A Naperville man was hauled away by federal immigration agents Thursday morning as his two sons watched, the older boy begging them not to hurt his father and tearfully asking for a chance to speak to him before they left.
The incident, which took place outside the Views of Naperville apartment complex off Ogden Avenue, was video recorded and has been circulating on social media.
In it, three men wearing vests marked “police” can be seen pinning the man to the ground while taking him into custody. (He has been identified by the Naperville Sun as 47-year-old Carlos; his last name is being withheld at the request of his family, who fear retaliation.)
Carlos’ 17 and 7-year-old sons can be heard in the background loudly crying.
“Stop, you’re hurting him,” the 17-year-old says. Then, as they’re taking Carlos to a truck, his son asks, “Can I talk to him? Can I talk to him please before he leaves? Let me — that’s my dad.”
At one point, one of the agents yells out to the crowd, “Get (the boys) away. Get them away.”
As Carlos is placed in the vehicle and they get ready to leave, both boys cry out, “Pa, te amo. (Pa, I love you).”
Such arrests have been taking place in Naperville and all over Chicago and the suburbs as part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s “Operation Midway Blitz,” which began in early September. Some of the arrests in Naperville have been witnessed or caught on video, including one in which three people were detained outside a Menards store and another in which a group of men working on a roof were targeted. All of the roofers detained in that incident were documented, according to a report by ABC7.
Carlos’ wife, Elena, speaking in Spanish, said she was at work and her husband taking their children to school when a group of federal immigration agents showed up shortly before 7:30 a.m.
Carlos had gone to get the car and the boys were waiting for him to pick them up, she said. A friend of one of the boys was waiting with them, she said.
“The kids were ready to get in the car and then they saw the truck, and the officers wouldn’t let them (go),” Elena said. “My husband thought they were just going to park. Then my son started telling him not to open the window, that he had rights — ‘Don’t open the door.’”
Carlos rolled down his window and the agents asked him for his documents, she said.
“When they opened my husband’s car door, my son says that one of the men was forcing him out of the car. And then another truck came and they threw (Carlos) to the ground,” Elena said.
In another video of the incident viewed by the Naperville Sun, authorities can be seen pulling Carlos out of a white vehicle. It appears that another agent is inside the vehicle pushing him out. When Carlos and the agent pulling him out fall to the ground, three agents apprehend him.
“My husband was telling them that they were hurting him,” Elena said. “They were choking him, and then they took him away.”
She rushed home from work as soon as one of her sons called her, but by the time she got there at 7:32 a.m., it was too late.
“My kids were crying uncontrollably. My oldest son was crying, saying they had taken his dad and treated him very badly,” Elena said. “They were yelling that they love him and that they care about him.”
Elena said she was able to speak with Carlos following his arrest. Her husband, who is from Honduras, told her he was going to be transferred to another state for deportation. Because he has an active deportation order for previously entering the country illegally, she now has to wait for him to be deported before the family can reunite with him.
“I have to wait for them to send him back to the country, if it’s possible for us to reunite in Honduras with my kids,” Elena said. “I have support from his family, but he’s gone now — he’s the head of our household.”
Carlos, whom she met in Honduras, has been in the U.S. for nearly a decade and recently opened his own tire business, she said. He is afraid to go back to his native country because he has brothers and other family members who have been killed there, she said. Both of their sons are U.S. citizens.
“What hurts me most is seeing my kids, what they went through in that moment when they were arresting their father,” Elena said.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Tribune staff writer Laura Rodríguez Presa contributed to this report.
cstein@chicagotribune.com
Carolyn Stein
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