUNCIL MEETING
Several council members voted against the marker Monday night because they said its wording is unknown. Final wording will be determined by the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Ala. The North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources turns to that group whenever a lynching is going to be mentioned on a historical marker, Johnson said.
Johnson told the Observer that he contacted the Equal Justice Initiative “and collected all the info we needed” for getting a marker approved. “We formed the ICRP, we researched, we coordinated with Todd Scott at the Statesville NAACP, and his wife, Marlene, agreed to chair our group after their board approved the committee,” he said.
Todd Scott and Marlene Scott of the Iredell Community Remembrance Project stand in front of the 1906 statue of a Confederate soldier outside the Old Iredell County Courthouse in downtown Statesville. Project members successfully campaigned for a historical marker planned nearby to honor how Black people and white people came together to prevent further violence after the 1883 lynching of Charles Campbell. Matthew Laczko For the Observer
Republican Statesville City Council member Steve Johnson, no relation to Frank Johnson, said he was concerned that a primary financial backer of the Equal Justice Initiative is the Open Society Foundations – a collection of grant-making organizations founded by multibillionaire and Democratic Party mega-donor George Soros.
“That ought to give anybody reason to be skeptical about the Equal Justice Initiative,” Steve Johnson, who is white, said at Monday’s meeting. “Show me what the marker is going to say, and then I’ll vote.”
The Old Iredell County Courthouse in downtown Statesville includes a 1906 statue of a Confederate soldier funded by the Daughters of the Confederacy. Matthew Laczko For the Observer
“For future generations”
Council member Doris Allison, who is Black, gave an impassioned plea for the marker.
“We could have had a riot, but it did not happen,” Allison said about the 1883 gathering of Blacks and whites. “We want our future generations to know that whatever happened, we have overcome, and there’s a part for everybody.”
“It saved Statesville from becoming another Ellenton, S.C.,” Frank Johnson said, referring to the killing of up to 100 Black people in an 1876 riot, or what many called a massacre, in the former town that Johnson said is now “a radiation dump.” It’s where the federal government in the 1950s located its nuclear materials Savannah River Site.
Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news. Support my work with a digital subscription
Meier, a Democrat first elected in 2020 to represent south Mecklenburg’s District 5, said at Tuesday’s county commission meeting she will not run for reelection in 2026.
“This has been a deeply personal and difficult choice, because serving this community has been one of the greatest honors of my life, and I’m deeply grateful for the trust you have placed in me,” she said.
Meier, 56, vowed to finish her current term but said now “is the right time to make space for new leadership and fresh ideas.”
“There is a whole younger generation out there that are waiting to make a difference,” she said.
Meier said Tuesday’s meeting may seem like an “odd time” to make her announcement given U.S. Border Patrol’s controversial ongoing operation in the county, “but for various reasons, I need to go ahead and do this.” County Commissioners read a proclamation in support of Charlotte’s immigrant community at Tuesday’s meeting and heard from multiple residents about their concerns with Border Patrol’s arrests.
“After the gut-wrenching last few days of watching our friends and our neighbors, our brothers, our sisters, become terrorized, I’m committed to serving this community more than ever,” Meier said. “And having said that, as you all know, one doesn’t have to be elected to serve the community.”
Before taking office, she worked as a campaign manager and volunteer. Meier previously served on the boards of Charlotte Women’s March, Cops and Barbers and Lillian’s List.
Her fellow commissioners gave her a standing ovation and praised her passion for the community from the dais after Meier made her announcement.
“When I first met Commissioner Meier, she was a community activist, and those are her roots,” Vice Chair Leigh Altman said. “And it’s been amazing to watch you in leadership. I know that you will continue just where you began, and that is serving the community.”
Mary Ramsey is the local government accountability reporter for The Charlotte Observer. A native of the Carolinas, she studied journalism at the University of South Carolina and has also worked in Phoenix, Arizona and Louisville, Kentucky. Support my work with a digital subscription
U.S. Border Patrol officials entered the Myers Park Country Club on Monday without prior permission, the club’s interim general manager said in a release to members.
“This morning, agents from U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) entered the Club’s private grounds without prior notice, warrant, or permission and briefly detained one of our employees,” said Adam Gartside, Myers Park Country Club’s interim general manager.
“The individual was released shortly thereafter, as they possessed all required and valid documentation. We are relieved they are safe and are providing them with our full support.”
Border Patrol Agents arrested a person on Sharonbrook Drive in Charlotte, NC on Sunday morning, Nov. 16, 2025. KHADEJEH NIKOUYEH knikouyeh@charlotteobserver.com
He added that the club is seeking legal counsel to determine next steps and to ensure “the privacy, security, and well-being of our employees and members.”
Over 60 protesters gathered outside the Homeland Security office on Tyvola Road, with a number shouting at Federal Protection Service Police who stood nearby, blocking the entrance.
One protester, dressed in a frog costume, said it was done to mirror similar things protesters did in Portland, Oregon, and to show the officers they’re peaceful like the Portland protesters.
“I’m just trying to make sure everyone in the country knows that we are not violent people,” said Bradley W., who was covered head-to-toe in a frog costume. “We are here to make sure that we stand up for our communities. The good people in our communities that do not need to be obstructed from the justice that they deserve.”
There were over 30 protesters outside the Homeland Security office on Tyvola Road, with a number shouting at Federal Protection Service Police who stood nearby, blocking the entrance. One protester, dressed in a frog costume, said it was done to mirror similar things protesters did in Portland, Oregon, and to show the officers they’re peaceful like the Portland protesters. The whistles were quite loud, with one protester saying the whistles were a reference to other cities, like Washington, D.C. and Chicago, where protesters used them to alert neighbors when ICE was in the area “No fear, no hate, we want ICE out of our state,” protesters chanted. They called for the release of protesters who were recently arrested in Charlotte.
The whistles were quite loud, with one protester saying the whistles were a reference to other cities, like Washington, D.C. and Chicago, where protesters used them to alert neighbors when ICE was in the area.
“No fear, no hate, we want ICE out of our state,” protesters chanted. They called for the release of protesters who were recently arrested in Charlotte.
