DOWNERS GROVE, Ill. (WLS) — A detention hearing for a man accused in the stabbing death of a pregnant woman in Downers Grove has been postponed until Thursday.
Court documents revealed the incident appeared to stem from a car sale, and the victim was stabbed 70 times.
Loved ones gathered for a vigil Wednesday evening as they continue to mourn Eliza Morales. She and her family were months away from welcoming a new child, their second after their two-year-old daughter. Now the family is left crippled with heartbreak, not knowing what those two lives could have become.
Revuckas’ detention hearing has been postponed until Thursday morning because both the state and defense need more time to process the sheer volume of evidence in the case.
Revuckas faces first-degree murder, armed robbery, arson, animal cruelty and other charges.
Investigators said 30-year-old Eliza Morales resisted the suspect at her doorstep, as he tried to rob that young mother, who was set to deliver her second child, a baby girl, in March.
Gabriel Morales had listed a pickup truck on Facebook Marketplace, and Revuckas had intended to purchase it, court documents showed. Revuckas was upset about the condition of the truck and “decided to take out his frustration on Eliza,” the documents say.
Court documents allege, during a struggle, Morales suffered 70 stab wounds.
Revuckas is also accused of stabbing the Morales family’s dog.
“You get angry and then you get sad and then you get angry again and it’s such a rollercoaster,” Morales’ mother-in-law Angelica Silva said.
A candlelight vigil was held Wednesday night, after court documents revealed the disturbing details about Morales’ death that took place Monday at her Downers Grove home.
“It was a horrific, violent crime committed,” Silva said. “She fought for her life.” (:07)
“She’s a sweetheart and she didn’t deserve this and it’s just too painful and honestly you just don’t expect this to happen,” Morales’ cousin Carolina Castro said.
During the fight, Revuckas told detectives Eliza “mentioned she was pregnant,” according to court documents. She was stabbed 70 times Investigators say after the stabbing, the suspect allegedly started a fire inside the home.
“Pure evil. I-I, none of us get it-she did not deserve this,” Silva said. “No one deserves anything like this.”
While the suspect’s motive is not clear to Morales’ family, what has been clear is the impact her loss will have on the family, including her surviving two-year-old daughter.
“Were just going to raise her daughter the way she was,” Silva said.
Prosecutors intend to ask a judge to deny Revuckas pre-trial release during the postponed dention hearing on Thursday, saying in court documents he poses a real and present threat to community safety. His detention hearing was postponed from Wednesday due to the amount of evidence attorneys have to go through.
A GoFundMe page has been set up to support the victim’s family.
A teenager has been accused of first-degree murder after a pregnant woman was found stabbed to death in an apartment fire in west suburban Downers Grove Monday night, local authorities said.
Downers Grove police and fire responded to reports of a structure fire in a local apartment building just after 6 p.m., according to village officials. Fire crews removed a 30-year-old pregnant woman from the building, who had suffered “apparent sharp force trauma,” officials said. The woman, identified as Eliza Morales of Downers Grove, was treated by paramedics but ultimately pronounced dead on scene.
A second person was treated on scene for smoke inhalation and transported to Advocate Good Samaritan Hospital in Downers Grove, officials said.
On Tuesday, the village stated Nedas Revuckas, 19, of Westmont, had been arrested in connection to the stabbing death. Revuckas was charged with first-degree murder, intentional homicide of an unborn child, armed robbery, aggravated arson and aggravated cruelty to an animal.
Officials released no further details on the matter.
Revuckas will be transported to DuPage County Jail and is scheduled to make an initial court appearance on Wednesday.
DOWNERS GROVE, Ill. (WLS) — A Willowbrook man has been charged with trying to sexually assault a woman and grabbing three others in the south and west suburbs, officials said.
Kwame Koranteng, 31, is charged with one count of Attempt Criminal Sexual Assault, two counts of Aggravated Battery in a Public Place, two counts of Aggravated Battery – Person Over Sixty and one count of Criminal Sexual Abuse, the DuPage County State’s Attorney’s Office said.
Officials said the first call came in last Friday around 3 p.m.
A woman was walking on Brookbank Road in Downers Grove when Koranteng allegedly got out of his parked vehicle, ran up from behind, and passed her. He then allegedly turned around, walked past the woman and grabbed her buttocks while asking if “she can have sex.” He then fled the scene in a Toyota Corola.
