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  • After 8-year legal battle, Dracut doctor pleads guilty in landmark opioid case

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    WOBURN — A case that stretched more than eight years reached its conclusion this week, as retired Dracut physician, Dr. Richard Miron, pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter and other charges tied to the illegal prescribing of opioids that led to a Lowell patient’s death.

    Attorney General Andrea Campbell’s office said Miron, 83, became the first doctor in Massachusetts to be convicted on involuntary manslaughter for prescribing opioids — a conviction that stemmed from the 2016 death of 50-year-old Michelle Craib. He also pleaded guilty to defrauding MassHealth and illegally prescribing medication to patients for no legitimate medical purpose.

    Miron was ultimately sentenced in Middlesex Superior Court in Woburn on Monday to what amounts to five years of probation, allowing him to avoid prison time.

    Miron’s attorney, Stephen Weymouth, said on Wednesday that he was prepared and confident to go to trial in a case that has faced a series of delays over the years, but after a conversation with his client earlier this month, the main concern became the possibility of serving time behind bars.

    “From the very beginning he said, ‘I didn’t do anything wrong, and I want to go to trial,’” Weymouth said about Miron. “But then he said he did not want to go to jail.”

    Weymouth pointed out that Miron was facing 47 charges, and any one of them could have resulted in a jail sentence. He said that prosecutors had previously sought four to five years in a plea deal, and the involuntary manslaughter charge carried a maximum of 20 years.

    “Going to trial would have been a mistake because all it would have taken was one guilty hook and he would have gotten a pretty lengthy sentence, and I just couldn’t do that. I just couldn’t take any chances,” Weymouth said. “If he had gone to trial and lost, who knows what would have happened.”

    Miron was indicted by a Middlesex County grand jury in December 2018 following an investigation that began in September 2017 by the AG’s Office, then headed by now-Gov. Maura Healey. Aside from involuntary manslaughter, he was charged with 23 counts of illegally prescribing controlled substances and 23 counts of filing false Medicaid claims.

    From September 2015 to February 2016, the AG’s Office said Miron, a solo practitioner of internal medicine, was the largest provider of high-dose, short-acting oxycodone prescriptions among all MassHealth care providers statewide.

    The Chief Medical Examiner’s Office determined Craib’s death was caused by acute intoxication from the combined effects of fentanyl, morphine, codeine, and butalbital — all prescribed by Miron. The AG’s Office said Miron was aware that Craib had previously overdosed on opioids he had prescribed, yet he continued to issue large doses to her on multiple occasions leading up to her death.

    Prosecutors also said Miron illegally prescribed opioids to several other at-risk patients for no legitimate medical purpose. The illegal prescriptions Miron issued led pharmacies to unknowingly submit false bills to MassHealth for medication.

    MassHealth terminated Miron from its program in September 2017, and he stopped practicing medicine in November 2018, following an agreement with the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Medicine.

    In 2023, Miron’s daughter, Linda Miron, penned a 17-page letter to the AG’s Office urging that the case be dropped. She argued that prosecuting her father — who had already relinquished his medical license and lived under pretrial probation since 2018 — was not in the interest of justice.

    “To bring this flawed case to trial does not seem to me to be the best use of the Commonwealth’s resources, and I urge you to drop your prosecution of this case in the interest of justice,” Linda Miron said in the letter. “More broadly, I fear that prosecuting someone who was willing to take on disenfranchised, medically and psychologically complicated patients here in the Commonwealth, when some other physicians refused to take on MassHealth patients, will further discourage other physicians from treating these patients who deserve compassionate care.”

    The case marched on until Monday, when Miron appeared in Middlesex Superior Court before Judge Cathleen Campbell, where it was finally resolved.

    According to the AG’s Office, Miron was sentenced to two and a half years in a house of correction on illegal prescribing, suspended for five years — meaning he will serve the term as probation rather than prison time, unless he violates probation, in which case the sentence could be imposed. He was sentenced to five years of probation on the involuntary manslaughter charge. For Medicaid fraud, Miron was sentenced to six months in a house of correction, suspended for five years.

    As part of his probation, Miron was ordered to pay full restitution to MassHealth and barred from practicing medicine or seeking reinstatement of his license.

    According to Weymouth, Miron was glad to put the case behind him and most of all to avoid prison time. He noted that Miron had already given up his medical career and had no intention of practicing again.