Protesters stood in the driveway of the office as federal officers began pushing people toward the sidewalk again.
As of 8:30 p.m., the protesting group continued to grow and a green alien joined the frog in the chanting.
Protestors blow whistles outside the Department of Homeland Security/ICE headquarters on Tyvola Center Drive as protestors gather to voice their concern over the presence of Border Patrol in Charlotte, NC on Sunday, November 16, 2025. Khadejeh Nikouyeh knikouyeh@charlotteobserver.com
A person donning a Mexican flag walks by federal police during a protest against Border Patrol outside the Department of Homeland Security/ICE headquarters on Tyvola Center Drive in Charlotte, NC on Sunday, November 16, 2025. Khadejeh Nikouyeh knikouyeh@charlotteobserver.com
A federal police officer keeps people contained during a protest outside the Department of Homeland Security/ICE headquarters on Tyvola Center Drive in Charlotte, NC on Sunday, November 16, 2025. Khadejeh Nikouyeh knikouyeh@charlotteobserver.com
Officers stand outside the Department of Homeland Security/ICE headquarters on Tyvola Center Drive as protestors gather to voice their concern over the presence of Border Patrol in Charlotte, NC on Sunday, November 16, 2025. Khadejeh Nikouyeh The Charlotte Observer
A man received medical treatment after he appeared to collapse while Border Patrol agents attempted to detain him on Milton Road Sunday near Weeping Willow AME Zion Church, said a neighbor who saw the interaction.
Raquel, who declined to provide her last name out of concern for her safety, lives off W.T. Harris Boulevard. She said she saw the interaction between agents and the man in front of the church.
On Milton Road, Raquel said agents attempted to pull the man out of his car and he fell to the ground. They screamed at him to get out after opening his door, she said.
A witness said a man was injured after fleeing from Border Patrol agents on Milton Road in Charlotte, NC on Sunday, November 16, 2025. submitted
Social media rumors erupted about the incident, but Raquel said the man appeared to be alive and moving — just in shock. She said two agents went into the ambulance with the man.
His condition could not immediately be ascertained.
Observer reporter Julia Coin contributed to this report.
This story was originally published November 16, 2025 at 3:36 PM.
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Staff and patrons of an international supermarket in the Charlotte area braced Sunday to see Border Patrol again after agents pinned down and arrested a teenage employee at the store Saturday.
Peter Han’s family has owned Super G Mart for 15 years. He took video Saturday of the teen employee who was pushing carts back to the store being thrown down and detained by Border Patrol as Border Patrol leader Greg Bovino stood by.
Agents, led by Bovino like they were during weeks of controversial operations in Chicago, began detaining people around the Charlotte area this weekend, triggering protests and business closures. Federal officials haven’t said how long they’ll remain in North Carolina.
On Sunday, more than half of Han’s employees called out of work. In the morning, agents drove by in unmarked Tahoes and Suburbans with Illinois, Texas and Washington license plates.
Agents didn’t arrest anyone Sunday morning. They rolled down their windows, “grinning” — it was “the same grin they had when they pinned a teen to the ground,” Han said.
“Even though I knew my rights,” Han said, when agents with guns and masks stormed into his store “I still felt helpless.”
U.S. Border Patrol agents rushed into this grocery store in Pineville, N.C., on Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025, and grabbed a teenage worker. They put him on the ground outside and arrested him. RYAN OEHRLI roehrli@charlotteobserver.com
Indivisible Charlotte documenting Border Patrol
Bruce Moody, a resident of Fort Mill, South Carolina, and a member of Indivisible Charlotte drove around the Super G and a nearby Home Depot Sunday morning to see if he could help document any additional CBP actions.
“We are trying to document what people have seen,” Moody said.
Vanessa Blancas and her sister Daisy went with their father to Super G Sunday but were wary about Border Patrol after Saturday’s incident. The Blancas, born in the United States but of Mexican heritage, said when they arrived they were “looking for immigration cars.”
“I wanted to make sure nothing was going to happen,“ Vanessa said “I’m always going to be on the lookout.”
Daisy Blancas said the family received an alert Sunday not to attend church as they often do because of the concerns over CBP activities. “We were paranoid,” she said.
The family read the signs on the doors and windows of the front of Super G that said ICE was not welcome there, and were heartened by that.
This story was originally published November 16, 2025 at 11:49 AM.
Related Stories from Charlotte Observer
Andrew Dys covers breaking news and public safety for The Herald, where he has been a reporter and columnist since 2000. He has won 51 South Carolina Press Association awards for his coverage of crime, race, justice, and people. He is author of the book “Slice of Dys” and his work is in the U.S. Library of Congress.
Manuel “Manolo” Betancur closed his Charlotte bakery for the first time in 28 years Saturday afternoon at the city’s arrival of U.S. Border Patrol agents, and he doesn’t know when he’ll reopen.
“The amount of fear that we have right now is no good,” Betancur told CharlotteFive outside Manolo’s Bakery in the 4400 block of Central Avenue, in the heart of Charlotte’s immigrant community.
“It’s not worth it to take that risk,” he said. “We need to protect our families and family separation.”
He said he saw federal agents randomly stop people and throw them to the ground. “That’s what I saw this morning,” he said.
Border Patrol in Charlotte
Similar scenes played out in other parts of Charlotte, Pineville and Matthews, as masked federal agents detained and arrested people, sparking community outrage. Many other businesses along Central Avenue also closed, at least for the day, as a result.
The U.S. Border Patrol has not said how many agents arrived in the city from Chicago or how long they plan to stay. Their operation started in the morning. It was not clear exactly which federal agencies were involved.
‘Made in Charlotte by Immigrant Hands’
Betancur’s shirt read, “Made in Charlotte by Immigrant Hands.”
“Easy they have taken maybe around 20 people today around in Charlotte,” he said. “They have been in our parking lots several times today.”
He said “of course” his business has been hurt.
“I am going to close the doors, and I don’t know when I am going to open back up,” he said.