The next call came in from Hinsdale on Monday around 2:45 p.m.
The alleged victim was walking with a 6-month-old child on a path on 59th Street. When she briefly stopped, she allegedly felt Koranteng grab her buttocks from behind with both hands. When she turned around, Koranteng allegedly reached down and touched the victim’s genitals over her clothes. When the victim screamed for help, he fled the scene.
The third report came in from Darien on Friday around 10:15 p.m. A woman reported that Koranteng followed her into the lobby of her apartment building and grabbed her buttocks before leaving.
After authorities identified Koranteng as a suspect in these cases, officers witnessed another alleged assault while conducting surveillance on him.
It happened on Friday in the 7300-block of Fairmount Avenue in Downers Grove.
Koranteng allegedly got out of his vehicle and approached a woman who was with her grandchild. While the grandmother was bending over to pick the child up, Koranteng allegedly grabbed her buttocks from behind and tried to wrap his arms around her. When the woman pushed him away, Koranteng fled back to his vehicle, where officers arrested him.
A judge ordered Koranteng, of the 400-block of Ridgemoor Drive, detained ahead of his trial on Saturday morning. He is due back in court on Dec. 8.
She got to the base’s main gate at 6:30 a.m. Wednesday, dressed in her Army boots and a red and black dress adorned with embroidered flowers, one of two identical dresses she and her daughter received from her aunt on a family trip to Guadalajara.
The boots, she said, were for confidence, the dress to symbolize her Mexican heritage.
Lina Alvarez spearheaded a protest outside Naval Station Great Lakes on Sept. 6 that drew hundreds of people opposed to its use as a base of operations for President Donald Trump’s planned immigration “blitz” on Chicago.
Four days later, the 42-year-old retired U.S. Army sergeant first class returned to the North Chicago base alone, carrying two flags — American and Mexican — bound together as one and a poster board on which she wrote in green marker:
IMAGINE 4 deployments IEDs Small arms fire Indirect fire Soldier’s suicide PTSD But I must prove I’m American when they ask?
“I came here to be a voice for people who are too scared to come out here,” Alvarez said. “I came here to try to make the world a little bit safer for my daughter. I came here because last Saturday was the first time I felt a little bit of hope.”
While the Trump administration has singled out Chicago for immigration sweeps this month — dubbed “Operation Midway Blitz” — and a possible National Guard deployment aimed, he’s said, at curbing the city’s endemic crime, those threats have stirred considerable pushback from residents and leaders across the suburbs who have organized protests and publicly condemned the spectre of federal incursions.
Tensions over immigration enforcement were heightened Friday after the agency reported that one of its agents shot and killed a man who struck and dragged the officer during a traffic stop in west suburban Franklin Park. The agent suffered severe injuries, the agency reported.
But suburban protests had mounted even before the shooting. In Downers Grove a few hundred people rallied Sunday outside a hotel after immigration advocates spotted Department of Homeland Security vehicles in the parking lot and suspected federal agents were staying there.
A day earlier, a similar-sized crowd gathered near a Wheaton grocery store to protest federal immigration raids, some carrying signs that read: ICE is not welcome here. And on Friday, dozens protested outside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement processing center in Broadview.