    “I’m glad it’s over,” Weymouth added. “I know he’s glad it’s over.”

    In a press release announcing the case’s conclusion on Tuesday, the AG’s Office said the case reflects their “commitment to addressing the root causes of the opioid crisis and holding companies and individuals accountable for their role in contributing to the nationwide epidemic.”

    Earlier this year, the release states, Campbell helped negotiate a $7.4 billion settlement in principle with Purdue Pharma and the Sackler family, which is expected to bring up to $105 million to Massachusetts. To date, the office said they have secured more than $1 billion in opioid-related recoveries, with more than $390 million already received. Those funds are being directed to the state’s Opioid Recovery and Remediation Fund and distributed to cities and towns to support prevention, harm reduction, treatment and recovery efforts.

    The AG’s Office added in the release that valuable assistance with the investigation into Miron’s case was provided by the Lowell Police Department, the State Police, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and MassHealth.

    Follow Aaron Curtis on X @aselahcurtis, or on Bluesky @aaronscurtis.bsky.social.

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    Aaron Curtis

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  • Arrest log

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    The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.

    BEDFORD

    • Paul Gioiosa, 48, Bedford; warrants.

    BILLERICA

    • Jesse Rawson, 29, 12 Belva Road, Billerica; possession of Class B drug.

    • Flith Derival, 35, 158 Concord Road, Billerica; unlicensed operation of motor vehicle.

    • Abudala Luhembo, 36, 2 Hampshire Road, Reading; assault and battery, possession of Class B drug.

    • Megan Whittier, 53, 10 Roosevelt Road, Billerica; no inspection/sticker, operation of motor vehicle with suspended/revoked license.

    LOWELL

    • Priscilla Silva De Carvalho, 34, 11 Summit Ave., Third Floor, Lawrence; warrant (failure to appear for unlicensed operation of motor vehicle).

    • Melissa Rodriguez, 33, 48 Dublin St., Lowell; operating motor vehicle after license suspension.

    • Chivonne Williams, 44, 27 Jackson St., Apt. 312, Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for possession of Class C drug), possession of Class B drug.

    • Philip Haley, 66, 481 Bridge St., Lowell; possession of Class B drug.

    • Patricia Boisvert, 27, 18 Auburn St., Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for receiving stolen motor vehicle).

    • Dennis Foster, 46, homeless; warrant (shoplifting by asportation), possession of Class B drug.

    • Mounthy Vongxay, 35, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for assault and battery, breaking and entering building at nighttime, and larceny under $1,200).

    • Danny Santos, 36, 111 Fort Hill Ave., Lowell; warrants (failure to appear for two counts trespassing, and unlicensed operation of motor vehicle).

    • Rafael Deleon, 58, 58 Oak St., Lowell; warrant (malicious damage to motor vehicle).

    • Matthew Simard, 34, 701 Methuen St., Dracut; possession of Class B drug with intent to distribute, manufacturing/dispensing Class B drug.

    NASHUA, N.H.

    • Matthew Paul Story Jr., 20, 171 Hartt Ave., Manchester, N.H.; criminal trespass.

    • Christiana Braccio, 23, 16 Country Club Drive, Apt. 1, Manchester, N.H.; two counts of theft by unauthorized taking ($0-$1,000).

    • Thomas Abreu, 33, 69B Chandler St., Nashua; simple assault.

    • Calvin Degreenia, 39, 10 Courtland St., Nashua; warrant.

    • Gidean Andrade, 23, 871 Middlesex St., Apt. 7, Lowell; operation of motor vehicle without valid license.

    • Bernard Leard, 83, 12 Tumblebrook Lane, Nashua; failure to procure dog license.

    • Nicole Long, 35, 14 Cross St., Apt. 2, Nashua; operation of motor vehicle without valid license, driving motor vehicle without giving proof, driving motor vehicle after license revocation/suspension.

    • Marques Stanford, 37, no fixed address; operation of motor vehicle without valid license, driving motor vehicle after license revocation/suspension.

    • Sarah Felch, 43, no fixed address; warrant.

    • Eliezer Rosario-Medina, 26, no fixed address; criminal trespass.

    • David Perez, 37, no fixed address; nonappearance in court.

    • Daniel Frost, 30, 3 Dolan St., Apt. 2, Nashua; criminal mischief.

    • Jennifer Elaine Bowen, 52, 199 Manchester St., Manchester, N.H.; nonappearances in court.

