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Tag: raids

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  • ‘Fear hasn’t paralyzed us’: anxiety and action in Chicago amid immigration raids | US immigration


    Some corners of Chicago have been unnervingly quiet this week.

    Residents who have lived in the city for decades without immigration documents have been worried about leaving their homes. Undocumented parents have been signing powers of attorney to ease custody issues if they are detained and separated from their children. Business owners are deputizing employees to take care of their affairs if anything happens.

    But in other ways, the city has been buzzing with action. Know Your Rights workshops taking place at community centers, local parks and union meetings across the city have been packed with participants. A network of local advocates has been coordinating to track operations by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) agents, and connect the families of those detained with legal aid.

    “The administration wants to instill in all of us fear tactics. They want to paralyze us. They want to make us immobilized by this moment,” said US representative Delia Ramirez at a press conference at Chicago’s Malcolm X college on Wednesday. “But what does the community and the state of Illinois do when we are under attack? We stand up and we fight back, folks.”

    Chicago had been bracing for raids for months, ever since Donald Trump won the election and signalled he would be enacting his campaign promise of “mass deportations” as soon as he took office. In advance of inauguration, reports were already circulating that the city would be an early target.

    Since then, Ice, the largest branch of the Department of Homeland Security, announced that it would be conducting “enhanced targeted operations” in Chicago along with several other federal agencies, including the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Agency and the US Marshals service. The Illinois governor, JB Pritzker, said the raids could target up to 2,000 people in the city.

    The scale of the raids, which are targeting people all across the region, has been chilling, said Tovia Siegel, the director of organizing and leadership at the Resurrection Project, an advocacy group that provides legal aid and community education for immigrants.

    “It’s causing really significant fear, and it’s causing people not to leave the house, not to want to go to work or bring their kids to school,” she said.

    Agents have been primarily apprehending people at their homes, Siegel said. Officers in unmarked vehicles and those wearing the insignia of various federal agencies have confused people, she said. “We’re seeing children who are terrified their parents are not going to be there when they get home from school.”

    Trump and his appointees have emphasised that the raids are targeting criminals, but people with and without criminal histories have been apprehended so far.

    “It’s being articulated that there’s a prioritization of dealing with criminals, but the impact is wider,” said Kwame Raoul, Illinois’s attorney general, who has been an outspoken critic of Trump’s immigration orders and is one of several Democratic attorney generals suing the administration over its efforts to end birthright citizenship for the children of undocumented people.

    US citizens and legal residents are being swept up in the raids, Raoul said, “whether intended or as unintended consequences of racial profiling”.

    Adding to the unease is the administration’s decision to lift a longstanding ban on immigration raids in schools, churches and hospitals. Late last week, Chicago public schools officials announced that they had spotted immigration agents at Hamline elementary school in the city’s south-west side. It later became clear that the officers were from the Secret Service, and were not conducting immigration enforcement. But the incident has nonetheless continued to unnerve parents and educators

    In Chicago’s ward 25, which encompasses Pilsen and is made up of many immigrants, Alderman Byron Sigcho-Lopez said that right after the Secret Service incident, attendance at high schools had declined by at least a third, and attendance was even lower at elementary schools. In Chicago’s Brighton Park neighborhood and Little Village, home to many Mexican American and other immigrant families, neighborhood associations who run afterschool programs said they noticed significant drops in attendance.

    At the Lincoln United Methodist church in Chicago’s Pilsen neighborhood, where about three-quarters of residents are Mexican American, the Spanish-language Sunday service is now being held over Zoom so that congregants of all immigration statuses can safely attend. “We haven’t done this since the beginning of the pandemic,” said the church’s pastor Emma Lozano, who’s a longtime immigration advocate. “Back then we felt it would be temporary. We were waiting for the vaccine, for medicine.”

    This time around, she said, she’s not sure how long her congregants will have to worship virtually. “We’re all just trying to figure out how long this is going to last – and what’s the medicine for this?” Lozano’s church has long been a refuge for migrants. In 2006, it drew national attention when the activist Elvira Arellano took refuge and resisted arrest there for months along with her young son, and churches around the US joined a sanctuary movement in solidarity.

    But now, the city has come into the Trump administration’s crosshairs – and Lozano is shaken. The church has ramped up its security protocols, making sure the door is locked behind the kids coming in for the evening capoeira classes. Lozano said she herself has felt rattled, and worried about her safety and threats from Trump supporters.

