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  • 21 arrested outside Broadview ICE detention center as protesters clash with police; 4 officers hurt

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    BROADVIEW, Ill. (WLS) — Twenty one people were arrested and four police officers were injured Friday as protesters clashed with police outside a Broadview U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility. There was a large protest Friday morning outside the building.

    Meanwhile, the ABC7 I-Team obtained new details Friday night on the list submitted by the DHS of the more than 600 migrants that a judge has ordered to be released by next Friday.

    SEE ALSO: Judge, attorneys inspect Broadview ICE facility amid ‘inhumane conditions’ allegations

    Just after 10 a.m., protesters moved from their designated zone, resulting in a clash with police.

    Protesters were pushed back, and several were detained.

    It was the largest crowd seen in Broadview in recent weeks.

    Members from the faith community were leading hundreds of people in the anti-ICE protest.

    They had hoped for it be non-violent. It was expected to be a prayer vigil with faith leaders requesting access inside the building.

    Counter-protesters were also present.

    SEE ALSO: Chicago federal intervention: Tracking surge in immigration enforcement operations | Live updates

    Cook County sheriff’s deputies, Illinois State Police and Broadview police were trying to hold the line.

    Some were in tactical gear, wearing face masks and holding batons and zip ties.

    Those arrested range in age from 25 to 69. They were charged with obstruction/disorderly conduct, officials said.

    The afternoon was calmer.

    Broadview Mayor Katrina Thompson said in a statement that two Broadview police officers, one state trooper and a Cook County sheriff’s deputy were injured.

    “I have repeatedly pleaded to protesters to raise their voices, not their fists. They have chosen their fists. These out-of-towners have chosen to brutalize police officers who have been protecting their free speech and protecting them against assaults by ICE agents. We will see them in court,” the statement said.

    “It’s unfortunate we came out here to pray for our neighbors who have been taken by ICE. And we came out here in a non-violent way and within seconds batons were out. Tasers were pulled out, and people were pushed down” said Brandon, a protester.

    “This is an opportunity for us to testify to the evil that is in our country where it is unnecessary to be spending money to treat people in such a manner,” protester Sandra Castillo said.

    Border Czar Tom Homan also weighed in on the clashes.

    “Look, they got the right to protest. Have at it. But don’t cross the line. I was watching the videos before I came out here. When they, when they put hands on a law enforcement officer, they’re getting arrested, going to jail,” Homan said.

    A federal judge has ordered the release of hundreds of migrants arrested in the Chicago area, including some arrested under the Department of Homeland Security’s “Operation Midway Blitz,” by Nov. 21 after finding their arrests could have violated a 2022 consent decree.

    U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Cummings sided with attorneys for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the National Immigrant Justice Center (NIJC) representing detainees who said DHS violated a consent decree that limits the ability of federal agents to conduct warrantless arrests.

    Cummings ordered 13 people to be released by Friday at noon, and another 615 people will be released into “alternatives-to-detention” which could include electronic monitoring by next Friday, Nov. 21.

    The National Immigrant Justice Center said some were released. It’s not clear where the rest are being held. It’s possible some are in Broadview.

    The ABC7 I-Team obtained new details Friday night on the list submitted by the DHS of the more than 600 migrants that a judge has ordered to be released by next Friday.

    The judge had ruled that those 614 people should not be in custody while it’s determined whether they were arrested in violation of a previous consent decree – unless they posed a “high public safety risk.”

    According to the list from DHS, that ABC7 obtained from a court filing, 43 people were categorized as posing a “high” risk, and 101 people on the list are no longer in custody. That leaves 470 people who could be eligible for release by next Friday, pending an appeal by the government.

    DHS asked the judge to pause the release of hundreds of immigrants as the Trump administration considered an appeal. The federal judge is now requiring attorneys for the detainees to respond by Monday.

    DHS says the judge who ordered this release is putting American lives at risk.

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    Stephanie Wade

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  • Immigration enforcement on North Side leads to tense confrontations, soft lockdowns at schools

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Videos showed federal agents detaining people as immigration enforcement activity was reported across Chicago on Friday.

    At several North Side locations, federal agents making arrests were met by community members, and at least one encounter ended in a cloud of tear gas.

    ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

    Footage from West Town Friday morning showed a federal agent breaking the driver’s side window of a car and detaining a man inside near West Superior Street and North Paulina Street.

    ABC7 blurred his face because we do not know if he has been charged with any crimes.

    Neighborhood residents confronted agents, shouting at them and blowing their whistles to alert the community as they detained the man, who was waiting for his pregnant wife outside of a community health center. Local elected officials and the community center say the man is in the country legally on a work permit and had a court date with immigration.

