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Tag: Kristi Noem

  • Immigration agents have detained dozens of US citizens

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    During a press conference about a Midwestern immigration enforcement operation, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said federal agents have not detained U.S. citizens. 

    Chicago, the center of the effort dubbed Operation Midway Blitz, is the latest target in the Trump administration’s nationwide immigration crackdown. Agents have arrested more than 3,000 people during the operation. Noem said the effort covers the area “that the field office is covering,” and local news outlets reported that the Chicago Immigration and Customs Enforcement field office also includes Indiana, Wisconsin, Missouri, Kentucky and Kansas.

    “There’s no American citizens have been arrested or detained. We focus on those that are here illegally” Noem said during the Oct. 30 press conference in Gary, Indiana. “And anything that you would hear or report that would be different than that is simply not true and false reporting.”

    Noem didn’t say whether she was referring to Operation Midway Blitz specifically or the nationwide immigration crackdown more broadly, and the Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to our questions about her statement. 

    By either measure, Noem’s wrong. News reports and lawsuits show that U.S. citizens have been detained during Operation Midway Blitz, and a ProPublica investigation documented 170 cases of U.S. citizens who have been arrested by immigration agents across the country since Trump started his second term. 

    Homeland Security addressed such reports in an Oct. 1 statement: “We have said it a million times: ICE does NOT arrest or deport U.S. citizens.”

    But DHS has also released several statements and posted on social media explaining why U.S. citizens have been detained or arrested.

    Here are some examples.

    Several U.S. citizens in Chicago say they’ve been arrested by immigration agents

    The detentions and arrests of U.S. citizens during Operation Midway Blitz have included people who DHS said were obstructing law enforcement, and people who were released after showing proof of U.S. citizenship. 

    Journalists in Chicago sued the Trump administration saying federal agents have illegally stopped, detained and “arrested hundreds of people, including many citizens.” 

    The suit names Steve Held, a U.S. citizen who the lawsuit says was arrested and later released without charges.

    Another lawsuit details the detention of U.S. citizen Julio Noriega, who said he was taken into custody by federal immigration agents and held overnight in an ICE processing facility. Immigration officers released Noriega after looking in his wallet and seeing his identification.

    Noriega is among 22 people the American Civil Liberties Union is representing against the Trump administration, alleging unlawful arrests and detentions by ICE. Immigration agents failed to properly verify Noriega’s citizenship and did not document his arrest, the lawsuit says.

    Federal immigration agents also detained Debbie Brockman, a U.S. citizen who works for a Chicago TV station, before releasing her. 

    “Deborah Brockman, a U.S. citizen, threw objects at Border Patrol’s car,” DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin told CNN after video of Brockman’s arrest went viral. Brockman was released without charges and denies wrongdoing, and witnesses have disputed the DHS account.

    ICE has arrested U.S. citizens across the country

    The detention of U.S. citizens hasn’t been restricted to Operation Midway Blitz. 

    In New Mexico, Border Patrol arrested Jose Hermosillo in April and kept him in custody for about 10 days. DHS said Hermosillo answered “yes” when officers asked if he was in the U.S. illegally.

    Agents released Hermosilo after his family produced a birth certificate and Social Security documentation and a federal judge dismissed a criminal case against him. Hermosillo’s parents told CBS News that their son has an intellectual disability and can’t read or write.

    In Florida, Juan Carlos Lopez Gomez, a 20-year-old born in Georgia, was arrested after a traffic stop and briefly held on charges tied to a Florida immigration law. The charges were dismissed after his mother presented his birth certificate, state ID and Social Security card.

    During an immigration raid in Hawthorne, California, ICE agents detained pregnant citizen Cary López Alvarado, releasing her later that day. 

    “Cary Lopez was arrested because she obstructed federal law enforcement by blocking access to a car that had two Guatemalan illegal aliens in it,” McLaughlin told NBC News

    In Alabama, Leonardo Garcia Venegas said he was working at a construction site when masked agents entered the area, according to ProPublica. When his undocumented brother asked to see a warrant, Garcia Venegas started recording on his phone. 

    He kept filming until officers turned on him. In the footage, agents try to take him down as he shouts, “I’m a citizen!” They pulled out his Alabama REAL ID — which is issued only to legal residents — but dismissed it as fake, according to ProPublica

    Garcia Venegas was handcuffed and held for more than an hour before being released. His brother, who is not a U.S. citizen, was later deported. 

    Our ruling

    Noem said “No American citizens have been arrested or detained” during the Trump administration’s immigration crackdowns.

    That’s wrong. 

    Lawsuits, news reports and DHS statements show that numerous U.S. citizens have been detained or arrested by immigration agents in and around Chicago during Operation Midway Blitz. A ProPublica investigation documented 170 cases of federal immigration officers detaining U.S. citizens nationwide under the Trump administration.

    We rate Noem’s statement Pants on Fire! ​

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  • ICE agents involved in Hibbing restaurant drug bust, sheriff says

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    WCCO is working to learn more about a federal immigration enforcement operation on Wednesday afternoon in northern Minnesota.

    St. Louis County Sheriff Gordon Ramsay said agents with Immigrations and Customs Enforcement, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Internal Revenue Service and U.S. Border Patrol joined members of the Lake Superior Violent Offenders Task Force during a drug bust at a Hibbing restaurant off East 18th Street and Third Avenue East just after noon.

    Ramsay said one person was arrested for selling cocaine and illegal firearm possession as part of an ongoing investigation that began last month. The suspect was “also in possession of several fake identification documents,” according to Ramsay.

    But after the arrest, a restaurant employee told Northern News Now ICE agents began detaining anyone without proper documents. It’s unclear how many people were detained.

    “The Sheriff’s Office is aware that federal law enforcement took additional actions during this search warrant,” Ramsay said. “The federal investigation is independent of this case; therefore we have nothing further to add.”

    Last week, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem visited Minneapolis to discuss ICE operations in Minnesota, stating more than 4,300 people who were “committing crimes and here illegally in this county” have been arrested in the state since January. Noem said 3,316 of those arrestees have criminal histories. 

    Noem said ICE agents have been “demonized” in Minnesota, and more agents are headed to the state.

    Earlier this month, an entire four-man roofing crew was arrested by ICE agents in a private backyard in St. Paul, Minnesota. An ICE spokesperson said three of the men had criminal records and were slated to be deported.

    This story will be updated.

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    Stephen Swanson

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  • Federal judge threatens Bondi, Noem with sanctions over Abrego Garcia comments

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    A federal judge in Tennessee is threatening Attorney General Pam Bondi, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem and other Department of Justice and DHS employees with sanctions if they make any prejudicial statements about Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia’s criminal case.

    U.S. District Judge Waverly Crenshaw, who is overseeing the case, wrote in a filing Monday that, “DOJ and DHS employees who fail to comply with the requirement to refrain from making any statement that ‘will have a substantial likelihood of materially prejudicing’ this criminal prosecution may be subject to sanctions.”

    Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran national deported earlier this year before being returned to the U.S., is facing federal charges of human smuggling and conspiracy. Bondi has described him as a full-time smuggler who made more than 100 trips transporting women, children and MS-13 gang-affiliated persons throughout the U.S.

    “The high-profile nature of his immigration case resulted in government officials and those supportive of Abrego regularly commenting to the media. Now that he has been indicted in this District, Abrego asks the Court to freeze extra-judicial comments to ensure his Constitutional right to an impartial jury,” Crenshaw wrote in a memorandum opinion.

    TOP TRUMP OFFICIALS SUBPOENAED IN ABREGO GARCIA HEARING FOR ‘VINDICTIVE’ PROSECUTION

    Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia arrives at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) field office in Baltimore, Maryland, on Monday, Aug. 25, 2025. (Graeme Sloan/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    In that filing, the judge wrote, “Media attention about Abrego started in March 2025 when the United States sent him to El Salvador, months before his indictment in the Middle District of Tennessee.”