    • Nicholas Deveau, 28, 11 Wildwood Road, Tewksbury; disorderly conduct.

    WESTFORD

    • Ismael Paulino Mendoza, 23, Groton Road, Chelmsford; operation of motor vehicle with suspended license, marked lanes violation.

    WILMINGTON

    • Morgan Lynch, 31, 4 Lockwood Road, Wilmington; unlicensed operation of motor vehicle.

    • Magno Moreira, 38, 345 Sutton St., North Andover; operation of motor vehicle with suspended license, speeding.

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    Staff Report

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  • Bay Area residents win more than half a million dollars in Powerball

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    Two Bay Area residents won more than half a million dollars each playing the Powerball Lottery on Saturday night, officials said.

    The two winning tickets, which selected five correct numbers, were each worth $609,497, according to the California Lottery.

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    Caelyn Pender

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  • Afghan man living in Lowell speaks about ICE detention

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    LOWELL — When Ihsanullah Garay was delivering food on Sept. 14, he found himself struggling to find the Starbucks he was being sent to pick up from in Methuen.

    He asked the first people he saw for directions, a man and a woman sitting in a car. The man pointed Garay in the right direction, he told The Sun Monday morning, and Garay thanked him and started walking away. Then, the two people started asking Garay questions about his nationality, and where he was born. Garay is from Afghanistan, arriving in the U.S. in the spring of 2021 on a student visa to get a doctorate in finance.

    “I said, ‘Brother, this is not related to you. You helped me, I said thank you, that’s it,’” Garay said.

    Garay then tried to walk away, but he said the man shouted at him, and continued questioning Garay’s nationality, while Garay maintained that he was in the country legally.

    After more back and forth, Garay said the man finally identified himself as a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent, and ask him to produce identification, which Garay had in his car, along with an ID badge from a former job.

    Garay was soon placed in handcuffs, beginning a more than monthlong ordeal in ICE custody that brought him to three different ICE facilities in three states before he was released on bond last month. After he arrived back in Lowell, where he has been living with his cousin, Abdul Ahad Storay, Garay took some time to settle and work to get back on track with his ongoing treatment for brain cancer.

    On Monday, he sat down with The Sun in Storay’s computer store in Downtown Lowell to give his firsthand account of his experience.

    Garay said that when he was placed in handcuffs, he tried to explain his situation to the ICE agents, to no avail.

    “I said, ‘What are you doing? I have brain cancer. I have a work permit, I have Social Security, I have everything. What are you doing?’ He said nothing,” said Garay.

    Garay’s first stop was the ICE field office in Burlington, where many of those detained by the agency in Greater Lowell are being brought. Since the spring, allegations of extremely poor conditions inside the building have been made by detainees and their attorneys, as it is designed primarily as an office building, not a long-term detention facility.

    Garay could not speak much to the conditions inside, as he said he was only at the facility for roughly an hour before he was transferred to another facility in Rhode Island. In that short time, though, Garay said he was asked by ICE officials for proof that he has brain cancer, which he was able to show them through his MyChart app when they brought him his phone, which they had confiscated along with his ID and other belongings. When the ICE officials saw the medical documents, Garay said they seemed shocked he was telling the truth.

    While still in Burlington, Garay said he suffered a couple medical episodes which lasted about two minutes, though he was unsure whether these were seizures or something else stemming from his brain cancer.

    Garay spent about 28 days in the facility in Rhode Island, and at one point he said similar medical episodes would occur on a near nightly basis, bringing him to the point of needing a wheelchair to move around, but the medical care available at the facility was not sufficient, he said. After he was moved to Georgia, where he was given the Oct. 21 court hearing that resulted in his release, Garay said he experienced more of the same.

    “They have no neurosurgeon, they have no oncologist, they have no neurologist, nothing,” said Garay.

    Through all of this, Garay was missing key appointments in the course of his cancer treatment. He was supposed to start a new medication at a Sept. 24 appointment at Boston Medical Center, but he missed it while in custody and was not able to start the medication on time. Even after reaching out to his doctors, Garay said the medicine did not arrive before he was moved to Georgia. In the meantime, he said he was prescribed Keppra, an anti-seizure medication he was supposed to take in the morning and evening, but it was only ever brought to him for the night dose while he was in Rhode Island.

    In Georgia, Garay said he saw a slight improvement to that end, as they gave him both daily doses of the anti-seizure medication, though at that facility he still lacked the medical care he needed.