“Thank you, thank you to the community and all the people that have supported me,” he said. “But I need to protect my customers. I need to protect my community and myself, because they are just jumping in and throwing people to the floor.”
Border Patrol is ‘chasing anyone who looks, speaks like me’
“They’re lying, man,” Betancur said. “They’re not chasing criminals. They’re chasing anyone who looks, speaks like me, who has an accent like me, who looks like me.”
Manolo Betancur closed his Charlotte bakery for the first time in 28 years Saturday, and he doesn’t know when he’ll reopen. “It’s not worth it to take that risk,” he said. “We need to protect our families and family separation.” Alex Cason CharlotteFive
This story was originally published November 15, 2025 at 5:52 PM.
Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news. Support my work with a digital subscription
As masked federal agents appeared to detain people in Charlotte neighborhoods, Mayor Vi Lyles and other top local elected officials on Saturday told Charlotte’s immigrant community they have their backing.
“We want people in Charlotte and Mecklenburg County to know we stand with all residents who simply want to go about their lives contributing to our larger community,” Lyles said in a joint statement with Mecklenburg County commissioners’ chair Mark Jerrell and Stephanie Sneed, chair of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education.
“Our region has thrived and grown because our strength lies in our diversity and our collective commitment to each other and to this community,” the elected officials said. “Let us all — no matter our political allegiance — stand together for all hard working and law-abiding families.”
The arrival of federal agents has caused “unnecessary fear and uncertainty in our community,” according to the statement.
In the heart of the city’s immigrant community, a photograph posted on social media around 9:30 a.m. Saturday by Immigration Alerts CLT appeared to show two federal agents behind a man with his hands behind his back at Rosehaven Drive and Central Avenue.
“STAY AWAY FROM CENTRAL AVENUE,” Immigration Alerts CLT said on social media.
In the heart of Charlotte’s immigrant community, a photograph posted on social media at 9:30 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025, by Immigration Alerts CLT appeared to show two federal agents behind a man with his hands behind his back at Rosehaven Drive and Central Avenue. Immigration Alerts CLT
Border Patrol operations in other cities have led to people without criminal records being detained, according to the Charlotte elected officials’ statement.
The statement told people to protest peacefully.
Organizations are available to offer legal guidance on immigration matters and to answer questions about a person’s immigration status and rights, the elected officials said.
“If you need the police, don’t hesitate to call 911,” according to the statement. “Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department does not participate in Immigration and Customs Enforcement or U.S. Customs and Border Protection operations and is not involved in the planning or execution of any federal immigration enforcement activities.”
His troops shield their identities by covering their faces, something federal police had generally not done until this year.
He responded to criticism from state leaders.
“Immigrants rest assured, we have your back like we did in Chicago and Los Angeles,” Greg Bovino wrote on social media site X. “Rep. Adams, perhaps you & Gov. STEIN should learn the difference between an illegal alien & an immigrant. Illegal aliens have NO PLACE in our communities and should self deport via CBP Home.”
Friday morning, local and state leaders gathered outside the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Government Center to demand transparency from U.S. Border Patrol agents.
Elected officials said they were blindsided by the news reported by national news outlets this week and confirmed by Mecklenburg County Sheriff Garry McFadden Thursday. Leaders at the conference organized by N.C. House Democrats said they received no explanation for why Charlotte was chosen, what the federal mission is and how long agents might remain in the city.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department officers “are not authorized to assist with ICE administrative warrants, which are civil in nature and not criminal,” according to a CMPD statement on X Friday.
“The CMPD does not participate in ICE or CBP operations, nor are we involved in the planning or execution of any federal immigration enforcement activities,” according to the statement.
CMPD officers may participate “only when there is criminal behavior or a criminal warrant that falls under our jurisdiction,” officials said.
Most recently, U.S. Border Patrol stationed at least 200 agents in Chicago. The agency helps lead the Trump Administration’s crackdown on illegal immigration. Since September, border patrol agents have arrested 1,500 people, according to CBS News.
According to news reports, federal agents roamed the city and suburbs questioning people and using tear gas on residents and local police.
This is a developing story.
This story was originally published November 15, 2025 at 10:33 AM.
Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools on Thursday released a statement to families about “the safety, well-being, and education of every student” amid federal Border Patrol agents coming to Charlotte.
Two federal officials told Mecklenburg County Sheriff Garry McFadden that U.S. border patrol agents could arrive in the city as early as Saturday, according to a Thursday news release. The agents will come to the city following a monthslong stay in Chicago, though McFadden said he does not know details of a planned operation here.
In its statement to all families Thursday, CMS said it has not received any official notice of plans to conduct immigration enforcement on any of its campuses.
“Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools will continue to follow all federal and state laws that protect students’ rights to a public education,” it stated, later citing the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1982 decision in Plyler v. Doe. That ruling guaranteed all children have the right to attend public school for free, regardless of immigration status.
Border Patrol agents are expected to conduct an operation in Charlotte after spending time in Chicago. In this file photo, federal agents arrive at the Dirksen Federal Building to pick up US Customs and Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino after his hearing at federal court in Chicago on October 28. KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI AFP via Getty Images
The message also said CMS does not ask for a student’s immigration status upon enrollment, no district personnel are permitted to share student information unless required by law and that immigration officers cannot gain access to any personnel, students or private areas of the school without a verified warrant or subpoena.
“We want every family to feel confident that CMS is a place where students are supported and protected,” the message stated.
No immigration enforcement activities have taken place on a CMS campus, but the issue rose to public prominence when Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers detained a parent near a drop-off line for Charlotte East Language Academy in May. At the time, the parent was not technically on school property.
While CMS laid out protocols for staff in the event agents come to campus, it has not clarified whether it will notify families of ICE or U.S. Border Patrol activity near its campuses.
Charlotte leaders also released a statement of support Wednesday for Charlotte’s immigrant communities.
“Our message is simple: Mecklenburg County and Charlotte are communities of belonging. We will stand together, look out for one another, and ensure that fear never divides the city we all home,” it stated. CMS Board Member Liz Monterrey Duvall was one of the local leaders who signed the letter.