    “Government employees have made extrajudicial statements that are troubling, especially where many of them are exaggerated if not simply inaccurate. These statements made allegations regarding Abrego’s ‘character or reputation’ and expressed government officials’ views on Abrego’s ‘guilt or innocence,’” the judge said.

    DOJ SIGNALS IT WOULD RATHER DEPORT ABREGO GARCIA THAN PROSECUTE HIM

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia and his wife, Jennifer, speak to supporters outside of an ICE Field Office in Baltimore, Maryland. (Breanne Deppisch/Fox News Digital)

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia and his wife, Jennifer, speak to supporters outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) office in Baltimore, Maryland.  (Fox News Digital/Breanne Deppisch)

    The judge continued, “For example, the DHS Secretary stated that Abrego is a ‘MS-13 gang member, human trafficker, serial domestic abuser, and child predator’… Similarly, on June 6, 2025, the Attorney General stated that Abrego played ‘a significant role in an alien smuggling ring … [that] this was his full-time job, not a contractor … [that] [h]e was a smuggler of humans and children and women … [and that] [h]e made over 100 trips.’”

    A headshot of Kilmar Abrego Garcia wearing a Chicago Bulls hat

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia is seen wearing a Chicago Bulls hat in this handout image obtained by Reuters on April 9, 2025.  (Abrego Garcia Family/Handout via REUTERS)

    Crenshaw also declared the Trump Cabinet members were in violation of a local court rule limiting remarks from government officials relating to an active criminal case, although he stopped short of issuing a gag order, according to Politico.

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    Fox News Digital has reached out to the Justice Department and Homeland Security for comment.

    Fox News Digital’s Jasmine Baehr contributed to this report. 

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  • Kristi Noem visit, Trump administration policies spark protest at Minnesota State Capitol

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    One week after the historic “No Kings” rally, another protest formed at the Minnesota State Capitol. 

    Demonstrators shared concerns about President Trump’s use of the National Guard, the war in Gaza and U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s visit to Minnesota on Friday.

    “I’m here to stand up for my kids, grandkids, everybody,” one woman told WCCO. “I’m just frightened with what’s happening with this country right now.”

    Demonstrators occupied the intersection of University Avenue and Park Street in St. Paul.

    “We do have an increase of federal officers that will be coming,” said Noem while in Minneapolis on Friday. Saturday’s march happened less than 24 hours later.

    “We have enough ICE in Minnesota. We wait for Ice-out Day every spring, and I would like to see ICE out,” said Sue, from Mounds View, who was marching on the Capitol grounds. “We don’t need ICE here. They’re not doing the job they’re supposed to be doing.”

    The Republican Party of Minnesota said in a statement, “Secretary Noem represents exactly the kind of leadership Minnesotans want — tough on crime, supportive of police, and focused on safety, not slogans. Another disgraceful example of the DFL choosing politics over public safety.”

    A Woodbury mom says, amid the conflict, the golden rule is what she’ll follow.

    “Hate is always an easy thing to appeal to; it’s very easy to make people afraid of those around them, but it never works,” said Jane Masterman.

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    Frankie McLister

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  • Some airports refuse to play Noem video on shutdown impact, saying it’s political

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    FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Airports big and small around the country are refusing to play a video with a message from Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem in which she blames Democrats for the federal government shutdown and its impacts on Transportation Security Administration operations.

    Airports in New York, Atlanta, Chicago, Las Vegas, Charlotte, Phoenix, Seattle and more say the video’s political content goes against their policies or regulations prohibiting political messaging in their facilities.

    Various government agencies, in emails to workers and on websites, have adopted language that blames Democrats for the shutdown. Some experts argue it could be in violation of the 1939 Hatch Act, which restricts certain political activities by federal employees.

    The shutdown has disrupted routine operations at some airports, leading to flight delays. Democrats say any deal to reopen the government has to address their health care demands, and Republicans say they won’t negotiate until they agree to fund the government. Some medical insurance premiums would double if Congress fails to renew the subsidy payments that expire Dec. 31.

    In the video, Noem says the TSA’s “top priority” is to help make travel pleasant and efficient while keeping passengers safe.

    “However, Democrats in Congress refuse to fund the federal government, and because of this, many of our operations are impacted, and most of our TSA employees are working without pay,” she continues.

    The TSA falls under the Department of Homeland Security. Roughly 61,000 of the agency’s 64,130 employees are required to continue working during the shutdown.

    A spokesperson for DHS responded to a request for comment restating some of the message from Noem’s video.

    “It’s unfortunate our workforce has been put in this position due to political gamesmanship. Our hope is that Democrats will soon recognize the importance of opening the government,” spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said.

    DHS said Friday that the video is being rolled out to airports across the country.

    In Columbus, Ohio, the video was not being aired at John Glenn International Airport as of Tuesday. Spokesperson Breann Almos said it is under legal review but did not provide a timeline.

    The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates John F. Kennedy International Airport, LaGuardia Airport and Newark Liberty International Airport, said it would not air the videos, citing rules against “politically partisan messages.”

    Near the border with Canada, travelers won’t see the video at Buffalo Niagara International Airport or Niagara Falls International Airport. The Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority said its “long-standing” policy and regulations prohibit “partisan messaging” in its facilities.

    The Chicago Department of Aviation said advertising and public service announcements must follow guidelines that “prohibit content that endorses or opposes any named political party.” In Florida, Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport said it has a policy that doesn’t allow political messaging to be displayed in its facility. Harry Reid International Airport in Las Vegas said it had to “remain mindful of the Hatch Act’s restrictions.”

    “Per airport regulations, the terminals and surrounding areas are not designated public forums, and the airport’s intent is to avoid the use of the facility for political or religious advocacy,” the airport’s statement said.

    Westchester County Executive Ken Jenkins said the county north of New York City won’t play the video at its local airport. In a statement, he called the video “inappropriate, unacceptable, and inconsistent with the values we expect from our nation’s top public officials,” and said its tone is “unnecessarily alarmist” as it relates to operations at Westchester County Airport.

    “At a time when we should be focused on ensuring stability, collaboration and preparedness, this type of messaging only distracts from the real issues, and undermines public trust,” he said.

    Even in red states, airports weren’t showing the video for various reasons. Salt Lake City International Airport wasn’t playing it because state law prohibits using city-owned property for political purposes, said airport spokesperson Nancy Volmer.

    The airport in Billings, Montana, “politely declined” even though it has screens that could show the video with audio, assistant aviation director Paul Khera said Tuesday.

    “We don’t want to get in the middle of partisan politics,” Khera said. “We like to stay middle of the road, we didn’t want to play that video.” ___

    Yamat reported from Las Vegas. Associated Press writers Mead Gruver in Fort Collins, Colorado; Julie Carr Smyth in Columbus, Ohio; and Claire Rush in Portland contributed to this report.

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  • Trump admin on pace to shatter deportation record by end of first year: ‘Just the beginning’

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    EXCLUSIVE: With over 500,000 illegal aliens deported since President Donald Trump took office in January, the administration is on track to significantly exceed the record number of illegals deported out of the United States.

    Since Trump’s return to the Oval Office on Jan. 20, the administration has deported over 515,000 illegal aliens, according to a high-ranking official at the Department of Homeland Security.

    DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told Fox News Digital the administration is “on pace to shatter historic records” by deporting 600,000 illegals by the end of Trump’s first year back in office. She said that in total, more than two million illegal aliens have left the U.S., including 1.6 million who voluntarily self-deported, as well as the over 515,000 deportations. Another 485,000 illegal aliens have been arrested by DHS since Trump took office.

    McLaughlin said that “this is just the beginning” and that Trump and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem “have jumpstarted an agency that was vilified and barred from doing its job for the last four years.”

    DEM JUDGE IN HOT SEAT AFTER DHS EXPOSES ‘WHOLE NEW LEVEL’ OF ACTIVISM, SHELTERING ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT

    A high-ranking Homeland Security official said the administration is set to “shatter” the record for illegal aliens deported in President Trump’s first year. (White House; Rebecca Blackwell/AP Photo)

    “Illegal aliens are hearing our message to leave now or face the consequence. Migrants are now even turning back before they reach our borders,” said McLaughlin, pointing to what she said has been a 99.99 percent drop in migration through Panama’s Darien Gap, which is a key migration route to the U.S.