    After he was released on bond, the police brought Garay to the airport, where he was denied boarding because his identification had been taken by ICE in Massachusetts, despite reassurance from the police and ICE he would be allowed on the plane.

    After Storay called local police to help his cousin, Garay was brought to Jacksonville, Florida, where he got on a bus for the multi-day journey back north to Lowell.

    Now home, Garay is doing much better. He is able to walk around without the need for a wheelchair, and his cancer treatment is moving back on track after he met with his doctors at the end of October. His next appointment is an MRI at Boston Medical Center later this month, and he has multiple other appointments scheduled with his doctors before the end of the year.

    Still, his ICE ordeal continues with a court hearing on Dec. 11 in Georgia, but Garay and his attorneys are working on getting it moved up to Massachusetts. He hopes to remain in the U.S., not only because of his ongoing medical treatment, but also because both he and Storay, himself a U.S. citizen, would not be safe returning to Afghanistan, which fell back to Taliban control in 2021, months after Garay left the country.

    As his home country fell, and the U.S. completed the withdrawal of its military forces, Garay applied for asylum that August on top of his student visa, fearing what would happen to him if he were to return.

    “If the U.S. will give me nationality, I will accept it. If not, I will go somewhere else,” said Garay. “When the Taliban suddenly came, I had no choice but to apply for asylum.”

    Garay’s asylum case has been pending ever since. So when Temporary Protected Status was offered to Afghan citizens living in the U.S. the following spring after the Taliban retook control, Garay did not apply for TPS due to his open asylum case. TPS for Afghanistan was terminated in July this year.

    “They (ICE) told me my visa expired in September 2021. I asked them how this was possible when I came in April,” said Garay.

    Even without the Taliban, Garay said he could not return because Afghanistan lacks the medical infrastructure he needs to treat his cancer.

    Now that he is back in Lowell, Garay is looking for other work that is not food delivery.

    In addition to delivering food, Garay said he had been working at Lahey Hospital as a receptionist, but he left that job just a couple weeks before his arrest after they could not give him enough hours.

    Friends of Garay also left Afghanistan after he did, but some went to Canada, he said, and once there they asked him to join them.

    “I said no … I don’t want to be in some country illegally, so that is why I am here,” said Garay.

    Garay credited Storay for getting him back to Lowell.

    “He knows my situation. Nobody can even imagine my situation … He also knows what he has been spending on me. Only he knows,” said Garay.

    An ICE spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment Friday. When previously asked about Garay’s case in October, ICE Boston spokesperson James Covington said in a statement Garay is “an illegal alien from Afghanistan,” and claimed he lawfully entered the U.S. in April 2021 with permission to remain until Sept. 7, 2021.

    “However, he violated the terms of his lawful admission when he refused to leave the country. Garay will remain in ICE custody pending the outcome of his removal proceedings,” Covington said in the Oct. 11 statement.

    In addition to Garay’s current work permit, Storay was also able to show The Sun Garay’s original student visa, which was issued in April 2021 and expired one year later, seven months after Covington claimed it did.

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    Peter Currier

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  • Lowell opens Northeast Junior Football League playoffs with a shutout

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    Lowell’s defense stood tall during a shutout victory over Manchester in the first round of Northeast Junior Football League playoffs.

    Lowell’s winning effort was sparked by running back Kevin Ortin, who rushed for three touchdowns and he also played strong defense. Owen White threw for a touchdown as Ryan Galvin, Jake McNeil and JC Sotirakos were consistent targets in the passing game.

    The offensive linemen were the true stars as White had all the time he needed and they opened up large holes for the running attack. Fueling the offensive line in the trenches were Jeymeson Guerrido, Logan Thurston, Caydin Hamilton, Michael Riel and Isaac Ortiz.

    The defense blanked a usually potent Manchester offense led by Reyden Chim, Jeremy De La Cruz and Stanley Ribeiro.

    Lowell moves on to the semifinals to play Hudson.

    Lowell’s Ryan Galvin, left, sprints with the ball for a long gain during a recent win against Manchester. (Courtesy photo)
    Lowell quarterback Owen White lofts a pass to an open receiver. (Courtesy photo)
    Lowell quarterback Owen White lofts a pass to an open receiver. (Courtesy photo)

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  • Indiana officials, experts share mixed feelings about end to government shutdown

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    The end of the longest government shutdown in U.S. history exposed partisan divides in Washington and left Democrats hoping, again, that Republicans will keep their word of addressing expiring healthcare subsidies in the coming months, political science experts said.