A protester yells at federal agents as the officers attempt to clear a path for their vehicles to enter and exit the ICE facility in Broadview on Sept. 12, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
A protester yells “Shame!” at federal agents during a protest at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 12, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
A federal agent watches from the roof while demonstrators scream during a protest at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 12, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
Federal agents emerge from the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview to push back protesters to allow vehicles to enter the facility on Sept. 12, 2025. One agent fired a nonlethal pepper ball into the crowd. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
Vehicles with federal agents drive close to protesters attempting to block their path to the Broadview ICE processing facility on Sept. 12, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
Federal agents head back into to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview after they cleared a path for vehicles to enter and exit the facility on Sept. 12, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
Protesters and activists shout down federal agents while vans enter the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview, Sept. 12, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
Protesters stand face to face with federal agents at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 12, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
Protesters yell at federal agents while they clear a path for vehicles to enter the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 12, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
Protesters and activists shout down federal agents while vans enter the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview to protest on Sept. 12, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
Protesters and activists shout down federal agents while vans enter the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview to protest on Sept. 12, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
Sandy Roelofs, general manager of New to You Upscale Resale in Broadview, delivers blankets to a federal agent at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 9, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
A federal agent escorts a detainee into the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 9, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
Federal agents clean off markings left by protesters on signs at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 5, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
Federal agents clean markings left by protesters off of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 5, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
A detainee is brought into the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 9, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
Protesters and activists sit in front of a federal agent’s car to prevent it from entering the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 5, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
Protesters and activists sing and chant with a drum circle while protesting outside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 5, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
Protesters and activists join hands and sing “We Shall Overcome” outside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 5, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
A federal agent drives off after being blocked by protesters while trying to enter the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 5, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
Protesters and activists sit in front of a gate to prevent vehicles from entering the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 5, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
Protesters and activists sit and join hands in front of a federal agent’s car to prevent it from entering the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 5, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
Protesters and activists sit and join hands in front of a federal agent’s car to prevent it from entering the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 5, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
Broadview police watch and ask protestors to move as protesters and activists sit and join hands in front of a federal agent’s car to prevent it from entering the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 5, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
A federal agent enters an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview while protesters and activists shout on Sept. 5, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
A protester, who declined to be named, leads others in a chant outside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 5, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
Joaquín Martínez of Des Plaines flies an “Our Lady of Guadalupe” flag after praying the rosary with a prayer group that met during a protest on Sept. 5, 2025, at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview. The group has been meeting at the facility every Friday since 2006 and praying for the immigrants that are held inside. Martínez has been attending for 18 years. (Dominic Di Palermo/ Chicago Tribune)
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A protester yells at federal agents as the officers attempt to clear a path for their vehicles to enter and exit the ICE facility in Broadview on Sept. 12, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
More rallies have been scheduled in Broadview and in other communities in the coming days, as suburbs that were once Republican strongholds have turned reliably Democrat-blue in the past decade. The demonstrations reflect both the disdain for Trump among an increasingly less conservative electorate and a significant suburban immigrant population that surpasses that of the city itself.
“It’s been historic,” said Cristobal Cavazos, co-founder of Immigrant Solidarity DuPage and Casa DuPage Workers Center. “I’m just so proud of our level of activity. When I first got into activism, the suburbs were seen as a land of conservative white folks. But that’s changing.”
Suburban mayors speak out
As ICE activity has ramped up, some suburban mayors have spoken out against the raids.
“We have communicated in partnership with the county that uninvited, unwanted and unjustified (presence) from ICE is unwelcomed,” Maywood Mayor Nathanial George Booker said in a statement. “Together, we will ensure that no show of force is stronger than a united community.”
Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss has joined protesters opposing ICE actions, going online to describe the situation as an emergency in which “we are under attack.” He has gotten rapid response training and gone to Pilsen to warn residents to know their rights in case of ICE detention, saying it’s “unacceptable” for masked federal agents without any identification to “snatch” people off the street.
In North Chicago, where DHS and ICE have a temporary office at Great Lakes Naval Station, Mayor Leon Rockingham Jr. joined a news conference with Sens. Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth, who spoke out against ICE.
“If people have broken the law, they should be detained and brought to justice,” Rockingham later told the Tribune. “But we have a 40% Latino community, and the majority of them are hardworking, they have homes, they pay property taxes, and they’re living to raise a family. They shouldn’t have to live in fear. That’s not right.”
From left, U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth, U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, U.S. Rep. Brad Schneider and North Chicago Mayor Leon Rockingham Jr. hold a news conference in North Chicago on Sept. 5, 2025, to discuss President Donald Trump’s plan to use Naval Station Great Lakes as a hub for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
Both Rockingham and Waukegan Mayor Sam Cunningham emphasized that their police departments won’t cooperate with ICE on immigration enforcement, a policy which is set by state law.
In west suburban Broadview, protesters have repeatedly marched and prayed outside an ICE facility there that Mayor Katrina Thompson said would be used as a primary processing center for detainees for about 45 days.
Thompson didn’t criticize the operation, but issued a statement that the village police would work with state and Cook County law enforcement to maintain safety and order as ICE operations unfold.