    Social media videos and televised broadcasts of immigration agents battering down people’s front doors or raids attended by the television psychologist Dr Phil, have pained her, she said. “It’s almost like lynchings,” she said. “There’s a perversion and some kind of pleasure they’re getting from terrorizing this population of immigrants.”

    To many activists, the administration’s activities in Chicago did not come as a surprise. The city, which has been a sanctuary for immigrants since 1985, has long drawn the ire of immigration hardliners and conservative politicians. Its sanctuary status was first ordered by mayor Harold Washington, who prohibited city officials from cooperating with federal immigration agents, and required that city services were provided to all residents regardless of their immigration status. The order was eventually passed into law, and then weakened by mayors over the years. Chicago’s current mayor, Brandon Johnson has vowed to fiercely defend his city’s immigrants. On Wednesday, congressional Republicans called on him to testify at a hearing on sanctuary cities.

    In the past two years, the state of Texas has bussed thousands of people – mostly from Venezuela – to the city and its suburbs, including during the dead of winter. Now, both the recent arrivals and people who have been living in the city for years without documentation have been on high alert, and advocates are straining to make sense of why and how people are being targeted.

    For Yess Gómez, who has been living in Chicago for two decades, the raids have brought back a familiar anxiety – but also a defiance. “We are afraid, but fear hasn’t paralyzed us,” said Gómez, who has been involved in Chicago’s immigrant rights movement for many years. “My kids don’t deserve to see their mother hiding. And I’m not going to do it.” Instead, she has been preparing.

    The Guardian is not publishing Gómez’s full surname to protect her from retaliation. She has a work permit as part of a program that delays deportations for workers who have witnessed or experienced workplace abuse, and works as a bartender. She, her husband and five children – three young kids and two in their 20s – have implemented a safety system to check in every few hours. “If someone doesn’t check in, the plan kicks in, and we start figuring out where they are. Some of us even have location tracking on our phones as a precaution,” she said.

    It’s not being deported to Mexico that scares her so much, she said – it’s being ripped away from the life she’s built in the US. “What really scares me is having to start over. That’s what most of us fear: starting over again.”

    During the first Trump administration, Gómez had asked her bishop to take custody of her children in case she and her husband were arrested and deported, she said. This time around, her adult children have been tasked with caring for their siblings, and contacting the family’s attorneys should anything happen to their parents.

    They have also been leaning on local networks of advocates who have been patrolling and tracking Ice activity, and investigating which rumours are credible and which ones are misinformation.

    Like many activists in the city, she was delighted by recent complaints by Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, that Chicagoans are too “well-educated” about how to resist immigration agents.

    “Sanctuary cities are making it very difficult to arrest the criminals. For instance Chicago, very well-educated, they’ve been educated how to defy Ice, how to hide from Ice,” Homan told CNN on Monday night.

    It goes to show, she said, that people in this city know how to take care of one another. “Even though they wanted to create a spectacle here, they couldn’t do it,” she said.



    In recent weeks, Chicago has been at the center of the national debate on immigration as reports of increased Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids have sparked fear and uncertainty in immigrant communities. However, despite the anxiety and fear, many Chicagoans have not been paralyzed by these threats, but instead have taken action to support and protect their neighbors.

    From community organizations offering Know Your Rights workshops to lawyers volunteering their time to provide legal assistance, Chicagoans have been mobilizing to ensure that immigrants are informed and empowered to navigate the complex immigration system. Additionally, local leaders have spoken out against the raids, condemning them as inhumane and unjust.

    While the fear of deportation still looms large for many immigrants in Chicago, the collective response to these raids demonstrates that the city is united in standing up for its immigrant population. By coming together and taking action, Chicagoans are sending a powerful message that they will not let fear dictate their actions, but will instead fight for justice and equality for all.

    Tags:

    1. Immigration raids in Chicago
    2. Anxiety and action in the US
    3. Chicago immigrants face fear
    4. Immigration raids spark anxiety
    5. US immigration crackdown
    6. Chicago community responds to raids
    7. Immigration fears in the US
    8. Immigration activism in Chicago
    9. Anxiety and action in US immigration
    10. Chicago immigrants stand up against raids

    #Fear #hasnt #paralyzed #anxiety #action #Chicago #immigration #raids #immigration

  • Immigration raids surprise New York City residents


    Phone calls from concerned tenants in an apartment complex woke up the Bronx building’s manager at around 6 a.m. Tuesday.

    “They were telling me that ICE was there,” the building manager, who declined to be identified, told NBC News.