Rebecca Noel reports on education for The Charlotte Observer. She’s a native of Houston, Texas, and graduated from Rice University. She later received a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Missouri. When she’s not reporting, she enjoys reading, running and frequenting coffee shops around Charlotte.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools on Thursday released a statement to families about “the safety, well-being, and education of every student” amid federal Border Patrol agents coming to Charlotte.
Two federal officials told Mecklenburg County Sheriff Garry McFadden that U.S. border patrol agents could arrive in the city as early as Saturday, according to a Thursday news release. The agents will come to the city following a monthslong stay in Chicago, though McFadden said he does not know details of a planned operation here.
In its statement to all families Thursday, CMS said it has not received any official notice of plans to conduct immigration enforcement on any of its campuses.
“Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools will continue to follow all federal and state laws that protect students’ rights to a public education,” it stated, later citing the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1982 decision in Plyler v. Doe. That ruling guaranteed all children have the right to attend public school for free, regardless of immigration status.
Border Patrol agents are expected to conduct an operation in Charlotte after spending time in Chicago. In this file photo, federal agents arrive at the Dirksen Federal Building to pick up US Customs and Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino after his hearing at federal court in Chicago on October 28. KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI AFP via Getty Images
The message also said CMS does not ask for a student’s immigration status upon enrollment, no district personnel are permitted to share student information unless required by law and that immigration officers cannot gain access to any personnel, students or private areas of the school without a verified warrant or subpoena.
“We want every family to feel confident that CMS is a place where students are supported and protected,” the message stated.
No immigration enforcement activities have taken place on a CMS campus, but the issue rose to public prominence when Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers detained a parent near a drop-off line for Charlotte East Language Academy in May. At the time, the parent was not technically on school property.
While CMS laid out protocols for staff in the event agents come to campus, it has not clarified whether it will notify families of ICE or U.S. Border Patrol activity near its campuses.
Charlotte leaders also released a statement of support Wednesday for Charlotte’s immigrant communities.
“Our message is simple: Mecklenburg County and Charlotte are communities of belonging. We will stand together, look out for one another, and ensure that fear never divides the city we all home,” it stated. CMS Board Member Liz Monterrey Duvall was one of the local leaders who signed the letter.
Rebecca Noel reports on education for The Charlotte Observer. She’s a native of Houston, Texas, and graduated from Rice University. She later received a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Missouri. When she’s not reporting, she enjoys reading, running and frequenting coffee shops around Charlotte.
Cabarrus County Commissioner Lynn Shue died on Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025. He was 71.
Courtesy of Steve Morris.
Cabarrus County Commissioner Lynn Shue, a longtime public servant whose career spanned decades in education and county government, died Wednesday afternoon, his family said. He was 71.
Shue served for decades in elected office, beginning on the Cabarrus County Board of Education, where he served several terms and served as chairman. He later joined the Cabarrus County Board of Commissioners in 2014. A family statement on his death said Shue’s leadership on the school board helped guide the county’s educational system “through critical growth and change.”
A statement from Steve Morris, former county commission chair and Concord’s mayor-elect, said Shue’s public life was defined by faith, perseverance and service to others. The Shue family asked Morris to serve as their spokesman as they mourn his loss.
Morris said Shue exemplified integrity, compassion and steadfast commitment to Cabarrus County throughout his decades of service.
“Commissioner Lynn Shue’s passing marks the loss of a deeply respected public servant and community leader,” Morris said.
The statement described Shue as calm and thoughtful in his approach to government, with a focus on stability and sound governance that “contributed significantly to the county’s success and reputation as a model for others across North Carolina.”
Morris said Shue showed extraordinary resilience in his later years.
He received a heart transplant and later a kidney transplant, recovered with what the statement called “remarkable strength,” and continued to serve the community with “energy and purpose.” Shue missed some commission meetings or attended virtually over the past year, as he received routine kidney dialysis. Even as health challenges affected his mobility, he remained deeply engaged, “participating in discussions, staying informed, and contributing meaningfully to decision-making,” the statement said.
In April Shue told The Charlotte Observer then-commissioner and current State Sen. Chris Measmer intentionally set a meeting during the time of his treatment so he would be unable to vote on the matter of Measmer’s replacement. Shue was a registered Republican but at times broke with his party on county board votes, including when he declined to support the Cabarrus GOP’s recommended candidate to fill Measmer’s vacant seat.
“His faith in God guided his actions and decisions,” Morris said. “He was known for always putting others first, never making decisions out of personal interest, and maintaining unwavering integrity in every aspect of his life.”
Morris said Shue wasn’t in public service for the spotlight but for the people, and that over ten years serving together, Shue was always willing to sit down, talk things through and find common ground.
Under a state law passed earlier this year, vacancies on the Cabarrus County Board of Commissioners are now filled by the executive committee of the departing commissioner’s political party — rather than by a vote of the remaining commissioners.
This story was originally published November 5, 2025 at 6:03 PM.
Food boxes for people in need during the pause in SNAP benefits due to the federal government shutdown contain protein, nonperishables and other items at the food pantry inside the Ella B. Scarborough Community Resource Center.
Mary Ramsey
The Charlotte Observer
Mecklenburg County will put hundreds of thousands of dollars into emergency food assistance with regular federal aid in limbo.
But county leaders warn pain is still likely on the way for families in need.
The county plans to spend $740,000 on food aid with November Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits at risk due to the ongoing federal government shutdown, Mecklenburg County Manager Mike Bryant said at a news conference Monday.
The money, already earmarked for the county Public Health Department’s efforts to address food insecurity, will pay for thousands of meal boxes and other assistance, Bryant said.
But Bryant said about 138,500 Mecklenburg residents across 63,000 households who rely on SNAP need help as the federal government remains shut down. He warned that Mecklenburg is legally and financially unable to make up all the paused SNAP funding.
“We remain in dire need for the current shutdown to draw to a close in a way that will make our community once again whole,” he said.