“Additionally, because Broadview respects the rule of law, we will defend the constitutionally protected right to peaceful protest and will accept no interference with that right,” Thompson said. “Simultaneously, we will reject any illegal behavior that puts Broadview police officers’ safety or the safety of local businesses and residents at risk.”
While the suburbs are home to a sizable immigrant population, the municipalities have not always been welcoming.
When Texas sent busloads of immigrants to the region in 2023 and 2024, most affected suburbs immediately sent the arrivals to Chicago, which officials said was better equipped to handle them as a sanctuary city. Several suburbs, citing a lack of resources for immigrants, passed ordinances restricting the buses or preventing migrants from being housed in their communities.
Earlier this month, a group of 50 people — some holding signs with messages like “stop illegal voting” — gathered in southwest suburban Orland Park for a tea party bus tour in support of a proposal to require documented proof of citizenship to vote in federal elections.
‘The strategy is working’
While the Trump administration appears to be walking back threats to deploy National Guard troops, Gov. JB Pritzker on Wednesday urged residents to remain vigilant in the face of what he expects will be increased ICE activity.
“They clearly have not gone out full force yet here with seemingly the number of people from ICE that they intended to have on the ground,” Pritzker said. “I haven’t seen all of those folks yet, but I anticipate that we will.”
Looming immigration raids have already caused the cancellation or postponement of Mexican Independence Day events slated for this weekend in Chicago, Waukegan and Wauconda.
It’s unclear how many people have thus far been swept up in the immigration blitz. At least three people were reportedly arrested along Archer Avenue on Chicago’s Southwest Side earlier in the week, while unconfirmed ICE sightings have been reported in Cicero, Elgin, Arlington Heights and Des Plaines.
Evanston’s mayor warned of ICE agents possibly descending on the north suburb, telling local news site Evanston Now that he’d been told a DHS helicopter was spotted flying along the lakefront Monday afternoon.
The mayor, who is running for Congress to succeed U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky, told the Tribune that ICE was in Evanston Wednesday and on Thursday detained someone, but he did not have further details.
Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss stands face to face with federal agents during a protest outside the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on Sept. 12, 2025. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
Biss confirmed that a city worker unknowingly ticketed an unmarked Homeland Security vehicle Wednesday, but the ticket was to be rescinded because the city does not ticket law enforcement vehicles being used for work.
“ICE is deliberately keeping us guessing to not only harm some people but terrify many more,” he said. “It has nothing to do with public safety or even with immigration. It’s about targeting people based on race and ethnicity.”
Homeland Security officials said Wednesday that federal agents “arrested several dangerous criminal illegal aliens in the sanctuary city of Chicago.” The release named about a dozen arrestees.
A previous Tribune analysis of ICE data suggested that many people previously arrested by the agency had no known criminal record.
Immigrant rights advocates saw a surge in hotline call volume this week, according to one of the leading groups — at one point fielding five times as many calls in a single day than they typically received in an entire month prior to Trump’s inauguration.
The Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights family support hotline received 500 calls on Tuesday alone, with the “vast majority” reporting ICE sightings, Lawrence Benito, executive director at ICIRR, told reporters Thursday morning at a news conference in Brighton Park.
Before the start of the Trump administration, the hotline received about 100 calls per month, he said.
The coalition did not have an estimate for the number of people detained this week, but it thinks the total is higher than initial federal reports because it knows of individuals who have been arrested but not included among the names publicly posted by the administration, ICIRR spokesperson Brandon Lee said.
Cavazos, the DuPage County immigration advocate, said volunteer patrols across the city and suburbs have been able to educate the public on their rights and thwart ICE activity.
“A lot of these raids and operations are failing because people are not opening the door, they’re not talking, they’re not signing anything,” he said. “ICE is going away empty-handed. … I think that the strategy is working.”
Outside the Downers Grove hotel that has been the site of repeated protests over possible federal agents staying as guests, Lombard resident Bernadette Young admitted she’s questioned if the protests or rallies she’s attended over the last nine years make a difference. But she remained hopeful the demonstrations help raise awareness.
“It brings attention to the cause and it lets people know that we’re paying attention,” the York Township Democrat said.