    New York was among the latest cities where Immigration and Customs Enforcement conducted raids, grabbing the attention of residents and business owners who were surprised by the early morning activity — which is part of the Trump administration’s heightened push to boost deportations and make them very visible, targeting major cities and publicizing the actions.

    Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced on social media that she was present when officers from ICE and other law enforcement agencies arrested at least one undocumented person in the apartment building in the Highbridge section of the Bronx.

    NBC News spoke with seven workers and business owners in the area late Tuesday morning as New York City police officers remained at the scene.

    Most of them were surprised and said that, while crime has long been a problem in the neighborhood, immigration enforcement actions are rare.

    “I think it’s OK if they need to arrest somebody because they committed a crime, but I worry that with ICE, they may also arrest others that haven’t done anything bad,” a 28-year-old business owner, who asked that his name not be used out of fear, said in Spanish.

    According to data from the Furman Center at New York University, which researches housing and urban policies, the serious crime rate in Highbridge is higher than the citywide figure.

    U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem speaks with federal law enforcement members in New York on Jan. 28, 2025.
    Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem speaks with federal law enforcement officers Tuesday in New York.DEA New York via X

    Even though city and state laws prevent New York police from getting involved in civil immigration enforcement, the police department is part of the Homeland Security Investigations task force, which cracks down on violations of federal criminal law.

    As part of the task force, police officers were present for the “criminal enforcement action” early Tuesday. They said the undocumented person who was arrested was wanted on suspicion of serious crimes, including kidnapping, assault and burglary.

    Mayor Eric Adams said the immigration enforcement operation was led by the Department of Homeland Security and supported by other federal agencies, as well as the NYPD.

    “We will not hesitate to partner with federal authorities to bring violent criminals to justice — just as we have done for years,” Adams said in a statement. “Our commitment to protecting our city’s law-abiding residents, both citizens and immigrants, remains unwavering.” 

    The Highbridge neighborhood in Bronx, N.Y.
    Immigration and law enforcement officers awakened residents at an apartment building in Highbridge in the Bronx early Tuesday as they arrested at least one undocumented person.Nicole Acevedo / NBC News

    The news reverberated across the city, which is home to a large number of immigrants, including newly arrived migrants.

    Many recent migrants are taking temporary shelter at the Roosevelt Hotel, in midtown Manhattan.

    Isabel Miranda, 39, a Colombian mother of two children who has been taking shelter at the hotel for a few weeks, said her youngest daughter, who’s 3 years old, has told her she’s fearful of the police.

    “It makes you desperate; you go out, and they look at us as if we were delinquents who came here to destroy the country, and that’s not the case,” Miranda said in her native Spanish. “We contribute, too, because we work hard and we do the tough work.”

    Asked whether she worries about deportations, Miranda said, “The only thing I ask for is that my children remain safe, because I can’t go back to Colombia.”

    The Highbridge neighborhood in Bronx, N.Y.
    Several business owners in the Bronx said that they rarely see immigration arrests and that they are more concerned with crime.Nicole Acevedo

    Recent numbers shared by the Trump administration show that about half of those arrested by ICE recently don’t have criminal records.

    Ihan Forero, an 8-year-old boy from Colombia who has been in the United States for six months, was coming back from school with his mother. Asked what he thought of President Donald Trump as he stood outside the Roosevelt Hotel, he responded: “Fear. … He has a cold heart.”

    Murad Awawdeh, president of the New York Immigration Coalition, a nonprofit organization that advocates for immigrant rights in the state, condemned the enforcement actions as “a publicity blitz” from the Department of Homeland Security, releasing photos and videos of Noem wearing body armor as she presided over the multiagency operation in the Bronx.

    “No matter how the Trump administration spins this enforcement, it is not about public safety — it is about instilling fear in our immigrant communities,” Awawdeh said in a statement



    In a recent turn of events, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids have caught many New York City residents by surprise. The raids, which targeted undocumented immigrants, have sparked fear and uncertainty among immigrant communities in the city.

    Many residents were taken aback by the sudden presence of ICE agents in their neighborhoods, with reports of individuals being detained and taken into custody. The raids have left many families worried about their loved ones and unsure of what steps to take next.

    Immigrant advocacy groups have been working tirelessly to provide support and resources to those affected by the raids. They have been circulating information about legal rights and offering guidance on how to navigate the complex immigration system.

    The raids have reignited debates about immigration policy and enforcement in the city, with some residents calling for more protections for undocumented immigrants and others expressing support for stricter enforcement measures.

    As the situation continues to unfold, it is important for New York City residents to stay informed and prepared. It is crucial for individuals to know their rights and seek legal assistance if needed. The community must come together to support and protect one another during these challenging times.