Here’s what to know about where to get and give help amid the SNAP pause:
Where to get food assistance during SNAP pause
Mecklenburg County Manager Mike Bryant joins other county leaders outside the Ella B. Scarborough Community Resource Center on Monday for a briefing on how the county is dealing with a pause in SNAP funding due to the federal government shutdown. Mary Ramsey The Charlotte Observer
The county is funding 28,000 food boxes that will be distributed by Nourish Up and securing additional food to be distributed through the food pantries at the county’s community resource centers.
The county is still processing SNAP applications and giving $50 food-only gift cards to any resident newly approved for emergency SNAP benefits. It’s also providing one-time $50 farmers market vouchers to eligible SNAP households and temporarily expanding its mobile food distribution program for SNAP-eligible seniors.
The county will also distribute free turkeys ahead of Thanksgiving on Nov. 22 at the Ella B. Scarborough Community Resource Center.
Some of the expanded resources are first-come, first-served, Bryant said. The county can afford to fund others for about 30 days.
West Charlotte’s Valerie C. Woodard Community Resource Center, 3205 Freedom Drive
East Charlotte’s Ella B. Scarborough Community Resource Center, 430 Stitt Road
South Charlotte’s Catherine M. Wilson Center, 301 Billingsley Road
The county recommends residents in need also reach out to community partners including:
United Way’s NC 211 line
Second Harvest Food Bank of Metrolina
Nourish Up
Hearts & Hands Food Pantry
Hope Street Food Pantry
Feeding Charlotte
Ada Jenkins Center
Angels & Sparrows
Christ the King Food Pantry
Where to donate food, money during SNAP pause
The county is also setting up donation boxes at the Eastway Regional Recreation Center, Northern Regional Recreation Center and some Charlotte-Mecklenburg Library locations to support local food pantries.
In-demand items include shelf-stable, low sodium and high protein foods, county staff said.
Mary Ramsey is the local government accountability reporter for The Charlotte Observer. A native of the Carolinas, she studied journalism at the University of South Carolina and has also worked in Phoenix, Arizona and Louisville, Kentucky. Support my work with a digital subscription
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools says it will continue to provide free lunches and breakfasts amid a pause in federal food assistance. Though, it expects students will increasingly rely on free meals provided by the district. This file photo shows the second floor overlook in the cafeteria at Ballantyne Ridge High School in south Charlotte.
MELISSA MELVIN-RODRIGUEZ
mrodriguez@charlotteobserver.com
The pause in federal food assistance expected Saturday will not impact the availability of free and reduced-price meals in Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, the district says.
As the federal government shutdown drags on, the U.S. Department of Agriculture directed state agencies to hold off on distributing November’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits, previously known as food stamps, “until further notice,” according to a letter dated Oct. 10. The USDA has so far declined to use its contingency fund, which currently holds $5 billion to $6 billion, to partially fund the SNAP program while the shutdown continues.
That means millions of Americans, including an estimated 1.4 million North Carolinians who rely on SNAP to afford groceries, will go without the federal food assistance. Mecklenburg County has around 143,000 SNAP recipients, the most of any county in the state, the Observer reported in July.
Around 580,000 of North Carolina’s SNAP recipients are children.
SNAP is the largest anti-hunger program in the country, mostly benefiting families with children, the elderly and those with disabilities. However, SNAP funding is separate from funding for school nutrition, so eligibility and availability of free meals at CMS schools will go uninterrupted, the district said, even though demand may increase.
“CMS anticipates that households affected may increasingly rely on school-provided meals,” a district spokesperson said in a statement to The Charlotte Observer. “This could result in higher student meal participation, which our School Nutrition Services team is prepared to support.”
Currently, 33,367 CMS students qualify for free meals based on SNAP participation, roughly 24% of the district’s total student population.
“We know if students are hungry that’s a barrier to learning,” CMS Board Chair Stephanie Sneed told the Observer. “We may very well see an increase in applications for free and reduced lunch… Families should look to our schools for support during these times.”
Who can get free lunch?
Schools with 25% or more students who automatically qualify for free lunch get money to provide all students with free lunches without parents having to fill out an application. This is called the “Community Eligibility Provision,” or CEP.
During the 2025-26 school year, 115 of the 186 CMS schools have free lunches for all students through the CEP, a district spokesperson told the Observer in August. CMS provides free breakfast for all students at all campuses — regardless of if a school qualifies under the CEP.
Students who qualify for SNAP benefits automatically qualify for free lunches, no matter what campus they attend. If they go to a non-CEP school, parents need to fill out an application.
In its statement to the Observer, the district encouraged families personally affected by the federal shutdown to complete the free or reduced lunch application.
Next year, cuts to the SNAP program will begin to take effect. They were outlined in the budget reconciliation bill President Donald Trump signed into law July 4 and include tighter guidelines for who qualifies for SNAP benefits, which could affect which schools are able to give free lunches to all students.
Food pantry impact
Dependence on local food pantries was already rising before the shutdown began.
Nourish Up, an organization that combats hunger in Mecklenburg County through food banks, grocery delivery and the meals on wheels program, served 164,000 people in 2024 alone. Over the last three years, the organization has seen a 115% increase in demand, Nourish Up CEO Tina Postel told The Observer in August.
In response to the expected SNAP freeze, NC Attorney General Jeff Jackson has joined a lawsuit with several other Democratic attorneys general against the Trump administration, calling for the USDA to release funding for November SNAP benefits.
Jackson said Tuesday that the USDA “has broken the law in a way that will create really severe consequences for a lot of vulnerable people,” The News and Observer reported.
This story was originally published October 30, 2025 at 12:24 PM.
Rebecca Noel reports on education for The Charlotte Observer. She’s a native of Houston, Texas, and graduated from Rice University. She later received a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Missouri. When she’s not reporting, she enjoys reading, running and frequenting coffee shops around Charlotte.
Railroad tracks at Camp North End in Charlotte. This site is a potential location for a new station on the Charlotte Area Transit System’s proposed Red Line rail project.
Chase Jordan
cjordan@charlotteobserver.com
Work on some projects that would be funded by the referendum on Mecklenburg County’s November ballot could begin as soon as late 2026 or early 2027.