    President Donald Trump signed a government funding bill Wednesday night, ending a record 43-day shutdown that caused financial stress for federal workers who went without paychecks, stranded scores of travelers at airports, and generated long lines at some food banks as Trump officials cut off SNAP benefits.

    Noe Luna, a student in the East Chicago Central job skills program, packs juice into boxes to be distributed by the Food Bank of Northwest Indiana on Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025. (Kyle Telechan/for the Post-Tribune)

    The House passed the measure on a mostly party-line vote of 222-209 on Wednesday afternoon, while the Senate had already passed the measure on Monday.

    U.S. Rep. Frank Mrvan, D-Highland, said in a statement he voted against the continuing resolution because while the bill will ensure that emergency food assistance will be funded, “it is wrong to do so at the expense of affordable health care benefits.”

    “I have spent my career as a public official working on behalf of individuals and families facing economic hardship, often through no fault of their own, who have been in need of access to food, housing, and health care. Too many times have I witnessed the difficult choice that families often make between choosing between a meal or health care services,” Mrvan said.

    “I remain deeply disappointed that the Republican Majority refused to extend the health care tax credits as part of this negotiation that so many small business owners and working families rely on, even as they allow the Trump Administration to direct $40 billion in federal funds to support Argentina’s economy,” Mrvan said.

    Mrvan said he also didn’t support the continuing resolution because it doesn’t fund the Toxic Exposures Fund, which supports veterans.

    “As we move forward, the fight for access to affordable health care continues, and I remain committed to working with my colleagues to find a bipartisan agreement that restores the health care tax credits as soon as possible,” Mrvan said.

    Senator Todd Young said in a statement that he voted in favor of the continuing resolution because it will reopen the government through Jan. 30, 2026 and include full-year appropriations for military construction, veterans affairs, agriculture and the legislative branch.

    Young noted that he voted 15 times to reopen the government, but Democrats voted 14 times to against the effort.

    “I am frustrated that the shutdown dragged on as long as it did and negatively affected our country in so many ways. I am grateful for all the dedicated federal workers, such as our service members and air traffic controllers, who continued to work throughout the shutdown,” Young said.

    Senator Jim Banks blamed the Democrats for “holding American hostage” by continuing the shutdown.

    The shutdown magnified partisan divisions in Washington as Trump took unprecedented unilateral actions — including canceling projects and trying to fire federal workers — to pressure Democrats into relenting on their demands.

    Democrats wanted to extend an enhanced tax credit expiring at the end of the year that lowers the cost of health coverage obtained through Affordable Care Act marketplaces. They refused to go along with a short-term spending bill that did not include that priority. But Republicans said that was a separate fight to be held at another time.

    The compromise funds three annual spending bills and extends the rest of government funding through Jan. 30. Republicans promised to hold a vote by mid-December to extend the health care subsidies, but there is no guarantee of success.

    The bill includes a reversal of the Trump administration policy of firing of federal workers since the shutdown began. It also protects federal workers against further layoffs through January and guarantees they are paid once the shutdown is over.

    A bill for the Agriculture Department, which funds the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, means people who rely on key food assistance programs will see those benefits funded without threat of interruption through the rest of the budget year.

    Food Bank of Northwest Indiana CEO Victor Garcia said the organization is pleased the government shutdown has ended, but it’s unclear how soon SNAP benefits will be distributed.

    “There is still some uncertainty in how and when SNAP benefits will be distributed to our neighbors in Northwest Indiana. The Food Bank will continue to provide additional nutrition support as we navigate the fallout of the shutdown together,” Garcia said.

    It’s unclear whether the parties will find any common ground on health care before a potential December vote in the Senate. House Speaker Mike Johnson has said he will not commit to bringing it up in his chamber. Without the enhanced tax credit, premiums on average will more than double for millions of Americans.

    Some Republicans have said they are open to extending the COVID-19 pandemic-era tax credits, but they also want new limits on who can receive the subsidies.

    Aaron Dusso, associate professor of political science at Indiana University Indianapolis, said he was surprised the shutdown ended when it did, but he thought it was likely because of the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday.