A small group protests on Sept. 9, 2025, against federal immigration agents outside a Hampton Inn hotel in Downers Grove where agents are reportedly staying. From left, Emily Ellsworth, of Wheaton, her sister Penny Ellsworth, of Glen Ellyn, and Katie Scott, of Naperville, were among the eight people protesting. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)
Naperville resident Katie Scott agreed.
“It’s important to be out here,” said Scott, one of eight people protesting at the hotel Tuesday afternoon. “We want ICE to know that we’re watching what they’re doing.”
‘What did I come home to?’
Lina Alvarez is not a community activist. She doesn’t think of herself as being affiliated with much.
“I feel like I’m just a mom and someone who loves my community,” she said. “But it’s hard to live under this administration.”
A North Chicago native, she joined the Army National Guard at 17 in search of a way to pay for college.
She became an active-duty Army soldier after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and spent two decades in the military, driving tactical convoys and later, overseeing logistics. She was deployed to South Korea, Iraq and Afghanistan before her retirement in 2023, military records show..
In that time, she said, she had to stay silent through the racial rhetoric of her then-commander in chief and some fellow soldiers.
“We’ve got to build a wall,” she remembered one soldier telling her during Trump’s first term. “And you’re in charge of it.”
Back home in North Chicago looking for ways to give back to her community, she started substitute teaching at the local school district.
“I wanted to decompress,” she joked.
One day this past July, she answered a phone call from her sister who, in a shaky voice, told Alvarez her 14-year-old nephew had been surrounded by four suspected ICE agents in a gas station parking lot near his home. They wore tactical gear, the teen reported to his mom, and questioned if he spoke English, if he was Mexican.
The gas station attendant, who recognized the teen from his frequent patronage, rushed to his aid, Alvarez recalled being told. He yelled at the agents to leave the boy alone, that he was an American citizen. In the commotion, Alvarez said, her nephew was able to slip away and run home.
The news left Alvarez enraged and scared. Some of her relatives, she said, are undocumented immigrants.
“We live in fear,” she said. “And it hurts. … We don’t know if they’ll be here.”
After the incident, Alvarez said the family downloaded a location-sharing app. She prohibited her daughter, 11, from riding her bicycle “unless she’s with, and it sounds horrible, but unless she’s with a group of friends who are not only Spanish.”
Lina Alvarez, a retired U.S. Army sergeant first class, carries Mexican and American flags as she makes her way to protest in front of the main gate at the Naval Station Great Lakes in North Chicago on Sept. 10, 2025. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)Lina Alvarez, a retired U.S. Army sergeant first class, wears her Army boots underneath a traditional Mexican dress as she protests in front of the Naval Station Great Lakes in North Chicago on Sept. 10, 2025. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
Then, last week, her brother called Alvarez with a request. He and his son work as outside contractors at the naval base. And despite both being American citizens, they were scared to go to work with ICE agents amassing there. He asked if Alvarez could shuttle them to their respective shifts, hopeful that the sight of her license plate identifying her as a military veteran would provide safe cover.
She asked herself: “What did I come home to?”
Then she started to form a plan to stage a protest at the naval base on Saturday.
Alvarez contacted local advocacy organizations and asked them to help spread the word. She and her daughter canvassed retail stores, stopping strangers to ask them to join, or to drive by and honk their horns in solidarity.
At the least, she figured, there would be six people protesting: She and her daughter and four other relatives who pledged to attend. Instead, hundreds came. Some estimates put the total at 600; Alvarez said the crowd near her looked the same size as her former military company: 200 people.
The moment filled her with love and pride for her community. And it meant even more to have her daughter there, she said, joking that she “got to look like a cool mom.”
When Alvarez was growing up, she said her stepfather discouraged them from speaking Spanish, preferring instead for the children to focus on their English. He didn’t want them to be thought of as being Mexican, with whatever negative connotation could be thrust upon that label.
“I understand my parents had their reasoning and they survived their circumstances, but I want the opposite for my daughter,” she said. “I want her to be a proud Mexican and an American. And if she has to stand up to people who don’t want her here, I want her to have that strength early on.”
That’s one of the reasons why Alvarez returned to the naval base Wednesday and why she plans to be out there again, as long as she feels it’s helping, even if she’s the only one.
Chicago Tribune’s Stacey Wescott, Olivia Olander, Richard Requena and freelance reporter Alicia Fabbre contributed.