The referendum on the 2025 ballot asks voters to approve or reject a 1% sales tax rate increase to fund road, rail and bus projects across the county. Road projects likely will be among the first to get started. Rail projects could take the longest.
If the referendum passes, local leaders anticipate the tax increase will generate more than $19 billion in revenue over the next 30 years. Of that money, 40% will go to rail projects and 20% to the region’s bus system. The other 40% would be divided between Charlotte and Mecklenburg’s six towns for road projects.
Some projects have priority, and some could come together faster because of their size and scope, local leaders say. Here’s what voters should expect when it comes to work starting:
When would work start on Red Line, other rail projects?
There’s no exact date yet for when crews would break ground on rail projects if the referendum passes. Existing plans include a general timeline and plans for prioritization.
The Red Line, a commuter rail line from uptown to Lake Norman-area towns
The Silver Line, a light rail line from Charlotte Douglas International Airport to Bojangles Coliseum. The line was originally slated to run from Belmont to Matthews but was shortened due to budgetary constraints over the objection of some east Mecklenburg leaders
An extension of the Blue Line light rail to Carolina Place in Pineville
An extension of the Gold Line streetcar from the Rosa Parks Community Transit Center to Eastland Yards
The Silver Line could eventually be extended further east, as could the Blue Line to Ballantyne, according to the plan.
The state law authorizing the referendum says the transit authority must complete at least 50% of the Red Line before completing any of the other rail projects on the docket. The commuter rail project has been in the works for decades but was hindered by a lack of access to railroad tracks and funding.
The Charlotte Area Transit System told The Charlotte Observer the rail projects are currently in the design stage and “will move as quickly as possible, with advancement within the next decade” if the tax increase passes.
What about buses, microtransit?
CATS’ overhaul of its bus system “would begin as soon as possible” if the tax increase passes, with a goal of completing the work within five years, the agency said. The plan, dubbed “Better Bus,” includes $3.8 billion in projects.
CATS plans to increase frequencies on its 15 busiest bus routes to 15 minutes or less.
Additional work would include:
Bus stop improvements, including 2,000 additional shelters, benches and waiting pads
Priority traffic signals for buses on the busiest routes
Bus fleet improvements, including 89 new buses
Increased express bus service frequency
The bus money would also fund an expansion of CATS’ microtransit program — a rideshare-like service currently operating in select parts of north Charlotte and Lake Norman-area towns — to 19 other parts of the county.
Charlotte, towns make plans for road projects
Road projects funded by the potential sales tax increase could begin in the next year or two.
Charlotte could begin work on road projects funded by new tax revenue as soon as money starts coming in, “which is anticipated to be in late 2026 or early 2027,” city spokesman Jack VanderToll said.
Davidson commissioners would decide the specific start dates for projects funded by the sales tax increase if it takes effect based on existing plans, resident feedback and the town’s prioritization process, town clerk Betsy Shores said.
Matthews expects revenue from the sales tax would be available to spend starting in fiscal year 2028, which begins July 2027, town spokeswoman Maureen Ryan said.
“In the meantime, we’ll continue planning and prioritizing transportation projects to be ready when the time comes,” she told the Observer.
Pineville plans to focus on smaller projects “from the onset” with the goal of starting “a more sizable road project” within 18 months to two years of receiving significant revenue, according to assistant town manager Chris Tucker.
Cornelius leaders plan to prioritize projects and set timelines for those projects if the referendum passes, town spokeswoman Emma Mondo said. Those projects may include “major road projects,” work on intersections and pedestrian and bicycle infrastructure, and maintenance.
Huntersville spokesman Ethan Smith said the town doesn’t have details yet on when work would begin on projects funded by the potential tax increase.
Representatives for Mint Hill did not respond to questions from an Observer reporter about the town’s plans for its portion of the roads funding.
Mary Ramsey is the local government accountability reporter for The Charlotte Observer. A native of the Carolinas, she studied journalism at the University of South Carolina and has also worked in Phoenix, Arizona and Louisville, Kentucky. Support my work with a digital subscription
“We have a spot,” Harris said at the end of a speech before a ceremonial final beam was placed on top of the tribe’s $1 billion North Carolina casino under construction.
Catawba Two Kings Casino and a hotel have sprouted after months of construction off Interstate 85 exit 5, about 35 miles west of Charlotte.
Many in the audience laughed when Harris told everyone to “get ready for the second casino,” thinking he was kidding.
Catawba Nation Chief Brian Harris speaks at the “topping off” ceremony on Monday, Oct. 27, 2025, for the $1 billion Catawba Two Kings Casino. A crane operator placed a ceremonial beam on top of the complex’s permanent casino. Melissa Melvin-Rodriguez mrodriguez@charlotteobserver.com
Harris didn’t elaborate and couldn’t be reached later for comment.
Glen White, spokesman for Delaware North, the consultant for the $1 billion casino, said Harris and casino officials “will have no further comment” about plans for a second casino.
Securing the tribe’s future
The $1 billion casino is more than a building, Harris told the crowd. “It represents the rise of a nation,” Harris said.
The casino will secure the future for tribal youth and be a legacy for the tribe, he said.
The casino resort will employ about 2,200 tribal members and local residents, tribal officials have said.
The Catawba have been on the land for thousands of years, Harris said, and have always supported the U.S., including during the Revolution.
When the Cherokee joined with the British at the 1780 Battle of Kings Mountain, “Gen. Washington called for (help from) the Catawba,” Harris said.
“We won,” Harris said about the Patriot-Catawba victory.
U.S. Rep. Tim Moore, R-Kings Mountain, knows all about the battle.
Congressman Tim Moore delivers remarks at the “topping off” ceremony on Monday, Oct. 27, 2025, for the $1 billion Catawba Two Kings Casino. Melissa Melvin-Rodriguez mrodriguez@charlotteobserver.com
In a brief address at Monday’s ceremony, the former N.C. House speaker congratulated the Catawba and noted a centuries-old thread in common with the tribe.
“I was born and raised in Kings Mountain,” Moore told the gathering, and his ancestors, too, fought on the patriot side at the Battle of Kings Mountain.