    “In the face of a historic number of injunctions from activist judges, ICE, CBP, and the U.S. Coast Guard have made historic progress to carry out President Trump’s promise of arresting and deporting illegal aliens who have invaded our country.”

    Just this weekend, DHS said that it continued its sweep of the “worst of the worst” criminal illegal aliens across the country amidst the ongoing government shutdown. Over the weekend, DHS said it arrested illegals convicted of rape of a child, assault, hit-and-run, kidnapping and other crimes.

    One of those arrested was Erick Xavier Romero, a Dominican national, who the agency said was convicted of rape of a child in Boston. Another illegal, Guatemalan national, German Osvaldo Cortez-Chajon, was arrested this weekend after being convicted of traveling to meet a child for an unlawful sex act in Dale County, Alabama. A third illegal, Mexican national Graciano Lopez-Flores, was arrested following a conviction of indecent liberties with a child in Orange County, North Carolina.

    DHS FLIPS SCRIPT ON MEDIA NARRATIVE WITH NEW DETAILS ABOUT ILLEGAL TEEN ARRESTED BY ICE: ‘SAFETY THREAT’

    Mug shots of illegal aliens arrested by ICE, Oct. 20, 2025

    Left to right, from top: Erick Xavier Romero, German Osvaldo Cortez-Chajon, Graciano Lopez-Flores, Shahed Hassan, Van Pham, Patricia Pimental-Cordero, Ramona Mercado-Vasquez and Karlett Zagal-Salazar. (ICE; DHS)

    Also in North Carolina, ICE arrested Shahed Hassan, an illegal from Bangladesh, who was convicted of simple assault, possession of drug paraphernalia, illegally carrying a concealed gun, driving while impaired, probation violation, felony larceny and domestic violence protection order violation in Wake County.

    Just to the north, ICE arrested Van Pham from Laos, who was convicted of five counts of abduction and burglary in Fairfax County, Virginia.

    In Massachusetts, ICE arrested Patricia Pimental-Cordero, from the Dominican Republic, who was convicted of two counts of hit-and-run in Lawrence, Massachusetts.

    Another illegal, Ramona Mercado-Vasquez from the Caribbean island of Dominica, was arrested by ICE in Bergen County, New Jersey, following a conviction for kidnapping and robbery.

    In Wisconsin, ICE arrested Mexican national Karlett Zagal-Salazar, who was convicted of drug trafficking.

    ICE REVEALS ‘DISTURBING DETAILS’ AFTER AGENCY RESCUED 3-YEAR-OLD ABDUCTED TO MEXICO

    Migrants getting onto a bus

    Shackled migrants board a transport van after getting off a plane at the Valley International Airport, Sunday, Aug. 31, 2025, in Harlingen, Texas. (Michael Gonzalez/AP Photo)

    Commenting on the arrests, McLaughlin told Fox News Digital that “nothing—not even a government shutdown—will slow us down from making America safe again.”

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    She slammed the Democratic Party, saying, “While Democrats in Congress continue to keep the government shutdown, our ICE law enforcement officers aren’t slowing down in arresting the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens.”

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  • FACT FOCUS: Trump paints a grim portrait of Portland. The story on the ground is much less extreme

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    PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — President Donald Trump, members of his administration and conservative influencers painted a bleak portrait of Portland, Oregon, at a roundtable event at the White House Wednesday, alleging that the city has been besieged by violence perpetrated by “antifa thugs” and that it is essentially a war zone.

    “It should be clear to all Americans that we have a very serious left-wing terror threat in our country, radicals associated with the domestic terror group antifa that you’ve heard a lot about lately,” Trump said.

    But the reality on the ground in Portland is far from the extremes described at the White House.

    Here’s a closer look at the facts.

    The protests

    TRUMP: “In Portland, Oregon, antifa thugs have repeatedly attacked our offices and laid siege to federal property in an attempt to violently stop the execution of federal law.”

    THE FACTS: There have been nightly protests outside the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement building in Portland for months, peaking in June when police declared one demonstration a riot. There have also been smaller clashes since then: On Labor Day, some demonstrators brought a prop guillotine — a display the U.S. Department of Homeland Security blasted as “unhinged behavior.”

    The protests at the ICE facility, which is outside downtown, have largely been confined to one city block and have attracted a range of participants. During the day, a handful of immigration and legal advocates mill about and offer copies of “know your rights” flyers. Daytime marches to the building have also included older people and families with young children. At night, other protesters arrive, often using megaphones to shout obscenities at law enforcement.

    While the administration claims protesters are antifa, short for “anti-fascists,” antifa is not a single organization but rather an umbrella term for decentralized far-left-leaning militant groups that confront or resist neo-Nazis and white supremacists at demonstrations.

    The building was closed for three weeks from mid-June to early July because of damage to windows, security cameras, gates and other parts of the facility, federal officials said in court filings submitted in response to a lawsuit brought by Portland and Oregon seeking to block the Trump administration’s deployment of the National Guard. The building’s main entrance and ground-floor windows have been boarded up.

    Protesters have also sought to block vehicles from entering and leaving the facility. Federal officials argue that this has impeded law enforcement operations and forced more personnel and resources to be sent from other parts of the country.

    However, in the weeks leading up to the Trump administration’s move to federalize 200 members of the Oregon National Guard on Sept. 28, most nights drew a couple dozen people, Portland police correspondence submitted to the court shows.

    Protests began growing again after the National Guard was ordered to Portland over the objections of local and state officials.

    Since June, Portland police have arrested at least 45 people, with the majority of those arrests taking place in June. Meanwhile, federal prosecutors have charged at least 31 people with crimes committed at the building, including assaulting federal officers; 22 of those defendants had been charged by early July.

    Is Portland on fire?

    TRUMP: “The amazing thing is, you look at Portland and you see fires all over the place. You see fights, and I mean just violence. It’s just so crazy. And then you talk to the governor and she acts like everything is totally normal, there’s nothing wrong.”

    THE FACTS: Fires outside the building have been seen on a handful of occasions. In June, a man was arrested after he lit a flare and tossed it onto a pile of materials stacked against the vehicle gate, according to federal prosecutors, who said the fire was fully extinguished within minutes.

    More recently, social media videos of the Labor Day protest showed a small fire lit on the prop guillotine. And in early October, following the announcement of the National Guard’s mobilization, videos on social media showed a protester holding an American flag on fire — and conservative influencer Nick Sortor stomping the fire out.

    There have also been some high-profile confrontations between protesters and counterprotesters. In late September, conservative media figure Katie Daviscourt was hit in the face with a flagpole and suffered a laceration, police logs show. In early October, Sortor, who has more than 1 million followers on X, was arrested along with two other protesters following an altercation. Local prosecutors ultimately declined to charge him after finding that one of the protesters had pushed him and that “any physical contact he had with other persons was defensive in nature.”

    While Portland police correspondence submitted to the court notes a few instances of “active” energy and disturbances between protesters and counterprotesters, many entries describe low energy and “no issues” in the weeks leading up to the National Guard’s mobilization.

    A new tongue-in-cheek website has also launched in recent days: isportlandburning.com shows multiple live cameras in the city and near-real-time data from the city’s fire department.

    Shops and sewers

    TRUMP: “I don’t know what could be worse than Portland. You don’t even have sewers anymore. They don’t even put glass up. They put plywood on their windows. But most of the retailers have left.”

    THE FACTS: This is false. Portland does have sewers — its sewer and stormwater system “includes more than 2,500 miles of pipes, nearly 100 pump stations, and two treatment plants,” according to the city’s website. The largest sewer pipe is the East Side Big Pipe, which has an inside diameter of 22 feet, while the smallest are only six inches in diameter.