    Tags:

    immigration raids, New York City, residents, surprise, ICE, undocumented immigrants, deportation, immigration enforcement, immigration crackdown, immigration policies

    #Immigration #raids #surprise #York #City #residents

  • New York City officials react to immigration raids


    New York officials criticized President Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement efforts in the city on Tuesday, following raids in multiple locations

    “What I’m hearing is that we are creating a level of hysteria, not just in my district but [in] the city. I’m hearing from parents that they’re not taking their kids to school because they’re scared because they think ICE is going to show up and families feeling like they’re going to be ripped apart,” City Councilwoman Althea Stevens said, reacting to immigration enforcement activity in her Bronx district. 


    What You Need To Know

    • New York officials criticized President Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement efforts in the city on Tuesday, following raids in multiple locations 
    • Officials say the raids have heightened fears in immigrant communities despite deportations targeting those committing violent crimes 
    • Mayor Eric Adams and Gov. Kathy Hochul showed support for the activity 

    Although the arrest was targeting a specific person, it still has rattled residents and officials. 

    “At this point there are a lot of people who just do not feel safe,” Stevens said.

    “These raids in the Bronx were nothing short of spectacle. We saw political theater to scare people,” Councilwoman Alexa Avilés said.

    Avilés, who chairs the Council’s Committee on Immigration, said that local lawmakers are committed to protecting immigrants, including strengthening the city’s sanctuary city law.

    “This is going to affect everyday New Yorkers. This is not just a new arrival situation, 40% of our New York City population [is] immigrants. So I think we are in for very dark days.,” she said.

    In a statement, Mayor Eric Adams said the raids were part of a larger interagency task force that included coordination of the city’s police department with federal partners. 

    Adams supported Tuesday’s enforcement efforts saying, in part, “As I have repeatedly said, we will not hesitate to partner with federal authorities to bring violent criminals to justice — just as we have done for years. Our commitment to protecting our city’s law-abiding residents, both citizens and immigrants, remains unwavering.” 

    The governor also showed support for the raids. 

    “My understanding is that they had specific names of people that committed crimes, serious offenders, and those are exactly the people that we want removed from the state of New York,” Gov. Kathy Hochul said.

    Despite claims that violent criminals are being prioritized, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said that others — even with no criminal activity inside the country — will be targeted.

    “The individuals who committed heinous acts in the interior of our country and who have terrorized law abiding American citizens absolutely those should be the priority of ICE but that doesn’t mean the other illegal criminals who enter our nation’s borders are off the table.,” Leavitt said.

    “That’s the problem with Trump administration. They are all over the place. They cannot differentiate between a violent felon who will be arrested, tried, convicted and deported and someone on a bad day who may have jumped the turnstile,” Rep. Adriano Espaillat said. 

    Espaillat said the vague information coming from the White House is troubling. 

    “If you cannot differentiate between those two, I think you’re confused. Of course, confusion in a mass deportation scheme is not a good thing. And that’s why this has turned not just sloppy but inhumane.,” he said.

    The raids come as Adams continues to be out sick and while he has carefully avoided saying anything critical about the president.



    In response to recent immigration raids conducted by ICE in New York City, officials are speaking out against the actions and expressing their support for immigrant communities. Mayor Bill de Blasio condemned the raids, stating, “We will not stand by and watch as our immigrant neighbors are targeted and torn apart from their families. New York City is a sanctuary city, and we will continue to protect and defend our immigrant population.”

    City Council Speaker Corey Johnson also voiced his opposition to the raids, saying, “These aggressive and unnecessary actions are causing fear and distress in our communities. We must stand together and show solidarity with our immigrant brothers and sisters.”

    In addition, Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez criticized the raids, tweeting, “These raids are cruel and inhumane. We must fight back against the Trump administration’s anti-immigrant policies and protect our immigrant communities.”

    As tensions continue to rise over immigration enforcement in New York City, officials are working to support and protect the rights of all residents, regardless of their immigration status.

    Tags:

    New York City, immigration raids, officials, reactions, government response, ICE, deportation, immigrant rights, NYC news, political reaction

    #York #City #officials #react #immigration #raids

  • What to know about the immigration enforcement raids in and around NYC


    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and federal drug agents launched a series of raids in New York City on Tuesday morning.

    Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem rode along with the federal law enforcement officials, who have broadly stated that their targets are “criminals.”

    Here’s what to know about the operation and the broader context of immigration enforcement under President Donald Trump.

    What happened on Tuesday?