When will the casino open?
On social media later Monday, Moore said the casino “will be a game-changer for our region and will benefit the Catawba Nation for generations to come.”
The project’s first-floor “introductory casino” is scheduled to open in spring 2026 with 1,350 slot machines, 22 table games, a 68-seat restaurant, an 18-seat bar, sports betting kiosks and a rewards desk. The introductory casino will replace the current, single-story one that opened in July 2021.
A ceremonial beam is lifted to be placed atop the Two Kings Casino complex’s permanent casino in Kings Mountain on Monday, October 27, 2025. MELISSA MELVIN-RODRIGUEZ mrodriguez@charlotteobserver.com
The casino building also will include three levels of covered parking, a back-of-house level and a top story with the main casino floor and restaurants.
Work also continues on the 24-story, 385-room hotel, “which is at full height and being connected to the casino,” according to a Delaware North statement.
The overall, two-million-square-foot casino is scheduled to open in spring 2027, including the hotel; 4,300 slot machines; 100 table games; and 11 dining outlets, including a steakhouse, Italian restaurant, a marketplace with six venues, a café and a grab-and-go outlet.
The casino also will have a players lounge; 11 bars, including a center bar and a sports bar; and 3,500 parking spaces, consisting of a 2,700-space underground parking garage and 800 surface parking spaces.
Members of the Catawba Nation signed the ceremonial beam that will be the centerpiece of the “topping off” ceremony on Monday, Oct. 27, for their $1 billion Catawba Two Kings Casino. A crane operator placed the beam on top of the complex’s permanent casino. The project’s “introductory casino” is scheduled to open in spring 2026. Melissa Melvin-Rodriguez mrodriguez@charlotteobserver.com
A crane operator places a ceremonial beam on top of the complex’s permanent casino at Catawba Two Kings Casino in Kings Mountain on Monday, October 27, 2025. MELISSA MELVIN-RODRIGUEZ mrodriguez@charlotteobserver.com
Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news. Support my work with a digital subscription
Lainey Wilson — the Grammy-, CMA- and ACM Award-winning country star — brought her “Whirlwind World Tour” to Charlotte’s Spectrum Center on Saturday night.
The tour started in March, and the concert here was the third-to-last of 39 dates.
Here is a collection of photos from the show.
Lainey Wilson performs at the Spectrum Center Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer
Lainey Wilson performs at the Spectrum Center Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer
Lainey Wilson performs at the Spectrum Center Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer
Lainey Wilson performs at the Spectrum Center Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer
Lainey Wilson performs at the Spectrum Center Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer
Lainey Wilson performs at the Spectrum Center Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer
Lainey Wilson performs at the Spectrum Center Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer
Lainey Wilson performs at the Spectrum Center Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer
Lainey Wilson performs at the Spectrum Center Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer
Lainey Wilson performs at the Spectrum Center Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer
Lainey Wilson performs at the Spectrum Center Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer
Lainey Wilson performs at the Spectrum Center Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer
Lainey Wilson performs at the Spectrum Center Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer
A now-empty section of Jail North was used as Mecklenburg County’s Juvenile Detention Center. It closed in November of 2022 because of lack of funding and staffing.
John D. Simmons
For the Observer
Nearly three years after Sheriff Garry McFadden closed Mecklenburg County’s only juvenile detention center, some in the criminal justice system still hope for its return.
State public safety leaders and local advocates agree: Something important was lost when McFadden shut down the facility once known as Jail North.
Today, much of the building sits empty in north Charlotte, and local teenagers charged with crimes are sent to a state juvenile facility in Cabarrus County.
On Wednesday, cobwebs hung there. Some in the hallways were decorations for a planned Halloween event; others, in long-abandoned pods, were real. Classrooms where inmates once learned are now used by sheriff’s office staff. Meals are still cooked there and taken to Detention Center Central in uptown.
For years, state Department of Public Safety Deputy Secretary William Lassiter has tried to persuade McFadden to do something with the building that once housed 72 teenagers. While North Carolina is responsible for juvenile jails, Lassiter has argued that Charlotte saw benefits when the sheriff’s office ran one.
“I tried to lease. I tried to buy. I tried to offer incentives for them to do it,” he said. “All those have been rejected. At this point, I feel like the ball is in their court.”
McFadden has his own plan to reopen the jail — one that the state called unfeasible.
But with an election set for next year, it might not be McFadden who decides what happens next.
A ‘model’ for others
By the sheriff’s own account, the juvenile jail was a success.
He used to visit weekly, he said, and saw teenagers there playing flag football, badminton and other sports.
McFadden keeps artwork from one teenager who stayed at Jail North in his office. It’s a detailed, shaded drawing of a man inches from the ground, struggling to lift himself against a judge’s gavel that wants to pin him down.
Another wrote a memoir that McFadden has kept. In the acknowledgments, the author thanked the sheriff by name for making a difference in his life.
“I don’t know what they’re getting at other facilities,” McFadden said. “We give them time… We had speaking engagements. We had public speaking classes. Families loved to come there because they (could) interact with their children.”
Sheriff Garry McFadden poses with artwork that one of the former residents at Jail North created. Jail North served as a juvenile detention center for years, and was considered successful. But McFadden closed it so he could move staff to the adult jail. RYAN OEHRLI roehrli@charlotteobserver.com
A collective of local advocacy groups known as Children’s Alliance credited Jail North’s programs. Those groups have also tried to persuade McFadden to reopen the facility.
“Additional vocational training was offered, which created new options for these youth to consider upon release,” the groups said in a position paper. “This detention center was hailed as outstanding and served as a model for other jurisdictions.”
It was convenient logistically, too.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools worked in Jail North, meaning teenagers could continue their education without having to enroll in a new district.
With the jail being just a 15-minute drive from the county courthouse, it was easier for teenagers charged with crimes to make their court date, District Attorney Spencer Merriweather said in an interview.
That was good for victims and their families, Merriweather said, as it meant fewer cases getting delayed.
Jail shut down, conversations stalled
In 2022, McFadden closed Jail North.