    SEE ALSO | Chicago federal intervention: Tracking surge in immigration enforcement operations | Live updates

    Later, a mid-day confrontation pitted Lakeview neighbors and protesters against masked federal agents. The face-to-face encounter ended with volleys of tear gas sending the residential block spiraling into chaos.

    Courtney Conway was among dozens of residents who confronted agents near Lakewood and Henderson after a construction worker at a home was arrested.

    “My eyes were burning. It did not feel great. They still burn a bit today,” Conway said. “There were some neighbors bringing out water for us to flush out our eyes.”

    Doorbell camera video showed agents rolling up and workers, who’d been having lunch, running for cover. One closed and braced against a gate as agents tried to push through. Another was helped through a window to elude agents.

    The stepped up ICE activity on the North Side disrupting the school day at Burr Elementary and other schools as multiple arrests played out on nearby streets.

    CPS parents and 32nd Ward Alderman Scott Waguespack confirmed a handful of schools in the Bucktown-Wicker Park area were placed on soft lockdown. That meant no outdoor recess, in response to ICE arrests in the neighborhood.

    “The kids aren’t playing outside because there’s been a huge amount of ICE presence in the neighborhood, just driving up and down the streets, just kind of terrorizing the neighborhood,” CPS parent Nicole Van Haperbeke said. “Why? It’s a peaceful, beautiful Friday.”

    SEE ALSO | US House subcommittee hosts ‘shadow hearing’ in Chicago on immigration enforcement tactics

    ABC7 obtained multiple videos from Bucktown-Wicker Park residents showing arrests in and around the neighborhood. At least one showed a gardener who a resident says was hired to plant a tree in her backyard.

    “I just asked them not to arrest him,” Bucktown resident Donna Kirchman said. “I said, ‘Please leave him alone.’ And they didn’t. I believe they took his phone, and then they took him.”

    Heavily armed agents also arrested a man sitting in a vehicle, who witnesses said works at a nearby car dealership.

    “It’s terrifying, and we knew that they were going to come to Bucktown,” resident Laura Dufour said. “They’ve been all over the city.”

    Those agents were later seen driving around vehicles that had stopped and clipping a woman. Alderman Waguespack says he’s been inundated with messages and witnessed first-hand what he claimed were ICE agents driving dangerously in the neighborhood.

    “We saw them backing up into intersections where we’ve got daycare children walking across the street,” Waguespack said. “You’ve got mothers with strollers. You’ve got a fun run right up here at St. Mary’s, and they’re driving without stopping at stop signs, blowing through alleys.”

    In light of the school lockdowns Mayor Brandon Johnson is urging Governor JB Pritzker to allow for a remote option for CPS students. That’s something the state has to sign off on, but the governor says he’s opposed to that idea because of the impact it could have on the students’ education.

    SEE ALSO | Some Chicago Board of Education members call for CPS remote learning amid immigration operations

    Also, Laugh Factory posted on social media on Friday, saying the Lakeview comedy club’s night manager was detained by “masked federal agents outside of the club.” The business posted footage of the incident to its Facebook account.

    Chicago police said officers responded to a report of a battery in the area of Belmont Avenue and Broadway just before 9:20 a.m.

    Responding officers saw federal agents and two other individuals in a physical altercation, and a crowd had gathered in the area, police said.

    Police said officers worked to deescalate and conduct crowd control. CPD did not make any arrests and left the scene once the area was cleared.

    No further information about the incident from federal authorities was available.

    Multiple alderpersons on the North Side issued alerts about more reported ICE activity on Friday.

    Ald. Daniel La Spata, who represents the 1st Ward, said on Friday morning, there have been “numerous confirmed sightings of ICE” throughout the West Town community area, including neighborhoods surrounding Ukrainian Village, Wicker Park, and the Humboldt Park border.

    Ald. Timmy Knusden, who represents the 43rd Ward, said community members on Friday have “reported ICE sightings and suspected enforcement activity at the following locations:

    • Cleveland/Belden

    • 2600 N Racine

    • 440 W Belden

    • Reports of 2 unmarked SUVs driving north on Halsted with masked drivers

    • Lincoln/Racine/Diversey

    • Racine/Drummond

    • Lill/Seminary

    • Wrightwood/Racine”

    Wicker Park’s A.N. Pritzker School also said it was on soft lockdown Friday, and all after-school programs, with the exception of Wicker Park Kids and Apollo, were canceled.

    Tear gas was thrown at Henderson and Lakewood, in a community that had so far has avoided contact with ICE agents.

    “The tear gas was deployed by ice without warning and without my neighbors hear from doing anything to provoke that reaction no one was interfering with them they were just exercising the first amendment rights,” 44th Ward Ald. Bennett Lawson said. “This is very disturbing.”