    Local and state officials have suggested that many of Trump’s claims appear to rely on images from 2020. Portland famously erupted in more than 100 days of large-scale unrest and violent protests after George Floyd’s killing by Minneapolis police that year. Police were unable to keep ahead of splinter groups of black-clad protesters who broke off and roamed the downtown area, at times breaking windows, spraying graffiti and setting small fires.

    But Portland has largely recovered from that time. Under a new mayor and police chief, the city has reduced crime, and the downtown — which has more than 600 retail shops, many with glass storefronts — has seen a decrease in homeless encampments and increased foot traffic. This summer was reportedly the busiest for pedestrian traffic since before the coronavirus pandemic, and a recent report from the Major Cities Chiefs Association found that homicides from January through June decreased by 51% this year compared to the same period in 2024.

    Gov. Tina Kotek said she told Trump during a phone call that “we have to be careful not to respond to outdated media coverage or misinformation that is out there.”

    Accusation of a cover-up

    KRISTI NOEM, Homeland Security Secretary: “I was in Portland yesterday and had the chance to visit with the governor of Oregon, and also the mayor there in town, and they are absolutely covering up the terrorism that is hitting their streets.”

    THE FACTS: Noem did visit Portland on Tuesday and met with Kotek and Mayor Keith Wilson. Both officials disagree with Noem’s narrative.

    Kotek has repeatedly said that “there is no insurrection in Portland,” including in conversations with Trump and Noem, and that the city does not need “military intervention.” She has also continually called for any protests to be peaceful and said that local law enforcement can “meet the moment.” After Trump threatened to send the National Guard to Portland, Wilson said in a statement that the city has protected freedom of expression while “addressing occasional violence and property destruction.”

    Observations on the ground in Portland support Kotek’s statement. While the nightly protests at the ICE facility have been disruptive for nearby residents — a charter school relocated this summer to get away from crowd-control devices — life has continued as normal in the rest of the city. There is no evidence of the protests in other areas of the city, including the downtown area about two miles away.

    Portland residents have taken to social media to push back against the Trump administration’s statements about their city with the hashtag #WarRavagedPortland, posting photos and videos that show protesters in inflatable unicorn and frog costumes, along with people walking their dogs, riding their bikes and shopping at farmers markets.

    ___

    Find AP Fact Checks here: https://apnews.com/APFactCheck.

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  • Multiple airports refuse to play DHS video blaming Democrats for government shutdown

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    Multiple airports across the country are denying a request from the Department of Homeland Security to play a video that blames Democrats for the ongoing government shutdown.

    The shutdown began on Oct. 1 with Democrats and Republicans in a stalemate over how to reopen the government. Democrats have demanded an extension of expiring health insurance tax credits, but Republican leaders have refused to negotiate, saying they want the government to reopen first.

    Transportation Security Administration officers and air traffic controllers are essential federal workers, requiring them to work during a shutdown without immediate pay. But, an uptick of workers calling out sick has led to staffing shortages, resulting in some flight delays and cancellations.

    In the DHS video, Secretary Kristi Noem tells travelers, “Democrats in Congress refuse to fund the federal government and because of this, many of our operations are impacted and most of our TSA employees are working without pay.

    “We will continue to do all that we can to avoid delays that will impact your travel and our hope is that Democrats will soon recognize the importance of opening the government.”

    The video began airing at airports on Thursday, a DHS spokesperson said. But multiple airports say they are not playing it because the partisan message goes against their policies, as well as state or federal regulations.

    “We did not consent to playing the video in its current form, as we believe the Hatch Act clearly prohibits use of public assets for political purposes and messaging,” Molly Prescott, a spokesperson for the Port of Portland, which oversees Portland International Airport, told CBS News. “Additionally, Oregon law states no public employee can promote or oppose any political committee, party, or affiliation. We believe consenting to playing this video on Port assets would violate Oregon law.”

    The Hatch Act, which was passed in 1939, aims in part to ensure federal programs are nonpartisan.

    Similarly, a Port of Seattle spokesperson said the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport will not play the video “due to the political nature of the content.”

    “We continue to urge bipartisan efforts to end the government shutdown and are working to find ways to support federal employees working without pay at SEA during the shutdown,” the spokesperson said.

    The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey also said the video is not playing at its airports, including John F. Kennedy International Airport, LaGuardia Airport and Newark Liberty International Airport.

    “The Port Authority’s longstanding policies prevent airing of politically partisan messages at our facilities, so airports are not airing the video on airport-controlled screens,” spokesperson Cheryl Albiez said.

    Other airports that are not playing the video include Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport in Arizona, Charlotte Douglas International Airport in North Carolina, Buffalo Niagara International Airport and Westchester County Airport in New York, and O’Hare International Airport and Midway International Airport in Chicago. Massachusetts Port Authority, which manages Boston’s airports, said the video is not being played and there are no video screens at its TSA checkpoints.

    “North Carolina municipal law as well as CLT Airport’s policy for digital content do not permit the referenced video,” Charlotte Douglas International said in a statement.

    Westchester County Executive Ken Jenkins called the video “inappropriate, unacceptable, and inconsistent with the values we expect from our nation’s top public officials.”

    “At a time when we should be focused on ensuring stability, collaboration and preparedness, this type of messaging only distracts from the real issues, and undermines public trust. As County Executive, I believe our residents deserve clear, honest and nonpartisan communication — especially when it comes to national security, government shutdown impacts, and public safety,” he said in a statement.

    DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin repeated in a statement what Noem said in the video and added that “security operations remain largely unimpacted at this time.” She did not specifically comment on airports not playing the video.

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  • Texas National Guard troops arrive in Illinois ahead of expected Chicago deployment

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    Texas National Guard troops arrive in Illinois ahead of expected Chicago deployment – CBS News










































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    Members of the Texas National Guard arrived in Illinois on Tuesday and are expected on the streets of Chicago as early as Wednesday at the request of President Trump. CBS News Homeland Security correspondent Nicole Sganga has the latest.

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  • ICE Officers Keep Making Arrests Without Pay As Government Shutdown Continues

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    Illegal border crosser crime doesn’t stop despite a government shutdown. As Democrats in Congress continue to keep the government shut down and federal employees go without pay or are laid off, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers continued to work without pay over the weekend targeting violent offenders.

    They arrested violent men with criminal histories including child sex crimes, rapists, gang members, drug traffickers, thieves and drunk drivers.

    In Chicago, arrests were made after violent attacks against ICE and Border Patrol agents, multiple incidents of ramming and blocking federal agents in their vehicles.

    Arrests in Chicago were part of “Operation Midway Blitz,” which launched Sept. 8. By Oct. 3, more than 1,000 criminal foreign nationals had been arrested.

    “Our brave men and women of law enforcement are being targeted and attacked by violent anarchists who seek to tear down America,” Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said. “I want each and every member of law enforcement to know this: President Trump and I have your backs. We stand with ICE as they continue to protect and defend our homeland.”

    ICE Chicago agents arrested over the weekend a confirmed Tren de Aragua foreign terrorist gang member, Venezuelan national Wilmer Alexander Gonzalez Garaban, whose criminal history includes theft and resisting an officer; Venezuelan national Abrahan Alfonzo Jimenez Rodriguez, whose criminal history includes charges for resisting an officer, vehicle theft, aggravated assault with a weapon, obstructing justice and aggravated assault with a gun; and Guatemalan national Jorge Mario Ramirez-Lopez, with a larceny conviction.

    They also arrested Mexican nationals Ricardo Gervasio-Gervasio, with convictions for cocaine possession, driving under the influence of liquor and dangerous drugs; Pedro Navajas-Contreras, with three driving under the influence convictions; Uriel Alvarez-Meneses, with eight convictions, including multiple driving under the influence and traffic offenses and a prior hit-and-run charge; Luis Arroyo-Telles, with convictions of fraud, licensing violation and cruelty toward a child; Arturo Guzman, with convictions of drug trafficking and selling amphetamines and illegally re-entering the U.S. twice.