    Eight Democratic Senators voted to end the shutdown with the promise from Republican Senate leadership of holding a vote on healthcare subsidies in December, Dusso said. But, earlier this year, a shutdown was avoided when Republicans told Democrats that they would discuss healthcare subsidies outside of the Trump administration’s tax bill, and that never happened, he said.

    “The classic cartoon is Lucy holding that football and Charlie Brown believing he’s going to finally be able to kick that football. We’ll see if that actually happens,” Dusso said.

    With the government reopening, funding for programs like SNAP should move fairly quickly because the apparatus for funding is already there, Dusso said. But departments that rely on people, like air traffic controllers, could take a little longer to start back up as people return to work, he said.

    It’s likely that the government shutdown won’t be top of mind for voters in 2026 as many more things will occur at the federal level between now and then, Dusso said.

    “I don’t think there’s going to be much, as far as outside of Washington, much memory of it. Inside Washington, some of the memories are going to come down to internal to the Democratic Party. There will certainly be hurt feelings and distrust,” Dusso said.

    The Associated Press contributed. 

    akukulka@post-trib.com

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    Alexandra Kukulka

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  • Activists rally outside Morton Grove board meeting, calling for ICE-free rules in town. Mayor Witko says they would only be ‘symbolic.’

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    A crowd estimated in the dozens gathered outside Village Hall in Morton Grove Wednesday – ahead of the Village Board meeting – for a rally where demonstrators hoped to urge town leaders to adopt anti-ICE resolutions.

    Demonstrators chanted and hoisted signs during the nearly hourlong rally, pushing for legislation that activists say would help protect residents – and others in the village – against federal immigration enforcement agents, including from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Border Patrol.

    Morton Grove Village President Janine Witko said at the Nov. 12, 2025 Village Board meeting that the town adopting anti-federal immigration agent rules would not change much in the north suburb. (Brian O’Mahoney/for Pioneer Press)

    Organizers say such “ICE-free zone” resolutions, as they are commonly known, call for explicitly prohibiting federal immigration agents from using public land and facilities as part of their immigration enforcement efforts in municipalities, including Morton Grove.

    “I feel your frustration. I feel your anger. And I understand that protesting against inhumane immigration policies can feel futile. Sometimes, it can seem like our objections to this invasion are just a drop in the bucket,” Bushra Amiwala, a member of the Skokie School District 73.5 Board of Education and candidate for Congress, said to the rally goers. “But they’re not.”

    Amiwala took part in the Morton Grove rally after participating in a similar effort earlier this month in her hometown of Skokie, where that Village Board was also urged to adopt an anti-ICE ordinance. She is among the candidates running to replace retiring U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky in the 7th Congressional District.

    “When you take seemingly small actions like giving out ICE whistles, sharing (Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights) hotline resources and telling your local authorities to do more, it matters. It does make a difference,” she said during the Morton Grove rally.

    Representatives from Indivisible Skokie-Morton Grove-Lincolnwood said the activist organization coordinated the demonstration. After the showing before the start of the meeting, rally participants moved inside Village Hall for the board meeting where some spoke during the public comment portion of the meeting.

    Bushra Amiwala speaks during Wednesday's demonstration outside the Morton Grove Village Hall, before Wednesday evening's board meeting, Nov. 12, 2025. The group; Indivisible Skokie Morton Grove Lincolnwood, was protesting how federal immigration enforcement activities have unfolded in the north suburbs, and in Chicago. (Brian O'Mahoney for the Pioneer Press)
    Bushra Amiwala, candidate for 7th Congressional District representative and Skokie School District 73,5 board member speaks during a demonstration Nov. 12, 2025 outside the Morton Grove Village Hall. (Brian O’Mahoney for Pioneer Press)

    Amiwala told Pioneer Press she would not address the Morton Grove board – as she had done in Skokie – because she is not a resident.

    During the rally, the crowd also sang, and there were some impromptu speeches, including Amawali’s. One person called out “silence is violence,” and another person added, “the mayor is complicit,” referring to Morton Grove mayor Janine Witko.

    Municipalities across Chicagoland, including in Evanston, Oak Park and Aurora, have adopted ICE-free resolutions. And in Chicago, Mayor Brandon Johnson signed an ICE-free zone executive order in October.

    However, Witko said her town adopting anything like that would be a pointless gesture.

    “What is being asked of us tonight … would not change the reality of the situation,” Witko said during the board meeting. “The village does not have authority, as you know, over the federal agents or their operations. … Placing signs and making proclamations would be purely symbolic.”