    Roaming bands of agents appeared to be targeting communities Friday where immigrants might be working.

    “No one gains, people already hurt and you kinda get to see that in real time,” neighborhood resident Donny Donoghue said.

    Earlier, protesters gathered outside the ICE processing facility in Broadview once again, as they have done every Friday now for several weeks.

    Friday’s demonstration has remained fairly contained to one corner as protesters keep within the safety zone, speaking out against the Trump’s administration’s operation “Midway Blitz” and the recent immigration crackdown in the Chicagoland area.

    “I believe that we are creating huge wounds, not only for the people who are being detained, but for the ICE officers who are doing these horrible things. I feel terrible for everybody,” said Mary Kelly, who lives in Oak Park.

    Messages left by ABC7 Chicago for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security regarding the North Side operations were not returned.

    Immigration operations are also having an impact on the Asian community.

    The Chinese American Service League shared a video of federal agents detaining a man outside his home in Bridgeport on Thursday.

    CASL claims the father of two was not doing anything illegal. Witnesses say the agents did not present a warrant.

    DHS says gang member tried to ram agents with car, defends apparent tear gas use on protesters

    DHS said a Latin Kings gang member tried to ram agents with a car in Cicero, IL and defended the apparent use of tear gas during a Chicago protest.

    Meanwhile, ABC7 is getting more information from the DHS about recent violent run-ins with federal agents over the past few days.

    DHS says Wednesday was one of their most violent days on the job. At 26th and Ogden in Cicero, DHS claims a Latin Kings gang member tried to ram agents with his vehicle.

    Six people were arrested that day for impeding operations, and three undocumented immigrants were placed into custody.

    And there were more tense moments Thursday at the Little Village Discount Mall during an anti-ICE rally.

    Attorneys accused federal agents of violating a court order, which does not allow them to use riot control weapons unless facing an imminent threat and requires them to issue warnings first before deploying tear gas.

    A federal complaint is now taking aim at the man who led the charge. An image of Border Patrol Chief Gregory Bovino appears to show him throw tear gas “without justification,” according to the complaint.

    “Federal agents started acting aggressive, pushing protesters away… Again, it was all peaceful protesters,” said protester Kristian Armendariz.

    However, DHS says the group of about 75-100 people began firing commercial artillery shell fireworks at agents and throwing rocks, adding that Bovino was hit in the head.

    According to DHS, agents repeated multiple warnings to the crowd to back up, informing them that chemical agents would be deployed. The department stood by their agents’ actions, saying, “Agents properly used their training. The use of chemical munitions was conducted in full accordance with CBP policy and was necessary to ensure the safety of both law enforcement and the public.”

    Bovino was set to appear in court on Nov. 5 to give a two-hour testimony, but now a federal judge has ordered more than double the time, five hours, to question Bovino after the incidents.

    Later Friday, Judge Sara Ellis also ordered Bovino to testify in-person on Tuesday during a status hearing.

    Copyright © 2025 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    Stephanie Wade

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  • Fencing around Broadview ICE facility set to be removed

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    BROADVIEW, Ill. (WLS) — Fencing around the ICE facility in Broadview is set to be removed soon.

    A judge ruled last week, that the fencing must come down by Tuesday. Monday morning, bulldozers were in position to potentially begin taking the fencing down.

    ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

    The village sued to have the 8-foot fence removed, saying it posed a public safety hazard because it blocks emergency responders.

    SEE ALSO | Chicago federal intervention: Tracking surge in immigration enforcement operations | Live updates

    RELATED | Appeals court upholds ruling blocking Trump admin. from deploying National Guard in Illinois

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  • Appeals court upholds ruling blocking Trump admin. from deploying National Guard in Illinois

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    BROADVIEW, Ill. (WLS) — As demonstrators kept their fight going outside the Broadview U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility on Saturday, at the same time, a court battle seemed to put an end to federal plans to have the National Guard on Chicago area streets, at least for now.

    The Trump administration on Friday asked an appeals court for an immediate stay of a Chicago federal judge’s ruling this week that blocked the National Guard from deploying in Illinois.

    The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals on Saturday upheld the judge’s ruling, but did partially grant the Trump administration’s request for stay by allowing troops to remain federalized pending their appeal of the judge’s ruling.

    ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

    Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul issued a statement later Saturday, saying, “The court’s order today keeps the troops off the streets of Chicago, Broadview or any other community in Illinois. This is a victory for our state. This is a victory for state and local law enforcement – who know their communities and who protect the right of their communities to speak truth to power.”

    The Department of Justice says the National Guard is needed to protect federal officers from violent attacks and called Judge April Perry’s move to grant the temporary restraining order “extraordinary.”