    “Our officers continue to risk their lives and work without pay because of the Democrats’ government shutdown,” DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said. “We will not let political games or violence against law enforcement slow us down from making American safe again.” 

    DHS also highlighted the “worst of the worst” criminal foreign nationals arrested nationwide over the weekend – primarily citizens of Brazil, Cambodia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Venezuela and Vietnam.

    Of the hundreds arrested, they include in California Salvadoran national Angel Antonio Vasquez, a confirmed MS-13 gang member, convicted of burglary and rape; Vietnamese national Nan-Su Hoang, convicted of burglary; Mexican national Miguel Gomez-Riios, convicted of force/assault deadly weapon.

    ICE agents also arrested Guatemalan Pedro Castro-Castro, convicted of burglary, shoplifting, rape, and incest with a minor, in Alabama; Cambodian national Kosal Chea, convicted of three counts of sexual assault inflicting bodily injury or victim for a child under age 16, in Montana; and Brazilian Thiago Dos Santos, convicted of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, in Massachusetts

    They also arrested Mexican nationals Angel Avalos-Rodriguez, previously deported five times whose felony convictions include forgery, firearms possession, domestic violence, criminal mischief, and multiple illegal entries in Texas, California and Oregon; Bonifacio Mendez, convicted of dealing child pornography, in Delaware; Nicolas Ortiz-Zenteno, convicted of a sex crime committed against a child, arrested in New York; Sammy Rey-Justiniano, convicted on weapons charges and driving under the influence, in New Jersey; and Omar Garcia-Pineda, convicted of attempted trafficking of opium by possession, in North Carolina

    In Texas, they arrested Mexican nationals Fiacro Huerta-Tobon, convicted of indecency with child contact, in Dallas; Ramon Venzor-Villa, convicted for smuggling of persons, in El Paso; and Honduran nationals Jorge Avilez-Lara, convicted of alien smuggling and Oscar Paz-Velasquez, convicted of unlawful carrying of a weapon, arrested in Del Rio and Bexar County, respectively.

    Those arrested remain in ICE custody pending removal. 

    Syndicated with permission from The Center Square.

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    Bethany Blankley – The Center Square

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  • Kristi Noem torches NFL as ‘weak,’ vows ICE will show up at Super Bowl amid Bad Bunny scandal

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    Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said immigration authorities will enforce the law at Super Bowl 60 at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, before criticizing the NFL, which she said was “so weak.”

    Noem was speaking with Benny Johnson on “The Benny Show” when she was asked about Bad Bunny, the Puerto Rican reggaeton artist slated to perform in the halftime show and the presence of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

    Bad Bunny, a three-time Grammy winner whose real name is Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, said last month he would not perform in the United States during his upcoming tour due to concerns about potential ICE raids at the shows.

    BAD BUNNY’S ICE COMMENTS RESURFACE AS NFL FANS DEBATE SELECTION OF SUPER BOWL LX HALFTIME SHOW PERFORMER

    Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem testifies before the House Appropriations Homeland Security Subcommittee. Noem said immigration authorities will enforce the law at Super Bowl 60 in California.  (Reuters/Kevin Lamarque; Christopher Dilts/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    “I have the responsibility to make sure everybody who goes to the Super Bowl has the opportunity to enjoy it and to leave safely. That’s what America’s about,” Noem told Johnson. “We’ll be all over that place.”

    Noem said those attending big game should be law-abiding Americans “who love this country.”

    Johnson asked Noem about the decision to have Bad Bunny perform, given his views on ICE.

    “They suck, and we’ll win,” Noem said of the NFL. “God will bless us, and we’ll stand and be proud of ourselves at the end of the day. And they won’t be able to sleep at night because they don’t know what they believe.

    “They’re so weak. We’ll fix it.”

    NOEM WARNS OF ‘UNPRECEDENTED’ THREAT LEVEL FOR ICE AGENTS, BLAMES ‘LIES’ FROM DEMOCRATS

    Bad Bunny at the Met Gala

    Bad Bunny attends the 2025 Met Gala Celebrating “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style” at Metropolitan Museum of Art May 5, 2025, in New York City. (Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue)

    Earlier in the week, Trump advisor Corey Lewandowski warned ICE agents would be present at the game.

    “There is nowhere you can provide safe haven to people who are in this country illegally,” Lewandowski said on “The Benny Show.” “Not the Super Bowl and nowhere else. We will find you and apprehend you and put you in a detention facility and deport you. Know that this is a very real situation under this administration, which is contrary to how it used to be.”

    Bad Bunny has frequently criticized ICE raids and ICE agents.

    “But there was the issue of — like, f—ing ICE could be outside [my concert]. And it’s something that we were talking about and very concerned about,” he told i-D last month.

    Bad Bunny at the Knicks game

    Bad Bunny watches Game 3 of the second round of the 2025 NBA Playoffs between the Boston Celtics and the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden May 10, 2025. (Wendell Cruz/Imagn Images)

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    Fox News Digital has reached out to the NFL for comment.

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  • Trump says he’ll send troops to Portland, authorizes ‘full force’

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    President Donald Trump on Saturday authorized sending federal troops to protect “War ravaged Portland.”

    It was the latest in a string of comments from the president about threatening federal intervention and inaccurately characterizing what is happening in the city.

    “At the request of Secretary of Homeland Security, Kristi Noem, I am directing Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, to provide all necessary Troops to protect War ravaged Portland, and any of our ICE Facilities under siege from attack by Antifa, and other domestic terrorists. I am also authorizing Full Force, if necessary. Thank you for your attention to this matter!” Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social.

    Portland Mayor Keith Wilson again blasted Trump’s threats to send troops in a statement Saturday.

    “President Trump has directed ‘all necessary Troops’ to Portland, Oregon. The number of necessary troops is zero, in Portland and any other American city,” Wilson said in the statement. “Our nation has a long memory for acts of oppression, and the president will not find lawlessness or violence here unless he plans to perpetrate it. Imagine if the federal government sent hundreds of engineers, or teachers, or outreach workers to Portland, instead of a short, expensive, and fruitless show of force.”

    Gov. Tina Kotek office did not immediately responded to requests for comment.

    It’s not immediately clear if or when troops would arrive in Portland, or which branch of the military might be involved.

    “We haven’t had an official request at this time,” said Lt. Col. Stephen Bomar, a spokesperson for the Oregon National Guard. “Any request that would come would be coordinated through the governor’s office.”

    Feds in Portland

    “Trump is launching an authoritarian takeover of Portland in the hopes of provoking conflict in my hometown. I urge Oregonians to reject Trump’s attempt to incite violence in what we know is a vibrant and peaceful city. I will do everything in my power to protect the people in our state,” Sen. Ron Wyden told The Oregonian/OregonLive in a statement Saturday morning.

    The president appears to be referring to the ongoing protests outside the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in South Portland. Those protests peaked in June, but have involved no more than several dozen people in recent weeks.

    The White House did not immediately respond to a request for details on Trump’s announcement, such as a timeline for the deployment or what troops would be involved.

    He previously threatened to send the National Guard into Chicago without following through. A deployment in Memphis, Tennessee, is expected to include only about 150 troops, far less than were sent to the District of Columbia for Trump’s crackdown or in Los Angeles in response to immigration protests.

    Portland mayor Keith Wilson and other Oregon leaders gathered Friday to sound the alarm about the apparent increased federal presence at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility south of downtown Portland.

    U.S. Rep. Maxine Dexter said in a statement Saturday that Trump’s decision to send troops to Portland “is an egregious abuse of power and a betrayal of our most basic American values.”

    “We did not ask for federal agents, and we do not want them. Let me be clear: the Portland we love will not be divided by federal forces,” Dexter said. “Do not take the bait. Stay safe, stay peaceful, and stay together.”

    Federal agents have been filmed hitting, shoving and pepper-spraying nonviolent protesters, and more than a dozen demonstrators have reported other alleged uses of excessive force that resulted in massive bruising or injuries. A top Portland Police Bureau official has said in court that federal officers were “instigating and causing some of the ruckus” outside the ICE facility.