    ICE officers targeted at least two locations, including on Ogden Avenue near West 170th Street in Highbridge, and arrested at least one immigrant without legal status.

    “Here in New York City this morning, we are getting the dirtbags off these streets,” Noem said in a video she posted on X. One person who was among those arrested had kidnapping, assault and burglary charges, she said in another post.

    ICE arrested 969 people nationwide on Tuesday morning, according to a social media post from the agency. It wasn’t clear how many of those arrested were in New York City.

    Why all the activity now?

    The arrests in New York City follow Trump’s pledge to conduct “mass deportations” throughout the country.

    ICE conducted similar targeted operations in Chicago on Sunday. That day, the agency announced the arrest of nearly 1,000 immigrants nationwide, significantly more than is typical.

    Who is being targeted?

    Trump’s “border czar” Tom Homan has said criminals and gang members would be the first targets of the Trump administration’s mass deportation efforts.

    In an interview on ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday, he said people who threaten public safety and national security remain a “priority,” but that others without criminal records could also be arrested.

    What’s different about these ICE raids under Trump?

    Despite Noem’s presence, there’s no immediate indication that the New York City raids were out of the ordinary. Federal immigration enforcement officers routinely conduct actions in the city.

    Under Trump, however, ICE arrests have ramped up in recent days.

    Homan has also warned that ICE will make “collateral arrests” — that is, arrests of individuals who weren’t the initial targets of enforcement operations. Such arrests were banned under the Biden administration.

    Have ICE arrests increased in NYC?

    ICE has yet to release details about the number of arrests it’s made in New York City or regionally since Trump took office.

    But the number of daily ICE arrests nationwide has spiked significantly. In the first few days after Trump took office, ICE arrested several hundred people each day across the country. That number surged to 956 on Sunday and 1,179 on Monday, according to social media posts from the agency.

    The daily average was about 415 in 2023, according to ICE data. On Saturday, ICE implemented quotas for its 25 field offices, with each expected to make 75 arrests each day.

    Where is ICE arresting people?

    While there hasn’t been an official accounting, ICE arrested at least three people at a seafood distributor business in Newark last Thursday, according to Newark Mayor Ras Baraka and advocates who responded shortly after the raid.

    Surveillance video obtained by ABC7 shows immigration officers searching an apartment building in West New York, New Jersey.

    ICE officers are now allowed to enter areas that were previously off-limits, such as schools, churches and hospitals, under a directive from Benjamine Huffman, who served as the acting homeland security secretary in the first few days of Trump’s second term.

    Prior to Tuesday’s enforcement actions, ICE had also been spotted conducting enforcement actions in Asbury Park, New Jersey, and West New York, among other venues.

    How do the city’s sanctuary laws play into the enforcement actions?

    New York City law prohibits city resources from being used in immigration enforcement.

    Local police also can’t cooperate with ICE to help detain immigrants unless that person has been convicted of one of about 170 “violent or serious” crimes.

    Mayor Eric Adams said he directed the NYPD to coordinate with the federal Homeland Security Investigations task force and other law enforcement agencies to arrest a suspect “connected with multiple violent crimes” on Tuesday.

    The charges included burglary, kidnapping, extortion and illegal firearms possession, among other charges, both in New York and Aurora, Colorado, according to Adams and an NYPD spokesperson.

    Such NYPD actions were “allowed by law,” according to Adams, because of the suspect’s criminal history. In a statement, the NYPD spokesperson said the department does not “assist in any manner with civil immigration enforcement, or allow any department resources to be used.”

    “As I have repeatedly said, we will not hesitate to partner with federal authorities to bring violent criminals to justice — just as we have done for years,” Adams said in a statement on Tuesday. “Our commitment to protecting our city’s law-abiding residents, both citizens and immigrants, remains unwavering.”



    The recent immigration enforcement raids in and around NYC have sparked fear and uncertainty within the immigrant community. Here’s what you need to know:

    1. The raids are part of the Trump administration’s efforts to crack down on illegal immigration. ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) agents have been targeting individuals with deportation orders or criminal convictions.

    2. It’s important to know your rights. If ICE agents show up at your home or workplace, you have the right to remain silent and refuse to answer any questions. You also have the right to contact a lawyer.

    3. Stay informed and be prepared. Make sure you have a plan in place in case you or a loved one is detained. Know who to contact for legal assistance and have important documents, such as passports and birth certificates, easily accessible.

    4. Seek support from community organizations and advocacy groups. There are resources available to help immigrants navigate the complex immigration system and provide emotional support during this difficult time.