    Perry wrote in her opinion, after granting the state’s request for that temporary restraining order, that the deployment of the National Guard “is likely to lead to civil unrest.”

    Even as temperatures dropped, protesters’ voices still rang high outside the Broadview ICE detention center.

    Protests continued after local faith leaders held a prayer march to the facility Saturday morning. Their goal was to bring holy communion to detainees. Illinois State Police stationed outside the detention center said they called ICE with the request, which was denied.

    Before heading to the facility, the priests, nuns and community members gathered at a Maywood church for a prayer service.

    Bill Delong, a retired Army veteran visiting from Kentucky, was among the anti-ICE demonstrators in Broadview.

    “We all are Americans until due process,” Delong said. “I love my country, and I don’t know what happened, you know? When you start to see people get rolled up off the streets, hooded up, and thrown in vans; that’s something that we fought against.”

    SEE ALSO | Chicago federal intervention: Tracking surge in immigration enforcement operations | Live updates

    The latest in the legal battle over National Guard deployments comes as protesters and agents have clashed multiple times in the past, ending with arrests.

    Officials said Saturday night that 15 people were arrested by Illinois State Police in connection to protests near the Broadview facility throughout the day. Most charges were resisting, obstruction and disobeying a police officer.

    Illinois Democrats and Republicans remain divided of the deployment of the National Guard to assist federal agents in their ongoing immigration enforcement operation across the Chicago area.

    “This is an intentional attack by this president to divide and separate our communities, but he has finally met his match in the greatest city in the world, in Chicago,” Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson said.

    “I’m in disappointed in general,” Cook County Republican Party Chairman Aaron Del Mar said. “What we’re really trying to do is just implement the immigration laws that currently stands. And unfortunately, the protesters that are out there are disrupting the area to the point where it’s become unsafe for federal officers.”

    Meanwhile, another federal judge ruled the metal fence that was erected outside the Broadview ICE facility must come down by early next week. This comes after the Village of Broadview sued, saying it blocked this public road and could impact first responders getting to a scene.

    READ MORE | Broadview protest arrests, dropped charges influenced ruling to bar National Guard deployments

    Friday marked another day of anti-ICE demonstrations near the Broadview facility.

    Hundreds of people throughout the day could be seen rallying together, but authorities say at least four people were arrested for resisting and obstructing law enforcement.

    Sens. Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth were turned away from trying to visit the Broadview facility on Friday.

    And in a separate decision, a judge granted the village of Broadview’s temporary restraining order, calling for a fence, which was put up by federal agents and blocks a street near the facility, to come down. The government has until 11:59 p.m. on Tuesday to take that fence down.

    The faith community stepped off from St. Eulalia Catholic Church before heading to the Broadview facility. The goal is to attempt to deliver communion people who may be being held at the facility. Broadview’s mayor was also expected to walk.

    Copyright © 2025 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    Christian Piekos

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  • Broadview protest arrests, dropped charges influenced ruling to bar National Guard deployments

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    BROADVIEW, Ill. (WLS) — A grand jury refusing to indict protesters arrested at the Broadview ICE facility played a role in an emergency ruling that now bars National Guard deployments in Illinois, the ABC7 I-Team has learned.

    U.S. District Judge April Perry cited the rejection of some criminal charges by grand jurors as one of the factors casting, “…significant doubt on DHS’ credibility and assessment of what is happening on the streets of Chicago.”

    ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

    When grand juries meet, what happens behind closed doors is secret. They are convened without defense counsel present and have a low bar for probable cause –leading to the old adage that prosecutors could get a grand jury to” indict a ham sandwich.”

    But for one couple arrested for allegedly assaulting ICE agents during protests in Broadview, even the grand jury told prosecutors there wasn’t enough meat in the evidence to indict.

    In a post by Immigration and Customs enforcement to their more than one-million followers on X, Jocelyne Robledo and Ray Collins Called where called “armed rioters.” They were arrested by federal agents who said they were found with guns for alleged assault at the Broadview ice facility.

    But when prosecutors presented their case to a grand jury for official charges, which would have been serious, jurors issued a no-bill which is a formal response refusing to indict.

    It’s something ABC7 Chief Legal Analyst Gil Soffer told the I-Team is beyond rare.

    “It is extremely unusual that a grand jury returns a no bill or refuses to approve an indictment. It happens literally in handfuls of cases, out of tens of thousands of cases that are brought before a grand jury,” Soffer said.

    That’s because Soffer said Grand Juries are entirely one-sided.

    “The power of the prosecution is immense in a grand jury. There’s no defense lawyer present. There’s no judge present. And the prosecutor decides which evidence to present, what charges to present, how to frame them for the grand jurors,” he said.