    But the protests have been a source of frustration for many neighbors in the otherwise residential neighborhood, as Portland police have declined to enforce the city’s noise ordinance at anti-ICE protests. Protesters regularly blast music for hours and loudly hurl insults at federal police.

    Julie Parrish, a lawyer and former Republican state lawmaker, represented a Portland woman who lives near the ICE facility and sued over the “onslaught of noise” from protesters this summer.

    But Multnomah County Senior Judge Ellen Rosenblum, a former Oregon attorney general, said last month she couldn’t compel officers to intervene.

    Parrish said the president’s decision to send federal forces was the result of poor leadership from the city’s mayor.

    “They’ve let that area be feral for months and then blame the facility and not the people terrorizing the neighbors,” she said, referring to Wilson and the police bureau.

    A protester who said he has been going at least twice a week for the last three months said he was “baffled” by Trump’s announcement.

    “How do you label peaceful protesters terrorists in order to send troops against us?” Milo Black said. “We’re not antifa. antifa’s literally just an ideology. It’s not a group.”

    This is a developing story and will be updated.

    The Associated Press contributed to this story.

    Read the original article on NJ.com. Add NJ.com as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

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  • Trump orders deployment of troops to Portland, ICE facilities

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    (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump on Saturday said he was directing Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to send troops to protect Portland and federal immigration facilities.

    “At the request of Secretary of Homeland Security, Kristi Noem, I am directing Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, to provide all necessary Troops to protect War ravaged Portland, and any of our ICE Facilities under siege from attack by Antifa, and other domestic terrorists,” Trump said in a post on his Truth Social platform.

    (Reporting by David Ljunggren, editing by Caitlin Webber)

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  • Texas Ice facility shooting: Republicans blame ‘radical left’ as Democrats focus on victims and gun control

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    A deadly shooting at a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) field office in Dallas on Wednesday morning, has predictably been met with markedly different reactions from the political right and left.

    While the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) confirmed shortly after the news broke that detainees were the victims of the sniper attack on the facility and no federal agents had been injured, the president and his allies were quick to frame the shooting as an attack on Ice and place blame on the “radical left”.

    DHS previously said that two detainees were killed, but later issued a clarifying statement saying that the shooting killed only one detainee. It adds that two other detainees were shot and are in critical condition.

    Related: Texas Ice facility shooting: what we know so far about deadly attack

    Official statements have notably lacked much focus on the victims having been detainees, and at a press conference on Wednesday morning officials said the identities of the victims would not be released at this time. Meanwhile, figures on the left have centered on the victims’ families, pushed for greater gun control and urged a rejection of anti-immigrant sentiment.

    Donald Trump rushed to politicize the incident, blaming the violence squarely on “Radical Left Terrorists” and the Democratic party. “This violence is the result of the Radical Left Democrats constantly demonizing Law Enforcement, calling for ICE to be demolished, and comparing ICE Officers to “Nazis”, he wrote on his Truth Social platform.

    JD Vance called the shooting an “obsessive attack on law enforcement” that “must stop”. The vice-president claimed it was carried out by “a violent left-wing extremist” who was “politically motivated to go after law enforcement”.

    DHS secretary Kristi Noem also said: “This shooting must serve as a wake-up call to the far-left that their rhetoric about Ice has consequences. Comparing Ice Day-in and day-out to the Nazi Gestapo, the Secret Police, and slave patrols has consequences.”

    The FBI has said that authorities recovered shell casings with “anti-Ice messaging” near the shooter, but officials say the investigation is ongoing and have neither confirmed the motive behind the attack, nor corroborated claims about the shooter’s ideological background.

    The FBI is investigating the incident as an act of targeted violence. The DHS has also said the shooter “fired indiscriminately” at the Ice facility, “including at a van in the sallyport where the victims were shot”. The attacker died from a self-inflicted gun wound.

    Greg Abbott, the Republican Texas governor and staunch Trump ally, went as far as branding the attack an “assassination” and said that “Texas supports Ice”. He wrote on X: “This assassination will NOT slow our arrest, detention, & deportation of illegal immigrants. We will work with ICE & the Dallas Police Dept. to get to the bottom of the assassin’s motive.”

    Texas senator Ted Cruz also invoked the recent killing of rightwing commentator Charlie Kirk as he told reporters that political violence “must stop” and rebuked politicians who have been critical of Ice. “Your political opponents are not Nazis,” he raged at Democrats, who he accused of “demonizing” Ice. “This has very real consequences,” he said. He later acknowledged that the motive of the shooter is not known for a fact after a reporter brought up reports that the victims were detainees.

    The attack comes amid fears that the Trump administration plans to mount a brutal crackdown on leftwing organizations and amid the censorship of critical or nuanced commentary in the aftermath of Kirk’s killing, targeting anyone from visa-holders in the US to late-night talkshow host Jimmy Kimmel.

    As with Kirk’s death, Trump’s allies stand accused of using the Dallas incident to score “political points” against the left as it comes down hard against free speech that is at odds with the administration.

    Marc Veasey, a Democratic representative for Texas who represents the area where the shooting took place, told Notus that political “gamesmanship” was already spiraling out of control before anyone had real answers, and said he was “sickened” by officials’ focus on law enforcement and lack of acknowledgement that the victims were detainees.

    He added that he lacked trust in the FBI, which had become “overly political” under Trump, and said smears against Democrats were not helpful, citing that the GOP also routinely call colleagues on the left “Marxists”. “We have to start condemning this rhetoric from both sides,” Veasey said. “I was hoping that after the assassination of Charlie Kirk that we would have learned lessons and that we realize that this is not about gamesmanship. This is not about one-upsmanship … This is about public safety.”

    Former Arizona congresswoman Gabby Giffords, who now leads gun violence prevention group, said her heart broke for the victims’ families and urged leaders to take action against the “gun crime crisis” gripping the country.

    Representative Summer Lee of Pennsylvania, wrote on X: “Leave it to this administration to use a shooting against immigrant detainees to score political points and further provoke violence. We have to get guns off our streets and reject xenophobic and anti-immigrant sentiment that makes all of us less safe.”

    Fellow Pennsylvania representative Malcolm Kenyatta said: “Kristi Noem couldn’t get to Twitter fast enough to use the Dallas ICE shooting for political points. But local news now says it was detainees who were shot – not ICE agents.”

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  • FBI says anti-ICE messages found after shooting at Dallas detention center

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    One person was killed and several others wounded Wednesday in a shooting at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center in Dallas, Texas, with authorities describing it as a targeted act of violence.

    “While the investigation is ongoing, an initial review of the evidence shows an ideological motive behind this attack,” FBI Director Kash Patel posted on X, sharing an image of a shell casing inscribed with the phrase ‘ANTI-ICE’.

    A suspected sniper died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, officials said.

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    Following the shooting, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem posted on X that ICE officers were facing “unprecedented violence against them.”

    US President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown has seen almost 60,000 people arrested since his term began and sparked mass protests across the country.

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  • A pipeline, property taxes and a prison: Rhoden’s audition continues with a third big swing

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    South Dakota Gov. Larry Rhoden attends the Sept. 9, 2025, grand opening of High Plains Processing in Mitchell. (Joshua Haiar/South Dakota Searchlight)

    Larry Rhoden’s opponents should probably hope he doesn’t get his way Tuesday when he asks the Legislature to approve his $650 million prison construction plan.

    If the legislation passes, it’ll be another big win for the Republican governor in only eight months on the job.

    Whether you agree with Rhoden and his policies or not, he’s proven surprisingly effective at resolving disputes and achieving his goals, and at making himself look like a contender in next year’s election.

    When Gov. Kristi Noem departed in January to join President Donald Trump’s Cabinet and Lt. Gov. Rhoden was elevated to governor, Rhoden was viewed as a seat-warmer. U.S. Rep. Dusty Johnson was expected to easily thwart him in the June 2026 primary.