    Morton Grove and neighboring Lincolnwood are among the villages to publicly post that the towns would follow state law when it comes to municipal police and other employees getting involved with federal immigration enforcement. The Illinois TRUST Act prohibits local law enforcement from participating in immigration enforcement activities, the posts explain.

    Witko repeated that Wednesday night, adding that village staff do not ask anyone their legal status in order to provide village services. Witko said that as far as she knows, immigration agents have not used village property for anything.

    There were, however, reports of people detained in and near Morton Grove the week of Halloween. Officials told Pioneer Press that local police were not given advanced notice of the agents’ presence in town, and Morton Grove police did not assist.

    Witko said defiance against the immigration enforcement agents could only invite more attention. The mayor said Evanston, which now has an ICE-free resolution in place, has not seen a decrease in federal attention.

    But, members of the public addressing the Morton Grove board Wednesday night argued that even if only symbolic, taking a stance matters. People need something, they opined.

    “As if symbolism is something pejorative. It’s not. There’s a flag right there, that’s a symbol. And that’s something that carries a lot of meaning. I hope it carries meaning to everyone in this room,” said civil rights attorney Marci Sahinoglu.

    Sahinoglu lives in Skokie, and told that a neighbor of hers was arrested at Menards hardware store in Morton Grove. She said she drove the man’s wife to the parking lot to pick up his truck because the man was taken to El Paso, Texas.

    “Symbolism matters,” Sahinoglu said. “What this village does, symbolic or not, matters.”

    Another speaker said that if the village does nothing, that, too, is something.

    “Your silence is a stance,” said Haley Aichholzer. “It’s a prime example of moral hypocrisy.”

    Bob Burkhart also called the issue a moral one. He told the board he is no longer able to garden and maintain his lawn or shovel snow on his sidewalk. He depends on a crew to do the work for him.

    The men who did that work for him are believed to have been taken into federal immigration custody, he said.

    “We couldn’t believe this happened to our person, our hardworking guys,” Burkhart told village trustees. “You know what their offense was? Being Mexican. That seems to be very high on our nation’s priority these days; hating Mexicans.”

    An elderly man, Burkhart said he and his wife aren’t sure what they’re going to do when the snow comes.

    “For us having landscape service isn’t a luxury, it’s a necessity,” he said. “We’re able to stay in our home. I cannot take care of the lawn. I can’t plant flowers, I can water them. We can’t take care of the snow. What’s the village going to do? What are we going to do?”

    Jesse Wright is a freelancer. Pioneer Press staff contributed.

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    Jesse Wright, Pioneer Press

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  • Surfer walks 1,196 miles to raise awareness for endangered steelhead trout

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    Sean Jansen grew up surfing the waves at Lower Trestles – but little did he know, there was a struggling species in the nearby San Mateo Creek, the same river that helped create the surf break he’s enjoyed his entire life.

    The pristine beach area near his hometown of San Clemente had given him so much, he wanted to give something in return. So he set out on a quest to follow the natural habitat of the California steelhead trout, and raise awareness about why this unique fish is facing extinction, in large part due to human urbanization.

    Sean Jansen, of San Clemente, walked 86 days across Southern California to raise awareness for the steelhead trout, a struggling, endangered species that lives between rivers and the Pacific Ocean. (Photo courtesy of Jansen)

    The fish is a coastal rainbow trout, and similar to salmon, it matures in the ocean and then returns to swim upstream in the river to spawn. It repeats the cycle over and over — if it can find a way back up through freshwaters.

    “I felt guilty I didn’t know about it, at this wave I surf,” Jansen said. “And I realized this is not the only creek, throughout California, there are hundreds of creeks that have this fish.”

    He’s now working with California Trout, a group spearheading efforts to bring the species back from the brink of extinction brought on by the damming up of waterways, pollution, agriculture, climate change, the list goes on.

    Jansen said he decided to do a walkabout covering the migration patterns of the trout, from the ocean to the mountains, along rivers that meet the sea. He started in San Clemente up to Pismo Beach, then headed to the San Bernardino mountains, where he would take the Pacific Crest Trail down to the Mexico border, then back up the coast to finish where he started.

    The journey started in 2024 and happened over a total of 86 days, an estimated 1,196 miles. He took more than 2.6 million steps, burned 165,745 calories and spent 237 hours and 42 minutes walking.