    SEE ALSO | Chicago federal intervention: Tracking surge in immigration enforcement operations | Live updates

    That no-bill and several other instances of charges against protesters being dropped over the past 72 hours like that of Luci Mazur who was arrested while protesting at the Broadview ICE facility.

    “Very scary, but I’m just glad it’s all over with,” she said.

    That directly contributed to the emergency ruling forbidding National Guard troops from being deployed by President Trump in Illinois. Judge April Perry calling government accounts uncredible.

    “She flatly said she did not find the evidence presented to her by the government credible. You don’t see that every day. You don’t hear that every day from a federal judge,” said Soffer.

    Chicago Kent College of Law Professor Richard Kling, who represented Collins reacted to the refusal of grand jury members to indict.

    “Prosecutors could have the grand jury return an indictment against a ham sandwich. Apparently, they had less evidence than a ham sandwich,” he quipped.

    Robledo and Collins are not out of the woods yet. The charges against them were dismissed without prejudice meaning they could be brought again at a later date, but the assertions relied on in court by DHS lawyers are now being called into question by both jurors and federal judges.

    Judge grants request to drop charges against neurodivergent man arrested during Broadview protest

    On Friday, a judge granted a request from federal prosecutors to drop charges against a man arrested during protests outside the Broadview Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility.

    A judge granted a request from federal prosecutors drop charges against Paul Ivery. He was arrested during a Broadview ICE facility protest.

    Paul Ivery was charged with assaulting a Border Patrol officer last month.

    ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

    Relatives say Ivery has intellectual disabilities. And a judge later released Ivery from jail, saying he does not pose a threat to the community.

    He is the fourth person arrested during protests at the suburban facility to have their charges dropped this week.

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    Mark Rivera

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  • Broadview ICE facility protest expected Friday; DOJ files notice of appeal to National Guard ruling

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    BROADVIEW, Ill. (WLS) — ABC7 is watching to see what happens next with National Guard troops in the Chicago area.

    A federal judge temporarily blocked the deployment to our area, but the Trump administration has already filed a notice of appeal.

    ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

    The first large-scale weekly demonstration outside the Broadview Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility since that ruling is expected to get underway on Friday morning.

    Based on the judge’s order, for a two-week period, the National Guard is barred from being used in operations, but we will see if they still have a physical presence in Broadview.

    SEE ALSO | Chicago federal intervention: Tracking surge in immigration enforcement operations | Live updates

    Judge April Perry’s decision came hours after the Guard arrived at the Broadview immigration facility on Thursday. Troops could be seen walking around and lingering near the facility.

    The Trump administration has argued that the bolstered military presence is needed to protect federal property and employees. But the judge said the government’s claims about an out-of-control public on the brink of rebellion were not credible.

    The White House responded to the judge’s move to grant a temporary restraining order, writing, in part, “President Trump will not turn a blind eye to the lawlessness plaguing American cities and we expect to be vindicated by a higher court.”

    Protest hours in Broadview are from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily, but it is not clear if demonstrators plan to adhere to the guidance.

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    Christian Piekos

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  • Federal agents detain multiple people downtown; anti-ICE protests held in Chicago, Broadview

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Federal immigration agents swarmed downtown Chicago on Sunday afternoon, detaining multiple people.

    One of those incidents was caught on camera near Millennium Park, where Border Patrol agents appeared to detain a family, including a woman and multiple children.

    ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

    Agents appeared to detain another man in River North outside of Catholic Charities, near LaSalle and Clark.

    These were part of Sunday’s many sightings of Border Patrol agents, who were seen patrolling on foot and by boat along the Chicago River.

    “It’s a lot of places that can use some armor and some help, and I’m pretty sure walking down the street of Michigan Avenue is not the place for that type of armor,” said Robina Muhammed.

    Lawmakers and community leaders held a press conference on Sunday afternoon to speak out about the federal escalation.

    SEE ALSO | Chicago federal intervention: Tracking surge in immigration enforcement operations | Live updates

    “They showed up downtown to indiscriminately continue to profile against people just because of what they look like,” said Democratic Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia.

    “How dare you. This is our city. This is our state. This is our country. This is our home,” said Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights Deputy Director Veronica Castro.

    The group vowed to mobilize and protect against what they call fear and intimidation tactics.

    “We don’t have any other choice but to continue to organize, to continue to stand together and continue to fight to protect our communities,” said Resurrection Project Director of Organizing Tovia Siegel.

    But the Trump administration is making its own vow. The Department of Homeland Security posted to social media, saying, in part, “DHS under @Sec_Noem, will NOT back down. We will not rest until every violent terrorist, thug is arrested… @POTUS Trump and @Sec_Noem will return LAW AND ORDER to our streets.”

    Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson posted on X, saying, “This is another brazen provocation from the Trump administration that does nothing to make our city safer.”

    Johnson also issued a statement, saying, “There are reports of federal agents in downtown Chicago carrying weapons and wearing masks. On a Sunday afternoon, when people are out enjoying the weather and shopping, the Department of Homeland Security is militarizing our city. This is not about safety. It’s meant to intimidate and stoke fear. This also coincides with ICE agents sparking panic and creating chaos while continuing to tear gas and pepper spray people who are exercising their First Amendment rights at the Broadview facility. Stay alert, and stay safe, Cook County. Remember to Know Your Rights.”

    Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker issued a statement on the enforcement, saying, “The Trump Administration’s DHS officers appear to be carrying large weapons around downtown Chicago in camouflage and masks. This is not making anybody safer – it’s a show of intimidation, instilling fear in our communities and hurting our businesses. We cannot normalize militarizing American cities and suburbs. Make sure you know your rights and stay alert.”

    Broadview police investigating alleged attack on reporter near ICE facility

    Broadview police say they have launched a criminal investigation into what they describe as “an allegedly unprovoked attack” on a journalist near an ICE facility.

    Meanwhile, Broadview police say they have launched a criminal investigation into what they describe as “an allegedly unprovoked attack” on a journalist near an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility there.

    They say a chemical munition was fired from the direction of the facility on a CBS TV news reporter’s vehicle. The reporter declined medical attention.

    Broadview police say they expect full cooperation from DHS.

    “The Village of Broadview Police Department has launched a criminal investigation into an allegedly unprovoked attack on a CBS Chicago TV news reporter’s vehicle by a chemical munition fired from the direction of U.S. Immigration Customs and Enforcement detention facility. The victim declined medical attention. The Broadview Police Department expects the full cooperation by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security into our criminal investigation,” Broadview Police Chief Thomas Mills said in a statement.

    Demonstrators return to Broadview ICE facility after Saturday night’s escalation

    At one point on Sunday night, protesters tried to put up flags, and agents fired mace and pepper bullets in response.

    Protests outside the Broadview ICE facility have been happening for several days, and demonstrators continued to make their voices heard on Sunday night.

    At one point on Sunday night, protesters tried to put up flags, and agents fired mace and pepper bullets in response. However, everyone appeared to be OK, and no one was detained.

    Still, was a much calmer atmosphere outside of the facility throughout Sunday after the escalation ABC7 crews witnessed there on Saturday night.

    Beach Street has been reopened, allowing protesters to be right up against the facility’s fence again, and there were much fewer federal agents present outside compared to Saturday.

    Protest organizers rebuilt a tent and moved it further away from the facility after federal agents tore down their belongings on Saturday night while deploying tear gas to disperse the crowd.

    They had been taking in donations to help families impacted by ICE operations, but much of that was ruined during the escalation.

    “To see everything go to waste, this is people’s hard-earned money that are willing to help us out in any way, and it just went to waste,” said a protester named Maria.

    The presence of Border Patrol and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agents has dwindled compared to what was seen in Broadview on Saturday.

    Protesters say they will continue to show up as the Trump administration targets the Chicagoland area in federal operations.

    “I don’t think it’s gonna stop. The more they push, we’re gonna push, and you know, we want to make this as peaceful as possible, but they’re not making it peaceful,” Maria said.

    As protesters try to get their message across, loved ones of people who have been detained by ICE are also showing up to the facility in Broadview.

    Natalie Mirenda stood with the crowd on Sunday night after watching her father get detained in Downers Grove earlier in the day.

    “I saw a bunch of people and guns, and I ran out and realized it was ICE, and they already had him going in the car,” Mirenda said. “He’s a really hard worker. He’s never had a single ticket. He’s never been pulled over. He’s not a criminal. He has no criminal record at all.”

    Mirenda says it is a feeling of helplessness for her family with little information coming in from ICE officials.

    “We’re devastated. My sister is out here protesting with me, and we can’t do anything but just stand here and hope everything turns out good. It’s crazy,” Mirenda said. “You never know what happens until it literally happens to you. It’s crazy.”

    This comes as the Trump administration is committing more federal resources to Chicago and officials say they will have zero tolerance for any interference of ICE operations.

    President Donald Trump posted on social media earlier Sunday, referencing Chicago with a video of the escalations between protesters and federal agents in Broadview.

    Protests against immigration enforcement held in Chicago

    Dozens of people came out across the city’s North and Northwest sides for what is being called a day of action.

