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  • Federal agents surround South Shore apartment building as DHS requests military deployment

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Questions remain after the announcement that the federal government plans to send military personnel to the Chicago area.

    This news comes days after dozens of armed federal agents were seen patrolling streets in downtown Chicago and Tuesday morning, federal agents were seen in the South Shore neighborhood.

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    Governor JB Pritzker and other elected leaders believe the ramped-up immigrant enforcement is meant to intimidate.

    This comes as overnight dozens of federal agents could be seen surrounding an apartment building in the city’s South Shore neighborhood.

    READ MORE | Legal experts weigh in on federal agents making random stops, what to do if it happens to you

    Neighbors said they are still trying to make sense of what unfolded Monday night.

    Many described being woken up by federal agents and neighbors said it’s unclear who agents were looking for.

    “They were throwing flash bombs to the front of the windows, if they couldn’t get into units or apartments that how they got the attention to open the door,” resident Alicia Brooks said. “They came with these things to break down the doors.”

    Residents at the apartment building on 75th Street and South Shore Drive said they are trying to understand what unfolded after dozens of federal agents arrived overnight.

    Video shows armed Border Patrol and FBI agents dressed in military gear in the South Shore neighborhood. Citizen app video showed trucks with federal agents down the street.

    They were snatching people, no answers to any questions people asked,..at all,” Brooks said.

    Video shows some of the windows of the building left shattered.

    SEE ALSO | Border Patrol agents chase after cyclist after he claims he’s ‘not a US citizen’ in downtown Chicago

    The FBI confirmed they were helping U.S. Border Patrol carry out a targeted immigration enforcement operation in the area.

    The FBI said they have supporting these efforts at the direction of U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi.

    RELATED: DHS requests military deployment to Illinois to protect ICE agents, Pritzker says

    One man said he saw two people detained.

    “I saw two people come out in like not necessarily in handcuffs, but what do you call them, in zip ties,” he said.

    Felipe Dominguez came to the apartment building early Tuesday morning to help a Venezuelan woman run errands.

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

    He’s worried that she was might have been swept up during the operation after he says he attempted calling her multiple times, but hasn’t been able to reach her.

    “I tried to call her 5/6 o’clock because I’m supposed to take her to the bank today,” Dominguez said.

    Governor Pritzker denounced the intensified federal law enforcement presence, in a press conference Monday.

    The governor said the Department of Homeland Security is requesting 100 military personnel be sent to Illinois.

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    Cate Cauguiran

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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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    Michelle Gallardo

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  • ICE confirms 4 Chicago-area arrests as Trump administration’s ‘Midway Blitz’ operation gets underway

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Immigrant advocates say they have already received a large volume of calls to their hotline about Immigration and Customs Enforcement encounters in the Chicago area in recent days.

    Some elected leaders worry that this just the start of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in the area.

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

    “It’s obvious that operations have begun in Chicago, and it’s even more obvious they’re going to be targeting our communities here in the Southwest Side again. We’re afraid. Our neighbors are afraid,” said Any Huamani, who is on the Brighton Park Neighborhood Council and is a Southwest Side Rapid Response team member.

    The Department of Homeland Security says their operation “Midway Blitz” in the Chicago area is underway. They say they are targeting violent offenders who are here illegally.

    On social media, ICE posted a picture of one of their SUVs with the Chicago skyline behind it, saying they are here to remove the dangerous public safety threats.

    Late Monday, ICE said agents arrested at least four men from Mexico in the Chicago area on Sunday. They are accused of crimes like DUI, vehicular burglary, armed robbery, domestic battery, assault and sexual assault of a child, ICE said.

    “So far, it’s been successful. We have successfully arrested some criminal aliens over the last few days. We just began our surge. We’re going to be bringing in our our partners, our other DHS partners, DOJ partners, CBP partners coming in. So, they’ll be coming in and participating in this ICE-led operation,” said ICE official Marcos Charles.

    SEE ALSO | Katie Abraham’s father speaks out on DHS’ operation ‘Midway Blitz’ in Chicago area

    ICE said one arrest was made at 47th and Archer and another was made at 49th and Archer. ICE did not provide locations for the other two arrests.

    Video provided to ABC7 shows federal agents wearing badges that say “ICE” handcuffing a man near Archer and Pulaski. Neighbors say that man is a flower vendor.

    “We have confirmed in my ward… detained in my ward… there have been three people. One in 50th and Pulaski; he a was a street vendor selling flowers. The other, a couple of blocks down in Archer, was just standing on the sidewalk. The third one was waiting on the bus on 47th and Archer,” said Ald. Jeylu Gutierrez, who represents the 14th Ward. “This was never about arresting the worst of the worst. It’s been about terrorizing our community.”

    Gutierrez says the wife of the flower vendor has been notified, and the family is figuring out their next steps.

    On Monday morning, the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights says their teams were deployed to 61st and Kildare on Chicago’s Southwest Side after reports of immigration agents in the area.

    LIVE UPDATES | Chicago federal intervention: Tracking surge in immigration enforcement operations

    “What we do know is they attempted arrests, and there has been at least one arrest for today,” said ICIRR Senior Director of Deportation Defense Rey Wences.

    While announcing the immigration blitz on Monday, DHS also listed 11 specific people agents are looking for in Chicago.

    Many of those people were detained in the Cook County Jail for criminal cases, but later released.

    DHS accuses the jail of not cooperating. But in a statement on Monday night, the Cook County Sheriff’s Office says state law prohibits them from releasing any detainees into the custody of federal immigration authorities without a signed arrest warrant from a judge.

    Meanwhile, Evanston is also preparing for possible ICE raids in the coming days. The mayor there was tipped off by the governor’s office and sent out an email blast, letting residents know.

