Federal
Agent in Chicago Shot Motorist in Confrontation, Officials Say
The clash
touched off more protests in the city over immigration enforcement. The
Illinois governor said National Guard troops could be deployed soon against his
wishes.
Julie
Bosman Hamed
Aleaziz Robert
Chiarito
By Julie
BosmanHamed Aleaziz and Robert Chiarito
Julie
Bosman and Robert Chiarito reported from Chicago. Hamed Aleaziz reported from
Washington.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/04/us/federal-agent-shooting-chicago.html
Published
Oct. 4, 2025
Updated
Oct. 5, 2025, 12:47 a.m. ET
A federal
agent shot and wounded a motorist in Chicago on Saturday morning, according to
federal officials, touching off more protests in the city as tensions rose over
the Trump administration’s threat to send troops there.
Officials
with the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement that the agent
shot the motorist, a woman who they said was armed with a semiautomatic weapon,
after she rammed and boxed in a law enforcement vehicle. The Chicago Police
Department said it responded on Saturday morning to the area after receiving a
report of a person shot. The New York Times could not independently verify
details of the encounter.
The
wounded individual had non-life-threatening injuries, local officials said. No
law enforcement officers were injured in the incident.
On
Saturday night, D.H.S. officials identified the suspect as Marimar Martinez.
They said she had been discharged from the hospital and that she was in F.B.I.
custody.
D.H.S.
added that a driver of another vehicle, Anthony Ian Santos Ruiz, had also been
involved in the ramming and that he had been apprehended by law enforcement. It
was unclear on Saturday whether he or Ms. Martinez had been charged and whether
they had any representation.
“These
attacks on our brave law enforcement officers must end,” Tricia McLaughlin, the
assistant secretary of Homeland Security, said in the statement.
Mr.
Ruiz’s mother, Elizabeth Ruiz, said her son told her on the phone in the
morning that he had been rammed by federal agents and that they were shooting.
Upon hearing that, she said, she raced to the scene. She said an agent grabbed
her son and said he was under arrest. When she asked why, she said she received
no answer.
The
shooting occurred on a day that the president appeared to move closer to
sending National Guard troops to the area.
Gov. JB
Pritzker of Illinois said in a statement that he expected Guard troops to be
deployed to the state after a Trump official told him on Saturday that the
administration intended to federalize 300 members of the Illinois National
Guard against the governor’s wishes. Later in the day, White House officials
confirmed the authorization. Federal officials have said troops were needed to
protect Immigration and Customs Enforcement facilities, including a processing
facility in the Chicago suburb of Broadview.
“I want
to be clear: There is no need for military troops on the ground in the state of
Illinois,” said Mr. Pritzker, a Democrat. “State, county and local law
enforcement have been working together and coordinating to ensure public safety
around the Broadview ICE facility, and to protect people’s ability to
peacefully exercise their constitutional rights.”
For
months, President Trump has pushed to bring the U.S. military to the streets of
American cities, in Los Angeles; Washington; and Portland, Ore., where he vowed
to send troops to protect the “war-ravaged” city.
“President
Trump will not turn a blind eye to the lawlessness plaguing American cities.”
Abigail Jackson, a White House spokeswoman, said in a statement on Saturday.
The
confrontation on Chicago’s Southwest Side, where federal immigration agents
were on patrol, drew hundreds of people to the area on Saturday afternoon to
protest federal immigration activity, which has been escalating sharply in
Chicago and its suburbs in recent days. Many Chicagoans have pushed back on the
presence of ICE agents, shouting at them and trying to block their vehicles
when they have been spotted patrolling streets.
In
Broadview on Friday, during an appearance by Kristi Noem, the homeland security
secretary, federal agents confronted and pushed protesters outside the
immigration facility, leading to a standoff and demonstration that lasted
several hours.
At the
protest on Saturday, people waved Mexican and American flags, blew high-pitched
whistles as a symbol of resistance to immigration enforcement and chanted in
unison: “ICE, go home!”
Federal
agents responded with tear gas and pepper balls in an effort to disperse the
crowd. Dozens of Chicago police officers soon arrived to control the scene,
forming a line between federal agents and protesters.
Fabian
Sierra, 51, who lives in the neighborhood, said he heard of a shooting
involving a federal agent and immediately came to the scene.
“I felt
like I had to join my people,” said Mr. Sierra, who added that he was in the
country legally but still felt afraid.
Lately,
he said, people in his neighborhood have been fearful of ICE arrests, with
residents staying home and keeping watch.
“My
friends don’t want to go to work,” he said. “Businesses are closed.”
Melissa
Becerril, a 22-year-old nurse from the nearby Gage Park neighborhood, said she
felt that anyone who was Latino could be targeted.
“It’s
gotten to the point that ICE is targeting people regardless of whether they are
legal or not,” she said.
A
middle-of-the-night Border Patrol raid this week that targeted people in an
apartment building on the South Side has infuriated many in Chicago, and
bystander videos of hovering helicopters and zip-tied residents have spread
widely.
By
midafternoon on Saturday, ICE vehicles had begun pulling away from the scene of
the protests. Some members of the crowd erupted in cheers; others threw objects
at the vehicles. Federal agents responded with a volley of tear gas.
Eric
Schmitt, Shawn McCreesh and Orlando Mayorquín contributed reporting. Kirsten
Noyes contributed research.
Julie
Bosman is the Chicago bureau chief for The Times, writing and reporting stories
from around the Midwest.
Hamed
Aleaziz covers the Department of Homeland Security and immigration policy for
The Times.


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