    Meanwhile, the Indivisible Chicago Alliance, a grassroots organization dedicated to fighting the Trump administration’s policies and actions in Chicago and beyond, organized events in the city on Sunday.

    Even before Sunday’s show of force downtown, dozens of people came out across the city’s North and Northwest sides for what is being called a day of action.

    “We think it’s important that we show the majority of us are opposed to what Trump is doing. We’re opposed to ICE. We’re opposed to the militarization of our cities,” said protester Geri Kahn.

    Protesters, many of them members of Indivisible Chicago, fanned out from Irving Park and Lake Shore Drive in Buena Park to Welles Park in North Center, taking heart from the support of passing motorists.

    “We want to make a big statement that the American people, the majority of the American people, are not with the Trump administration,” said protester John Bachtell.

    In Humboldt Park, people also came out, but there, their purpose was different. Their eyes were firmly focused on getting people to the ballot box.

    “Our actions for today are writing postcards to voters in Virginia to remind them to get out and vote because they have a really important Supreme Court election coming up,” said Kristen Vandawalker with Indivisible Chicago Northwest.

    It is an effort to encourage political action from those who might feel their impact, in what is already a blue state, is limited.

    “Sometimes people feel like they can only take so much action or have so much impact within the state so it’s good to have, hey there is something really important happening in Pennsylvania we can help with or Virginia or whatever,” said Jessica Jorsch with Indivisible Chicago Northwest.

    Sunday’s actions are all a prelude to what is expected to be a large-scale No Kings protest coming up three weeks from now on Saturday, Oct. 18 in Grant Park.

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  • Anti-ICE protests continue at Broadview facility, downtown Chicago as federal presence grows

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    BROADVIEW, Ill. (WLS) — There was an amplified presence of federal agents Saturday in Broadview after U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi posted on social media that the Trump administration was directing more resources to Chicago.

    It appeared that Border Patrol has taken over operations at the west suburban ICE facility, and they were quick to detain several protesters throughout the evening while firing off pepper bullets to disperse the crowds.

    Demonstrators have been protesting against the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement blitz happening across the Chicago area.

    ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

    The developments came after the village said in a statement that Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents told officials in Broadview they would launch enforcement throughout the west suburb on Saturday.

    The village says ICE agents told Broadview police that there will be a “s*** show” in the area and that federal officers will deploy chemicals again.

    In a statement, Broadview said this is all in retaliation to the village calling on ICE to “stop making war on our community.”

    “Let’s be clear. ICE is seeking to intimidate the Village of Broadview because we dared exercise our 1st Amendment constitutional rights calling for an end to their war on Broadview. We will not be intimidated. We are Broadview strong,” the village said in a statement, in part.

    Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin issued a statement, saying, “This is made up. Our law enforcement enforces the rule of law. Period.”

    RELATED | Broadview police chief says he was verbally attacked by ICE agent; mayor criticizes ICE in letter

    The continued protests Saturday at the Broadview ICE facility came after Friday night’s standoff between demonstrators and federal agents.

    Some local organizations held a press conference in the afternoon, continuing to speak out against the operations going on there. The Revolutionary Black Panther Party is one of the organizations that spoke.

    There have been contentious moments the last couple of days, including the use of pepper bullets and other crowd controlling measures from DHS agents. Many of the protesters there Saturday have been the same people showing up to the facility every day, and they say that those tactics from ICE will not deter them from continuing to protest.

    Throughout the day agents chased down some protesters and detained them while also coming out to take any kind of shields or umbrellas from the crowd. Protesters believe the use of force has gone too far.

    “We oppose this kind of authoritarianism that is invading our city and suburbs,” community activist Andy Thayer said. “It’s not helping anyone.”

    After several escalations between protesters and federal agents over the last few weeks in Broadview, Attorney General Bondi says there will be no tolerance moving forward.

    “More than 200 violent rioters were at a Chicago ICE facility chanting ‘Arrest ICE. Shoot ICE,’” Bondi said in a video posted to X. “At least one had a gun. We’ve seen this before. We saw it in Portland and the LA riots. These are not peaceful protests. These are coordinated attacks by radical extremists, and they end now.”

    Border Patrol Chief Gregory Bovino also arrived to the Broadview facility Friday. He did not answer questions from reporters as he led operations on the ground.

    Crowd-controlling measures like pepper bullets were deployed several times in an attempt to push protesters back.

    Local immigration lawyer Louise Carhart was apart of the crowd. She says the federal agencies do not belong there.

    “All of these agencies are funded by tax payer dollars and they’re being deputized for things they are not authorized to do,” Carhart said. “That’s a misuse of public funds, and I think protesters have every right to be out here.”