    “We’re also working with community partners. So for example, this morning, the high school sent an email blast as well to all of their families, knowing that some people might get ours and not theirs, some people might get theirs and not ours,” said Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss.

    The Evanston City Council will vote on a resolution calling for the state to address ICE agents wearing masks on Monday night.

    “We believe that it is just fundamentally wrong in a democracy for an agent of the state to use the power of the state without identifying themselves clearly with transparency and accountability,” Biss said.

    Many people in the Chicago area are wondering if this past weekend was the calm before the ICE storm.

    “Operation ‘Midway Blitz’ is not public safety. It’s a declaration of war on Mexicans and Latinos in Chicago,” said state Rep. Aaron Ortiz, who represents the 1st District.

    Immigrant advocates reminded the public to not provoke federal agents and to take video of any encounters from a safe distance.

    Religious leaders rally against immigration crackdown in Chicago: ‘Faith over fear’

    Religious leaders from a diverse group of faith backgrounds stood with one voice on Daley Plaza to decry the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.

    Meanwhile, more than one dozen faith leaders came together on Monday, taking a stand against ICE raids and rallying in support of immigrants in a campaign they are calling Faith Over Fear.

    “ICE cannot survive the fire of a forge,” said Reverend David Black with the First Presbyterian Church of Chicago.

    “But what he’s done is rallying us together. I’ve not seen this in a long time. He’s fighting with all his weapons of his mouth and weapons of the army. We’re fighting for something. It’s our DNA, our faith, our faith is essential of who we are. He’s not ready for this and he’s not more powerful,” said Fr. Michael Pfleger with St. Sabina Church.

    Religious leaders from a diverse group of faith backgrounds stood with one voice on Daley Plaza to decry the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown and the possibility of a National Guard deployment in Chicago, as the White House border czar says the use of National Guard troops to protect and support immigration enforcement operations is “on the table.”

    “This morning, as I dropped my kids off at school. Like so many of us in Chicago did this morning, we took our kids to school, but today felt different,” said Rev Sandra Van-Opstal with Lawndale Christian Community Church.

    “I’ve got to tell you, there’s a lot of fear. I live in the Pilsen/Little Village area, and it’s been quieter these past few days, and so, we suspect that people will be navigating the conditions in our city cautiously,” said Ray Wences with the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights.

    Little Village is all decked out in Mexican colors in advance of this weekend’s Independence Day celebration. Many street vendors are selling flags and other items for those gearing up for the festivities.

    “God stood on the side of the vulnerable and the oppressed,” said Mishkan Chicago founder Rabbi Lizzi Heydemann. “God split the sea for them and said to the world, the way that you treat the least among you, the strangers, the slaves, the servants, the way that you treat them is a test of your society.”

    The faith leaders are preparing to support those families who may be impacted by ICE detentions.

    “As a way to be able to walk with the families after something has happened, we’re going to reactivate a lot of the resource network that we had during the new arrivals mission and be able to partner with churches and other groups to be able to get emergency items out to all of them,” said New Life Centers CEO Matt DeMateo.

    SEE ALSO | ‘We’re not going to war’ with Chicago, Trump says, after sharing ominous meme

    A protest and a march against the operation are set to get underway in the Loop late Tuesday afternoon.

    Trump, meanwhile, continues to focus on Chicago crime as operation “Midway Blitz” ramps up.

    “And I don’t know why Chicago isn’t calling us saying, ‘Please give us help,’ when you have, over just a short period of time, 50 murders and hundreds of people shot, and then, you have a governor that stands up and says how crime is just fine. It’s really crazy,” Trump said.

    In an op-ed piece in the New York Times, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson addressed a possible National Guard deployment to address crime, saying in part, “lowering crime rates here does not require an occupation of our city by armed members of the National Guard, as the White House continues to threaten us with…. Sending in the National Guard is the wrong solution to a real problem.”

    Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker responded to the ICE post about coming after dangerous criminals, saying it is not about fighting crime, and that if it were, his administration would have heard from the Department of Homeland Security to coordinate efforts. The governor says this is about scaring Illinoisans.

    The ICIRR Family Support Network was founded to connect immigrant communities with support. They can be reached at 855-435-7693.

    A spokesperson for Pritzker, issued a statement, saying, “The Governor’s Office has received no formal communication or information from the Trump Administration. Like the public and press, we are learning of their operations through their social media as they attempt to produce a reality television show. As Trump has said himself, this is not about seriously fighting crime or reforming immigration – it’s about Trump’s plan to go to war with America’s third-largest city. If he cared about delivering real solutions for Illinois, then we would have heard from him. Unlike Trump’s reality show, we don’t like keeping people in the dark. Since we have learned of the Trump Administration’s plans to deploy federal agents and active-duty military to Illinois, Gov. Pritzker has shared information with the public and the Governor’s Office has remained in regular contact with leaders and partners at the City of Chicago, Cook County, the Illinois congressional delegation, state legislature, and mayors and representatives from the collar counties.”

    Johnson also issued a statement, saying, “We have received no notice of any enhanced immigration action by the Trump administration. We are concerned about potential militarized immigration enforcement without due process because of ICE’s track record of detaining and deporting American citizens and violating the human rights of hundreds of detainees. ICE sent a 4-year-old boy with stage 4 kidney cancer to Honduras, even though the child was an American citizen. There are more than 500 documented incidents of human rights abuses at detention facilities since Trump took office, including deaths of detainees and alleged cases of sexual abuse of minors by federal immigration agents. Because of these incidents and more, we remain opposed to militarized immigration enforcement that runs afoul of the Constitution in our city. We encourage residents to visit www.Chicago.gov/KYR to stay informed on their rights.”

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    Jasmine Minor

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