Trump
Administration Begins Immigration Arrests in Chicago
The number
of arrests there was uncertain. Illinois officials, including the governor,
said they had not been given advance notice.
Devlin
BarrettJulie BosmanHamed Aleaziz
By Devlin
BarrettJulie Bosman and Hamed Aleaziz
Devlin
Barrett and Hamed Aleaziz reported from Washington. Julie Bosman reported from
Chicago.
Jan. 26,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/26/us/politics/chicago-deportation-emil-bove-trump.html
The Justice
Department announced Sunday it had begun a multiagency immigration enforcement
operation in Chicago, as the Trump administration sought to show it is quickly
fulfilling a campaign promise to ramp up arrests and deportations.
Officials
said a host of law enforcement agencies would conduct such operations in the
coming days. The Justice Department announced that its acting deputy attorney
general, Emil Bove, had traveled to Chicago to oversee the effort to address
what he called a “national emergency.”
The Trump
administration has enlisted various law enforcement agencies within the Justice
Department — the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Drug Enforcement
Administration, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and
the U.S. Marshals — to assist operations in Chicago and elsewhere.
Immigration
and Customs Enforcement said in a statement on Sunday night that it had made
956 arrests on Sunday, though it was unclear how many of them were in Chicago.
Local officials in Chicago said they had not been involved in the operations.
In some neighborhoods, residents said people were concerned, but also confused
about how the reported immigration operations were going to play out.
Mr. Bove
said in a written statement that he had watched agents from the departments of
Justice and Homeland Security deploy in lock step “to address a national
emergency arising from four years of failed immigration policy.” The Justice
Department, he added, was working to “secure the border, stop this invasion and
make America safe again.”
Immigration
and Customs Enforcement said in a statement that federal agencies have started
“enhanced targeted operations” in Chicago “to enforce U.S. immigration law and
preserve public safety and national security by keeping potentially dangerous
criminal aliens out of our communities.”
Mr. Bove
urged local officials to aid in the effort, and warned there could be
consequences for those who do not.
“We will
support everyone at the federal, state and local levels who joins this critical
mission to take back our communities,” he said. “We will use all available
tools to address obstruction and other unlawful impediments to our efforts to
protect the homeland.”
Gov. JB
Pritzker of Illinois said on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday that his
state would cooperate with federal authorities in deporting undocumented
immigrants convicted of crimes or with pending deportation orders. But he
emphasized that state law enforcement would not take part in targeted raids or
profile people in the state who might be without documents.
Mr. Pritzker
also said there was no new legal basis for the memo Mr. Bove issued last week
indicating the department may investigate and prosecute officials in any
jurisdictions that refuse to assist with the deportation crackdown. “They’re
just putting that out because they want to threaten everybody,” he said.
Mr.
Pritzker’s office was not given advance notice of the arrests, officials in the
governor’s office said. A spokesman for the Chicago Police Department on Sunday
reiterated that the department, in accordance with municipal code, does not
document immigration status or share information with federal immigration
authorities.
The field
offices of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Drug Enforcement
Administration assisted in the operation, officials in Chicago confirmed.
In the Logan
Square neighborhood, on the city’s Northwest Side, residents seemed on edge as
news reports emerged about the federal operations, Georgia Hampton, a
31-year-old podcast producer, said as she sat inside New Wave Coffee on Sunday.
“It feels like everyone is waiting to have some information to spread,” Ms.
Hampton said. “Everyone is holding their breath.”
In Little
Village, on the Southwest Side, Juan Sanchez, a 35-year-old electrician who was
born in Chicago, said the streets seemed especially quiet. Even residents with
legal status, he said, seemed tense.
“I can tell
you that even for those of us who are citizens or have a green card, there’s
fear,” he said. “I’m scared myself — not that I’ll be deported, because I was
born here, but I’m scared that I may get scooped up in a mass arrest.”
Immigration
enforcement is an everyday feature of the Homeland Security Department, which
oversees agencies including ICE. But the Trump administration has vowed to
devote more Justice Department personnel to those efforts as it takes more
aggressive action.
Several
immigration advocacy groups in Illinois filed a lawsuit against ICE last week,
attempting to prohibit the agency from conducting certain immigration
operations in Chicago. The lawsuit asserted that the Trump administration was
curtailing free speech through its deportation threats and targeting Chicago
because of its “sanctuary city” status.
Mr. Bove,
who was part of Mr. Trump’s defense team in his Manhattan criminal case, is now
overseeing much of the department’s day-to-day activity while the Senate works
toward a confirmation vote on Pam Bondi, Mr. Trump’s nominee for attorney
general. A vote on her nomination is expected this week.
Tom Homan,
Mr. Trump’s border czar, said on Sunday that the operation in Chicago, which
was focused on public safety threats with a criminal background, had resulted
in some arrests, though he did not specify how many. They included members of
the Venezuelan gang Tren De Aragua and individuals with sexual offenses, some
of whom he said had been convicted of other crimes.
He confirmed
that in the course of the operation ICE officers made “collateral arrests,”
picking up migrants who were around the target of the operation. Such arrests
have been criticized by immigrant rights groups and were not common practice
during the Biden administration.
Mr. Homan
said that other operations were taking place across the country and would
continue. He said that other agencies were supporting ICE in those efforts and
would help increase the number of arrests that the authorities could make.
“We’re going
full-on on this one, and more resources means more arrests,” he said, “which
means more criminals off the streets.”
Robert
Chiarito and Minho Kim contributed reporting.
Julie Bosman
is the Chicago bureau chief for The Times, writing and reporting stories from
around the Midwest. More about Julie Bosman
Hamed
Aleaziz covers the Department of Homeland Security and immigration policy. More
about Hamed Aleaziz
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