    Also on the scene Saturday were a few opposition protesters, who say they stand with ICE and believe this is what Illinois needs right now.

    Anti-ICE protesters in Chicago also gathered Saturday in the Loop, sending a similar message to the Trump administration. They rallied at Federal Plaza and marched a bit through downtown, with chants and signs standing up against ICE operations.

    SEE ALSO | Chicago federal intervention: Tracking surge in immigration enforcement operations | Live updates

    Officers used chemical agents multiple times in an effort to disperse the crowds on Friday in Broadview, and federal authorities said of the people arrested had a gun.

    Elias Cepeda, a volunteer with Pilsen Defense and Access, is seen in this video posted to Instagram right before his arrest. The 41-year-old has joined other protesters at the facility for weeks.

    His mother says her son is a legal Concealed-Carry License holder and is demanding his release while other demonstrators shared their account of his arrest.

    DHS commented on Cepeda’s arrest and the discovery of his firearm, writing in a post to X, in part, “This is transpiring just a few days after the horrific terrorist attack on an ICE facility in Dallas.”

    Demonstrators say the other man arrested on Friday is a military veteran.

    Broadview Mayor Katrina Thompson has urged Broadview residents to “take all necessary precautions to protect themselves and their families in order to stay out of harm’s way.”

    Illinois Governor JB Pritzker released the following statement in response to the federal deployments in the village of Broadview:
    “The State of Illinois is closely monitoring the federal deployments in the Village of Broadview. Public safety is always my top priority, and the Illinois State Police remain in close communication with the Broadview Police Department to monitor and maintain public safety.

    “Whether it be in Broadview here in Illinois or in Portland, Oregon, the Trump Administration is intentionally creating chaos to threaten sending military troops to American cities and suburbs. The suggestion that chemical agents like tear gas or pepper spray could be used indiscriminately against peaceful demonstrators, or even first responders, is unacceptable and not normal.

    “Illinois will always defend Americans’ right to peacefully protest and make their voices heard. We denounce any violence against the general public, members of the media, and law enforcement or first responders. Even when the Trump Administration does not follow the law, we will.

    “I urge members of the public to remain calm, stay safe, and document what you see with your phones and cameras. My senior team has also asked legal organizations to support monitoring on the ground. By observing and recording peacefully, we can ensure that any violations of the law are brought to light and those responsible are held accountable.”

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  • Officers appear to use pepper balls against protesters at Broadview ICE facility: LIVE

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    BROADVIEW, Ill. (WLS) — Reps. Chuy Garcia and Delia Ramirez are expected to speak outside the Broadview Immigration and Customs Enforcement processing facility about recent operations in the area later Saturday morning.

    Protesters gathered outside that ICE detention center on Friday, with video showing what appears to be pepper balls being used against some of the demonstrators that evening. Video also shows at least one demonstrator being dragged away.

    ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

    Demonstrations were also seen in other northwest suburbs on Friday night after an ICE agent allegedly shot a man to death in Franklin Park earlier in the day.

    Reps. Chuy Garcia and Delia Ramirez are expected to speak Saturday outside the Broadview ICE facility, where an anti-ICE protest got underway Friday.

    Federal agents say they were trying to make a traffic stop when Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez, a man the Department of Homeland Security says was undocumented with a criminal history of reckless driving, allegedly drove at the officer, dragging him in the process.

    SEE ALSO | Chicago federal intervention: Tracking surge in immigration enforcement operations | Live updates

    That’s when, officials say, the officer fired shots, striking Villegas-Gonzalez, who later died at the hospital.

    Cellphone video obtained by ABC7 shows the moment ICE officers removed the man from his crashed car near Grand and Elder Lane. ABC7 froze the video since it is too graphic to show.

    DHS said in a statement, in part, “We are praying for the speedy recovery of our law enforcement officer. He followed his training, used appropriate force, and properly enforced the law to protect the public and law enforcement.”

    READ MORE | U.S. reps. denied access to Broadview immigration facility; Speaker Johnson tours Chicago ICE office

    Villegas-Gonzalez’ girlfriend and stepdaughter, who asked ABC7 not to show their faces, say he was a working 38-year-old father of three from Mexico who has lived in the United States for more than 20 years.

    Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker called Friday’s events in Franklin Park troubling.

    Meanwhile, a group of local Catholics will gather for what organizers are calling a people’s Mass outside Naval Station Great Lakes, which is hosting federal immigration agents as they carry out operations in the Chicago area.

    The Mass, set to begin at 10 a.m., will serve as a peaceful and spiritual protest against the Trump administration’s mobilization of ICE to Chicago.

    RELATED | Broadview protesters demand release of Chicago mother detained by ICE during routine check-in

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    Christian Piekos

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