    5. Stay vigilant and report any suspicious activity. If you witness an immigration raid or encounter aggressive behavior from ICE agents, document the incident and report it to a trusted organization or legal service provider.

    Remember, you are not alone in this fight. Stay informed, know your rights, and seek support from your community. Together, we can work towards a more just and inclusive society.

    Tags:

    immigration enforcement raids, NYC immigration raids, ICE raids in NYC, NYC immigration crackdown, immigration enforcement in New York City, immigration enforcement updates, NYC immigration news, ICE raids in NYC neighborhoods, immigration crackdown in NYC

    #immigration #enforcement #raids #NYC

  • Immigration raids have begun. For immigrant families life has changed. : NPR


    Food drive at United Giving Hope sanctuary church in Waukegan, I.L. on Jan. 22, 2025. (Mustafa Hussain/NPR)

    Food drive at United Giving Hope sanctuary church in Waukegan, I.L. on Jan. 22, 2025.

    Mustafa Hussain for NPR


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    Mustafa Hussain for NPR

    It’s been snowing all morning in Waukegan, a working class, heavily immigrant city just outside Chicago. It’s freezing, but the line outside the United Giving Hope Church stretches down the block. About 50 immigrants, mostly women and children, are waiting to pick up food donations.

    As she opens the door for them, Pastor Julie Contreras yells: “What kind of people are we!?”

    “Without fear!” they answer.

    Pastor Julie Contreras at United Giving Hope sanctuary church in Waukegan, I.L. on Jan. 22, 2025. (Mustafa Hussain/NPR)

    Pastor Julie Contreras at United Giving Hope sanctuary church in Waukegan, I.L. on Jan. 22, 2025.

    Mustafa Hussain for NPR


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    Mustafa Hussain for NPR

    But in this community, even standing out in public now feels terrifying to many. Immigrants make up 30% of the population here, many from Mexico and Honduras. In the first week of the Trump administration, federal immigration officials conducted raids in several cities across the US, including in this area. Nationwide, more than thousand people suspected of being in the country without legal status were arrested over the weekend The Trump administration says it’s focusing on migrants who present a public safety threat in what it calls a historic crackdown. But the ramped up enforcement has already upended how immigrants and mixed status families go about their daily lives.In the crowd, a young woman named Rosa stands out, her belly is enormous. She’s six months pregnant. “We’re afraid,” she says. “We’re staying indoors, to avoid deportation.”

    Rosa is in the country without legal status, so she’s asked that NPR withhold her last name.

    She says she’s missed her recent appointments with her OB-GYN because she’s too scared to go to her doctor. If the mood here stays this tense, she says, she might not go at all.

    Food drive at United Giving Hope sanctuary church in Waukegan, I.L. on Jan. 22, 2025. (Mustafa Hussain/NPR)

    Food drive at United Giving Hope sanctuary church in Waukegan, I.L. on Jan. 22, 2025.

    Mustafa Hussain for NPR


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    Mustafa Hussain for NPR

    The Trump administration is going out of its way to publicize its crackdown. This weekend’s immigration roundups in the Chicago area included television personality Phil McGraw, better known as Dr. Phil, followed White House Border Czar Tom Homan. Dr. Phil’s cameras rolled as ICE took enforcement actions.

    Homan highlighted the case of one immigrant who he said does not have legal status and is a convicted sex offender. “This is an example of Sanctuary cities”, said Homan. “You have an illegal alien convicted of sex crimes involving children. He’s walking the streets of Chicago.”

    Homan says, these are the types of criminals ICE agents are going after. But advocates here say, it’s thrown all migrants into a deep panic.

    After the church food giveaway, one family invites us over to their home. We meet Lupita, a very timid 12 year old who hopes to become a lawyer someday.

    She’s a US citizen, but her parents are in the country illegally so they’ve asked NPR to withhold their last name. When she retires to do her homework, her mother, Rosa, tells us it’s more than just normal teenage angst keeping Lupita in her bedroom. With the news of the immigration raids, she has become withdrawn. “We’ve told her some very hard times are coming”, says Rosa. “That she might go to school and when she comes back, we will no longer be here.”

    They’ve been discussing the possibility of sending her to a therapist to treat her for anxiety.

    Everyone in this family is shaken. “Every day we wake up afraid,” Rosa says.

    Inside their home, which they’ve owned for years, they show us family photos of quinceañeras, marriages, graduations, and birthdays.

    Rosa's family photos in Waukegan, I.L. on Jan. 22, 2025.