Staff working there were moved to uptown, where they worked with adults instead of teenagers. Short staffing numbers and other issues forced the sheriff’s hand, he said at the time.
The law says juvenile justice is a state responsibility. Jail North was always optional, even if it was beneficial. Housing adults and ensuring they are in a safe facility, however, is something that sheriffs are legally mandated to do.
In an interview on Monday, McFadden repeatedly said he would like to reopen Jail North.
“Do I want to open the juvenile detention center? Absolutely, 100 percent,” he said.
But hiring more than 90 people to work in the facility would be long, involved work, even if the state helped pay for some of those employees, McFadden said.
From 2019: A 16-year-old in general housing at Mecklenburg County’s Jail North. JOHN D. SIMMONS Observer file photo
Why not open it on a smaller scale?
“If you’re going to open it up, and it goes max on the first week, then what are you going to do?” McFadden said. “Whether you entertain one person for mental health or 14, you still have to have a doctor for mental health. You cook 14 chicken sandwiches versus 100 chicken sandwiches. You know what you still need? A cook.”
Why not lease it to the state? Or sell it?
“How are they going to staff it?” he said of DPS.
Lassiter, the deputy director who oversees juvenile justice, said he has tried to find a solution with McFadden for years. He recently gave up, he said. It’s up to the sheriff’s office to say what it needs, he said.
McFadden’s idea not feasible, DPS says
McFadden proposed an idea to the Observer: The state could shut down the juvenile detention center in Cabarrus County and move all its staff to work for him in Mecklenburg County.
Overnight, they could start reporting to McFadden, he said.
“I hate to say this. It’s kind of like ‘The Jeffersons’ — kind of movin’ on up,” he said. “You move from this facility to this facility, and I’ll give you what you want.”
Sheriff Garry McFadden reads a book written by a former resident at Jail North, which was a juvenile detention center for years. RYAN OEHRLI roehrli@charlotteobserver.com
McFadden has floated the idea before, DPS spokesperson Matt Debnam said in an email, and it’s not feasible for a few reasons.
First, the employees working at Cabarrus County’s juvenile jail are state employees, Debnam said, meaning they applied specifically to work for North Carolina, and there’s no way to simply transfer them to a county job.
Also, closing the Cabarrus facility “would not help alleviate capacity issues currently facing the juvenile justice system, and would in fact result in a net loss of juvenile detention beds,” Debnam said.
Jail North had capacity for 72 beds. The Cabarrus County facility has 158.
What’s been lost
While wanting a juvenile jail in Mecklenburg County again, Merriweather is sympathetic to McFadden.
“I’ve got to make resource decisions in the things that I control, so I get it,” the district attorney said.
Still, he said, Jail North came with benefits, and not just for the teenagers kept there. The community at large could feel safer.
“When you’re talking about sending a juvenile to a possibly overcrowded place (where) many people would consider the conditions to be substandard — then the judge is having to factor in things that don’t have anything to do with public safety, or anything to do with the correction of that juvenile,” Merriweather said.
A pending lawsuit in federal court alleges poor conditions at the Cabarrus County facility. The lawsuit mentions Jail North’s closure.
The Department of Public Safety is not shy about those problems.
“The reality is, right now, in juvenile detention, we’re overcrowded,” Lassiter said, not speaking about the lawsuit specifically. “We’re short-staffed.”
This section of Jail North, shown on Wednesday, was used as Mecklenburg County’s Juvenile Detention Center, which closed in November of 2022 because of lack of funding and staffing. John D. Simmons For the Observer
Three facilities in Rockingham County, Perquimans County and Richmond County have opened since Jail North closed. That’s given the juvenile justice system “breathing room,” Lassiter said, but facilities across the state are still at capacity, and some teenagers are having to sleep in cots.
Statewide there are 425 minors in facilities and only 407 beds for them, according to DPS.
Amid what he described as a “juvenile crime wave” in the city, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Chief Johnny Jennings has also said it is time to reopen Jail North.
“We stand with the state in support of reopening Jail North to support juvenile detention needs in Mecklenburg,” Jennings wrote in an Observer editorial last year. “I strongly advocate for more compensation for staff, and more programming and resources. We must address these issues holistically. We will not be able to arrest our way out of them.”
Jennings did not respond to an interview request for this story. He routinely ignores questions from the Observer.
Candidates want to reopen facility
That leaves McFadden — for now.
The sheriff has not decided whether he will run for reelection next year, he told The Charlotte Observer. But two of three candidates running want to reopen Jail North. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Sgt. Ricky Robbins and former Detention Officer Antwain Nance said they would seek to do so.
(Former Chief Deputy Rodney Collins said he has other priorities before reopening Jail North, and that the facility became “a drain on resources and a tax burden at some point.”)
Could a new sheriff change the conversation?
“I could be a Puerto Rican,” McFadden said, dismissing the idea. “It’s still not going to change. Tell me the formula, how to hire 96 people.”
Nationwide, law enforcement agencies are in a yearslong trend of struggling to hire and keep people. Factor in that CMPD, Pineville police, Huntersville police, the Highway Patrol and other agencies are also hiring, McFadden said. Then factor in the other jobs that his own agency needs to hire for.
“Everybody’s recruiting from the same pool of people,” he said.
All the same, state and local public safety officials, judges and children’s advocates have been discussing Jail North since it shut down. They are not likely to stop anytime soon.
Juvenile crime has been a recurring concern in Charlotte for years, and crime in general has become a major political issue for local officials.
Jail North is a public safety issue, Lassiter said.
“We’ve got to make sure that those kids get the best services they possibly can while they’re in detention, so that when they come back to your neighborhood, your community, they’re going to be a better kid,” he said.
Ryan Oehrli covers criminal justice in the Charlotte region for The Charlotte Observer. His work is produced with financial support from the nonprofit The Just Trust. The Observer maintains full editorial control of its journalism.
This story was originally published October 24, 2025 at 5:00 AM.
Ryan Oehrli writes about public safety and criminal justice for The Charlotte Observer. He previously worked at the Asheville Citizen Times. A North Carolina native, he grew up in Little Washington.