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    That scenario would echo the history of 1993-1994, when Republican Gov. George Mickelson died in a plane crash and Lt. Gov. Walter Dale Miller took over, only to lose in the primary to the better-known Bill Janklow (who served four years as attorney general, 16 as governor and one in Congress).

    Rhoden is perfectly cast as the new Miller, not only because of the situation both were thrust into and the subordinate role they were expected to play. Miller, who died in 2015, was also a former legislator like Rhoden, was from the same county as Rhoden, was a rancher like Rhoden, and wore a cowboy hat and boots like Rhoden.

    Although Miller’s political career ended with his loss to Janklow, being the next Miller might not be so bad, thanks to a bit of trivia that’s been obscured by Janklow’s outsized place in state history: Miller only lost to Janklow by 8 points in 1994.

    When South Dakota News Watch and the Chiesman Center for Democracy released their poll about the 2026 governor’s race in April, Johnson’s lead over Rhoden was 1 point. Since then, Johnson has continued adding to his intimidating pile of campaign cash, which stood at about $7 million as of the most recent filing deadlines for campaign finance reports. Rhoden hasn’t had to file a new report since becoming governor, and there are questions about his ability to gain traction with donors.

    Yet Rhoden keeps getting things done.

    After taking over in January and applying a reset (his word) to every mess (my word) his predecessor left behind, Rhoden has been wrestling political problems to the ground like rodeo steers. The biggest of those are the three P’s — a pipeline, property taxes and prison construction.

    The controversial Summit Carbon Pipeline proposal was tearing the state Republican Party apart when Rhoden came into office. He signed a ban on eminent domain for carbon pipelines into law and put the issue to bed, at least for a while.

    Rising homeowner property taxes bedeviled legislators for years before Rhoden became governor, but nobody had come up with a workable response. He needed less than two months to propose, shepherd through the legislative process and sign a bill designed to slow the increases.

    Noem left behind a wreck of a prison construction plan, with a site under litigation and a revolt from legislators who didn’t like the price or the location in rural Lincoln County. Rhoden appointed his lieutenant governor, Tony Venhuizen, to lead a task force that came up with a new plan, a lower price and a different location in Sioux Falls for legislators to consider Tuesday.

    Rhoden hasn’t declared himself a candidate to keep his job yet, but he has a campaign website and is traveling the state on an “Open for Opportunity” tour that’s really an extended, state-funded campaign trip.

    Johnson has won nine statewide races including primaries and general elections, and he’s not likely to be outworked in a campaign. There are other announced Republican candidates — Aberdeen businessman Toby Doeden, who was at 4% in the April poll, and state House Speaker Jon Hansen, of Dell Rapids, at 2% — who could make up ground or play the role of spoiler in the primary.

    A Trump endorsement for any of them would probably be a clincher. Failing that, Rhoden’s best hope is completing a successful audition for the job.

    Those are the stakes for Rhoden on Tuesday, when he could clean up another Noem mess and rack up another political and policy win, or suffer a setback of his own making.

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  • Local immigration advocates outraged after video of a U.S. citizen briefly detained during an Elgin raid is posted online by DHS Secretary Noem

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    Local immigration advocates expressed anger and worry after a U.S. citizen was briefly detained — and footage of him handcuffed was posted on social media by a high-ranking member of the Trump administration — during a U.S. Department of Homeland Security raid on an Elgin home Tuesday.

    Ismael Cordová-Clough, an Elgin immigration activist who witnessed the raid, said he was outraged that the operation was recorded and publicized online by the federal government, especially when one of the individuals captured on the footage was an American citizen.

    “I think it’s disgusting, to be quite frank, that they utilized our community for their theatrics,” he said. “That is not putting our safety first. That is putting their show first.”

    Early Tuesday, federal agents forcibly entered a home in the 900 block of Chippewa Drive in Elgin, destroying the front door and shattering a patio door in the process.

    One of the residents in the home was Joe Botello, an U.S. citizen born in Texas, who described being handcuffed, questioned by armed agents and taken inside a U.S. Customs and Border Protection vehicle during the immigration enforcement operation.

    Botello, 37, said he showed his identification to federal agents, told them he had been born in the United States and then was released. Another roommate of his was also handcuffed and questioned but let go shortly afterward, added Botello, who described being “a bit in shock” following the incident.

    A few hours after the raid, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem shared a video on social media of four men — including Botello — handcuffed and being led away from the house.

    “I was on the ground in Chicago today to make clear we are not backing down,” Noem said in the message on X. “Just this morning, DHS took violent offenders off the streets with arrests for assault, DUI and felony stalking. Our work is only beginning.”

    Noem’s message and video post don’t explain that Botello is a U.S. citizen and was later released.

To Cordová-Clough, the video and Noem’s message “puts an overlay of guilt on (those recorded) just associated with their faces.”

“Honestly, if I was a U.S. citizen displayed in that manner by Kristi Noem or any other government official, absolutely I would be suing them,” he said. “If this was about public safety, you would be more mindful of who is (being recorded).”

The Department of Homeland Security said in a statement Wednesday that “no U.S. citizen was arrested, they were briefly held for their and officers’ safety while the operation in the house was under way.”

“This is standard protocol,” the statement added.

DHS officials did not answer Tribune questions about the video of the raid or Noem’s social media post. The misleading video had not been taken down as of Wednesday evening.

Botello, who had chronicled the raid and its aftermath to the Tribune on Tuesday, declined to comment on Noem’s social media post Wednesday or the DHS statement.

Federal immigration officials released information Wednesday on five allegedly undocumented immigrants arrested during the raid on the Elgin home, which was part of “Operation Midway Blitz,” the ramped-up immigration enforcement announced specifically for the Chicago area by Noem last week.

Federal agents conduct an operation in Elgin near the intersection of Chippewa Drive and Martin Drive on Sept. 16, 2025. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
Federal agents conduct an operation in Elgin near the intersection of Chippewa Drive and Martin Drive on Sept. 16, 2025. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)

The surge began Sept. 6 and encompasses the entire state of Illinois, as well as Lake County, Indiana, according to information released by U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood, a Democrat from Naperville. Underwood, who met with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials this week, said the agency reported 250 arrests as of Monday. Individuals who are detained and processed are being transferred to detention centers in Indiana and Wisconsin.

Federal court records revealed that the target of the Elgin operation appeared to be Carlos Gonzalez-Leon, a citizen of Mexico who had been previously removed from the U.S. on three separate occasions. Immigration officials had the Chippewa Drive home where Gonzalez-Leon, Botello and others were staying under surveillance as far back as Sept. 10, nearly a week before the raid, according to a criminal complaint unsealed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Chicago.

A border patrol agent said in an affidavit that he observed Gonzalez-Leon’s green Mercury minivan parked at the address. Two days later, agents tailed him as he got into a different vehicle and drove to a gas station, the complaint said.

The DHS release stated that Gonzalez-Leon was previously convicted of assaulting a family member. That conviction was not mentioned in the criminal complaint, however, and did not appear in a search of local criminal records.

DHS stated the arrests occurred during service of a search warrant for one individual in the home, but did not provide a copy of the warrant or say who the target was. In a news release late Tuesday, the agency identified five men arrested in the incident, all of whom are allegedly in the country illegally.

The others who were detained were Jose Morales-Rodriguez, of Mexico; Juan Eduardo Solarzano-Morales, of Mexico; Victor Manuel Rodriguez-Pantoja, of Mexico; and Ruben Antonio Gonzalez-Querales, of Venezuela, according to the news release.

Morales-Rodriguez has previous convictions that all appeared to be traffic-related, including a 2010 conviction for aggravated DUI and driving without a valid license, records show.

According to DHS, Solarzano-Morales has convictions for domestic violence and stalking. A search of local court records did not turn up any information on those cases.

The other two men arrested had no reported criminal background.

Chicago-area criminal defense attorney Steven Greenberg said authorities have the right to briefly detain and handcuff people when serving warrants if they deem it’s necessary. Noem’s social media post portrayed Botello in an unfair and inaccurate light, he said, but there’s likely little remedy because Noem has significant legal protections.