    Rosa’s family photos in Waukegan, I.L. on Jan. 22, 2025.

    Mustafa Hussain for NPR


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    Mustafa Hussain for NPR

    Over 30 years of family life in the U.S.

    “I feel a bitterness, a deep sadness,” Guadaluoe says. “I gave this country my youth.”

    These days, they’re making plans in case they get deported: They’re having discussions about transferring the deed to their home to their children; who to add to their bank accounts; and making arrangements for Lupita to go live with one of her older siblings.

    In order to avoid that fate, they’ve changed even their most basic routines.

    “Before going outside, I look out the window, and out the door,” says Guadalupe. “If I go to the store, I scan the parking lot for the police first. I buy what we need quickly, and I rush back home, and lock the door behind me.”

    He turns to Rosa, his wife. “Remember when we used to go to the mall, and eat popcorn, and a hot dog?” He says. “Those were the good times.”

    NPR Producer Marisa Peñaloza contributed to this story.



    Immigration raids have begun. For immigrant families life has changed.

    The recent increase in immigration raids across the country has left many immigrant families living in fear and uncertainty. With reports of ICE agents showing up at workplaces, homes, and even schools, the threat of deportation looms large for many individuals.

    Families are being torn apart, children are left without parents, and communities are left reeling from the impact of these aggressive enforcement actions. The fear of being separated from loved ones has created a sense of paranoia and anxiety among immigrant communities.

    As the Trump administration continues to crack down on undocumented immigrants, it is important to remember the human toll these policies are taking. Families are being forced to make difficult choices, living in constant fear of being torn apart.

    With the ongoing raids and the heightened enforcement efforts, immigrant families are facing a new reality. The uncertainty of what the future holds has left many feeling vulnerable and isolated.

    As we navigate through these challenging times, it is crucial to remember the humanity of those affected by these policies. Immigrant families are not statistics or political pawns – they are individuals with hopes, dreams, and families just like anyone else.

    Let us stand in solidarity with immigrant communities during this difficult time and work towards creating a more just and compassionate immigration system. The lives of immigrant families depend on it.

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    #Immigration #raids #begun #immigrant #families #life #changed #NPR

  • Chicago spared immigration raids Tuesday, but Pritzker warns feds may target ‘2,000 people’


    Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday said he believes President Donald Trump’s administration is targeting “as many as 2,000 people” in Chicago in its mass deportation plan.

    Those numbers come from local law enforcement, according to sources with direct knowledge of the discussions. But the Chicago Police Department declined to comment on that total, as did other police sources. It’s unclear whether the number encompasses the people Trump “border czar” Tom Homan is targeting: criminals who lack legal status and immigrants with deportation orders.

    After weeks of preparation by Chicago’s immigrant communities, and a weekend full of fear amid multiple reports that the city would serve as the first major raid, there were no reports of immigration enforcement on Tuesday.

    On Friday, the Wall Street Journal reported that the Trump administration’s immigration raids would begin in Chicago Tuesday morning, citing sources familiar with the planning. But by Saturday, Homan told the Washington Post that federal authorities were reconsidering whether to launch immigration raids in Chicago after details began to leak.

    At an unrelated news conference on Tuesday, Pritzker said the Trump Administration has not communicated with his administration about their plan.

    “We have heard that they’re targeting as many as 2,000 people initially in the city of Chicago alone,” Pritzker said. “I don’t know whether they’ll effectuate that or how, and I want to be clear about what my position is and what the law is. If there are violent criminals who have been convicted of violent crimes, who are undocumented, they are supposed to be deported. That is the law of the United States and has been for quite a long time. I don’t want them in my state. I don’t want them in the country.”

    Pritzker said a visit to Pilsen and Little Village’s empty storefronts on Monday served as proof that Trump’s plan is once again stoking fear in Chicago’s immigrant neighborhoods.

    “I was in businesses yesterday that were relatively empty because people are afraid to show up,” Pritzker said. “Because even documented immigrants, even citizens who are from another country but now are citizens of the United States have relatives who are undocumented. They’re afraid. That is what this president is doing, and it’s wrong.”

    Speaking with CNN’s Dana Bash on Tuesday, Homan reiterated that he’s targeting people in the country lacking legal status who have a criminal conviction. He said he wants access to criminals in jails in sanctuary cities, to arrest them “in the safety and security of a county jail.”

    But Homan said U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers also plan to go into communities to find these criminals — and others may be arrested along with them.