    His final steps this week landed him back in his hometown of San Clemente at T-Street Beach, where his adventure started.

    “It hasn’t hit me yet,” Jansen said, as he walked up the beach trail, looking out at the waves rolling in.

The journey didn’t happen in one swoop, rather three separate trips that started on April 15, 2024. He left from T-Street to head up to Santa Maria south of Pismo Beach, stopping at all the rivers the trout are known to live. That segment was 340 miles, taking three weeks.

Then he looped from Santa Maria inland to Wrightwood, then Big Bear in San Bernardino Mountains, another 300 miles that took him another three weeks.

During the summer months, he serves as a wildlife guide at Yellowstone National Park, so at that point he put the trek on hold to get back to work.

He was set to pick up where he left off in the fall of 2024, but fires ripped through the region, closing down several sections of trails he needed to access to finish the journey.

A year passed before he could pick back up in Big Bear, and on Oct. 10, he got a ride up the windy road up to where he left off. And then, again, started walking, taking the Pacific Crest Trail south.

Jansen was familiar with the route, hiking the entire 2,600-mile Pacific Crest Trail, from Alaska to Mexico, in 2015.

He packed noodles and instant meals to cook on a portable stove, used a water filter to drink from streams and rivers and when his body needed a rest, he listened.

He encountered a bear once, he said, but not a big deal – as a wilderness guide, he sees them all the time in Yellowstone and clapped it away. The rattlesnake was more of a scare, he said, striking his walking stick while he traversed a remote area.

There was the mysterious rash that crept over his body, and into his eye, that lasted about two weeks. He’s still unsure what it was from.

But more memorable were all the conversations Jansen had with random people he met, a chance to educate people on the plight of the steelhead trout, the purpose behind his journey.

“For me, it’s all about giving back,” Jansen said. “Nature has given me so much, this is my effort to return the favor.”

The largest recorded steelhead trout came from the San Juan Creek, measured at 34 inches, he said. “These are big fish, they can reach the same size as a salmon.”

The last recorded population number is 170 in all of Southern California.

Jansen carried along with him a steelhead trout stuffed animal, which he named “Steely Daniela” in a nod to the ’70s rock band, and used it as a pillow along his journey.

As he wrapped up his trek, he said one thing he was humbled by was the natural terrain of Southern California’s wilderness areas.

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Sean Jansen, of San Clemente, walked 86 days across Southern California to raise awareness for the steelhead trout, a struggling, endangered species that lives between rivers and the Pacific Ocean. (Photo courtesy of Jansen)

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In the mountains, the creeks and rivers the trout can be found in are pristine, he said. But the concreted channels closer to human development are “in pretty rough shape,” he said.

“They are wilderness, protected and they are wild,” he said of the headlands. “But when they get into civilized areas, they are full of pollution and concreted. We have literally stopped the geomorphological processes.”

There have been recent efforts to help the struggling species.

Dam removal projects and stream restoration efforts have gained steam in recent years.  A $45 million proposed trail bridge in San Juan Capistrano would remove barriers in Trabuco Creek, helping the trout to travel between the ocean to their spawning grounds in the Santa Ana Mountains.

There are efforts, Jansen added, to remove dams in Ventura and Malibu to bring back natural sediment at the coast.

“How did we not know we can’t control nature?” he said of the concrete that has lined many once-natural waterways. “We tried and failed, and it costs millions of dollars to fix our problems. They are full of sediment or polluted. There’s no benefit. Some are necessary because of flood control. But some are unnecessary and going to be removed in the coming years.”

Jansen said he hopes one day the barriers will be removed and rivers can run free, as they did until the dams and channels were built.

“I hope that we are able to let them do what they do,” he said. “If they give them the chance, they will come back. My hope is the low number of fish can get into the tens of thousands, like they used to be. If we let them, they will come back, it’s that simple.”

If we don’t fix the problems humans created, he said, the next species will suffer, a domino effect that will throw off the balance of nature.

Now, comes the challenging part, he said, going through his photos and writing his experience for a book about his journey and the steelhead trout.

The educational journey wasn’t his first, nor his last. A few years ago, he paddled more than 1,000 miles along the Baja Peninsula to raise awareness for the endangered porpoise, writing “Paddling with Porpoise.” His next adventure will likely raise awareness about the rebounding wolf population in Yellowstone.

For more about his trek, go to jansenjournals.com.