“It’s just so obvious why it’s irresponsible … to mislabel someone as a criminal when they’re not or an illegal alien when they’re not,” he said. “Federal government officials have immunity for virtually anything they do in the course of their employment for official acts, so he likely has no recourse.”

Ismael Cordova-Clough, left, and Maria Elena Muniz, right, both members of an Elgin volunteer patrol group document federal agents in vehicles departing from a raid along Chippewa Drive on Sept. 16, 2025, in Elgin. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
Ismael Cordová-Clough, left, and Maria Elena Muniz, right, both members of an Elgin volunteer patrol group, document federal agents in vehicles departing from a raid along Chippewa Drive in Elgin on Sept. 16, 2025. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)

To Cordová-Clough, the arrests didn’t justify Noem’s social media post and video, which he believes should trouble every American.

“It also means that we must not believe in our criminal justice system, where you’re innocent until proven guilty,” he said. “They’re putting guilt at the forefront to excuse their behavior. And that’s not the best way to govern.”

Immigration advocate Delani Hernandez, a volunteer who patrols the Elgin area to spot raids or other immigration enforcement activity, called Noem’s video “propaganda” for President Donald Trump’s administration.

She added that Botello and others captured in the video were just “collateral damage.”

“Not all people there were bad people,” she said. “Some people were just there because they lived there.”

Chicago Tribune reporters Jason Meisner and Olivia Olander contributed.

Originally Published:

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Angie Leventis Lourgos

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  • Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem visits Chicago area amid enhanced ICE operations

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    DHS Sec. Kristi Noem visits Chicago area, shares video of Elgin ICE raid



    DHS Sec. Kristi Noem visits Chicago area, shares video of Elgin ICE raid

    01:12

    U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem was in the Chicago area Tuesday morning amid increased immigration enforcement operations in the city, multiple sources told CBS News.

    The Department of Homeland Security launched what it dubbed “Operation Midway Blitz” last week. 

    DHS earlier said the operation aimed to “target the criminal illegal aliens who flocked to Chicago and Illinois,” a situation it blamed on the city and state’s sanctuary laws that prohibit local and state law enforcement from cooperating with ICE agents. 

    The department said its mission would be carried out to honor Katie Abraham, a Chicago woman killed in a drunk driving hit-and-run crash in Urbana, Illinois, about 130 miles south of Chicago, earlier this year. The driver was an undocumented immigrant from Guatemala. 

    Noem left the Chicago area shortly before 10 a.m. Tuesday, not long after posting video to X of immigration arrests made at night. The video Noem posted matched video posted to Facebook of an ICE raid in Elgin, Illinois, which is 42 miles northwest of Chicago. 

    Her tweet referenced the incident in Franklin Park, Illinois, a northwest suburb in which an ICE agent was dragged and an undocumented driver was fatally shot on Friday. The video Noem posted is not video of that Franklin Park incident, which was captured on surveillance video at nearby businesses. 


    This is a developing story. Stay with CBS Chicago for further updates as they are available.

    contributed to this report.

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  • Kristi Noem reacts to Charlie Kirk’s death: ‘Start focusing on each other’

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    Kristi Noem said she believes that the killing of Charlie Kirk could be a turning point for the country.

    Kirk, a 31-year-old conservative political activist, was fatally shot Sept. 10 while speaking at Utah Valley University. The alleged shooter, Tyler Robinson, 22, was taken into custody following a two-day manhunt.

    “It feels like a grief has settled on not just the country, but the entire world. Something has changed,” Noem said in a Sept. 14 interview with Fox News host Maria Bartiromo. “My hope is that we will use this as an opportunity to come together and unify.”

    Noem, the Homeland Security secretary and former South Dakota governor, went on to criticize what she described as “rhetoric we’re seeing out of the left and out of political animals,” saying it’s “ugly and it’s bitter and it’s seeking to seize this opportunity to turn it into evil.”

    “I would just encourage everybody to start focusing on relationships, to start focusing on each other and talk about what Charlie believed in,” she said.

    Related: South Dakota political leaders offer prayers for slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk

    Noem also talked about her personal relationship with Kirk. She said he had the chance to meet her family, including her kids.

    “He was a special man who stood up and was bold enough to go speak to people who disagreed with him,” she said. “We need more of that today. More civil discourse rather than some of the violence that we’ve seen.”

    In a Sept. 14 post on Facebook, Noem wrote about the grief she felt after learning about Kirk’s death.

    “Before, I have felt isolated in my grief, but this grief feels collective – millions of people’s hearts breaking and wishing they could carry some of the burden for Charlie’s family and dearest loved ones,” she wrote.

    Noem also described some of her personal interactions with Kirk.

    “I remember being so impressed by his talents when I first met him,” she wrote. “He had a skill set and knowledge I didn’t have and he became an encourager for me over the years.”

    Noem was in her second term as South Dakota’s governor when she left to become President Donald Trump’s Homeland Security secretary. Kirk was “deeply involved” in the vetting process for top positions in Trump’s administration, ABC News reported.

    This article originally appeared on Sioux Falls Argus Leader: Kristi Noem reacts to Charlie Kirk death, talks personal interactions

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  • Delays in DHS’s self-deportation app leaving some in limbo

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    The federal government’s program for people to voluntarily self-deport has been live since March, though it appears some users are experiencing delays.

    It comes after the federal government released nationwide ads encouraging self-deportation through the CBP Home app. In the advertisement targeted toward undocumented immigrants, U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem says, “You will receive financial assistance, a free flight, and the chance to come back to America legally.”

    While there are big things promised in that process, it seems users are having difficulty. Boston 25 spoke with someone looking to self-deport. They said they went through the CBP Home app, filed an application, and were invited to go downtown for an interview where they provided all their personal information, including their fingerprints. However, after months passed by, they haven’t received an update.

    Melissa Celli, an immigration lawyer with Strehorn Ryan & Hoose said she hasn’t seen much proof of the CBP Home app delivering on its promise.

    “It is a very worrying time, and it’s getting kind of increasingly worrying,” Celli said. “We don’t have regulations. There is nothing in the Code of Federal Regulations. There’s nothing in statute because this is not a legally mandated program.”

    Celli said this process has been taking an awfully long time. Long enough that people are starting to get worried.

    “They have then given up a whole lot of personal information and now their names are out there, their addresses are out there, now their fingerprints are out there and there’s nothing to stop ICE from coming and grabbing them as low hanging fruit other than their word saying they’re not going to do this,” Celli explained.

    It comes at a time when the federal government is ramping up immigration enforcement in Massachusetts. Governor Maura Healey said Monday that the enforcement campaign is negatively impacting hardworking people in Massachusetts.

    “While they said they were after violent criminals, what we’ve seen far too often and in such great numbers here and across the country are construction workers and nannies and healthcare aids and agricultural workers who are being taken out of our communities,” Gov. Healey said.

    Also, with sanctuary cities under the microscope, Boston Mayor Michelle Wu has also been pushing back against the federal government’s efforts.

    Mayor Wu said in a response to a DOJ’s letter on Aug. 19, “Stop attacking our cities to hide your administration’s failures.”

    Boston25 reached out to the Department of Homeland Security to learn more about the self-deportation process and exactly what metrics they’re seeing since the app’s launch.

    DHS responded with the following statement:

    “After successfully ending the invasion of our country and securing our southern border, President Trump established the visionary Project Homecoming in May to create a smooth, efficient process for illegal aliens to return home. By using the CBP Home App, illegal aliens will receive a complimentary one-way plane ticket home, a $1,000 exit bonus, and forgiveness of any fines previously assessed for failure to depart. Tens of thousands of illegal aliens have utilized the CBP Home app, and 1.6 million illegal immigrants have left the United States population since January 20.

    Once illegal aliens submit their intent to depart through the CBP Home Mobile App and pass vetting, they will be deprioritized by ICE for enforcement action, detention and removal before their scheduled departure.”

    DHS spokesperson

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