    “We will find him, but when we find him, he may be with others. Others that don’t have a criminal conviction are in the country illegally. They will be arrested too,” Homan said. “So, there’s going to — there’s going to be more collateral arrests in sanctuary cities because they forced us to go in the community and find — and find the guy we’re looking for.”

    Homan also downplayed the attention on Chicago, despite his own claims in December at a GOP holiday party that the city would serve as ground zero for his plan.

    Contributing: Tom Schuba





    In a recent turn of events, Chicago was spared from immigration raids on Tuesday, but Governor J.B. Pritzker has issued a warning that federal officials may still be targeting around 2,000 individuals in the city.

    The news comes as a relief to many immigrant communities in Chicago, who have been living in fear of the recent crackdown on undocumented individuals by the Trump administration. However, Governor Pritzker is urging caution and vigilance, as the threat of raids still looms large.

    Pritzker emphasized the importance of protecting the rights and safety of all residents, regardless of their immigration status. He has vowed to work with local law enforcement agencies to ensure that everyone in Chicago feels safe and secure in their homes.

    As the situation continues to unfold, it is crucial for immigrant communities to stay informed and aware of their rights. Resources and support are available for those who may be affected by potential raids, and it is important to seek help if needed.

    Overall, while Chicago may have been spared from immigration raids on Tuesday, the fight for immigrant rights and justice is far from over. Stay tuned for further updates and continue to stand in solidarity with those who are most vulnerable in our communities. #ImmigrantRights #ChicagoStrong

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  • Internal Memos Instruct New York City Government Employees to Block ICE Raids


    As President Donald Trump repealed years of precedent strongly discouraging immigration raids in schools, houses of worship, hospitals and other “sensitive locations,” Mayor Eric Adams on Tuesday declined to explain how the city will respond if federal agents start showing up at city facilities. 

    But behind the scenes it’s a different story, with local government agency heads in the last few days distributing advisories instructing staff to block access to any non-local law enforcement, even if presented with a judicial warrant. City employees were ordered instead to contact city lawyers who must authorize access.

    Staff at the Department of Citywide Administrative Services (DCAS), for example, got a universal “all staff reminder” Friday requiring them to contact the agency’s general counsel if any non-federal law enforcement agent — including from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Customs and Border Protection (CBP) or the FBI — show up demanding access to facilities managed by DCAS.



    In a shocking turn of events, internal memos have surfaced revealing that New York City government employees have been instructed to actively block ICE raids within the city. This directive comes amidst growing tensions between federal immigration enforcement agencies and local governments.

    The memos, which were leaked to the media, instruct employees to refuse entry to ICE agents without a warrant and to report any ICE activity to city officials immediately. The goal of these memos is to protect undocumented immigrants living in New York City from deportation and to uphold the city’s status as a sanctuary city.

    This move has sparked controversy and debate among city officials, with some applauding the decision to protect immigrant communities and others criticizing the potential legal ramifications of defying federal immigration authorities.

    As the debate continues to unfold, it is clear that tensions between local and federal government regarding immigration enforcement are at an all-time high. Stay tuned for further developments on this story.

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  • What we know about Trump’s mass deportation plans and ICE raids after immigration executive orders


    Two days after President Donald Trump signed a raft of executive orders cracking down on immigration, arrests by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers appear to remain along the lines of “routine operations” and not part of a large scale raid in any one place, a source familiar with operations told NBC News.  

    Trump’s designated border czar, Tom Homan, told Fox News on Wednesday that ICE had conducted 308 arrests across the country. 

    For comparison, in September of 2024, the latest month for which data is available, ICE arrested 282 migrants per day.

    The source said the arrests targeted criminals, but could not say whether migrants without criminal convictions were arrested as “collateral arrests.”

    The actions come in the days after officials in major cities friendly to migrants, such as Chicago, Denver and Minneapolis, anticipated ICE major raids of immigrant communities.

    The Department of Homeland Security said Tuesday it was ending a policy that restricted Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents’ ability to arrest undocumented people at or near so-called sensitive locations, including houses of worship, schools and hospitals.

    NBC News reported last month that the Trump administration would roll back the restriction, which had been in place since the Obama administration. It was continued during the first Trump administration and expanded by the Biden administration to include areas like domestic violence and disaster relief shelters. The restriction discouraged immigration actions from those areas without approval from supervisors in the interest of public safety.

    “Criminals will no longer be able to hide in America’s schools and churches to avoid arrest. The Trump Administration will not tie the hands of our brave law enforcement, and instead trusts them to use common sense,” DHS said in a statement announcing the decision Tuesday.

    Whether and how that will play out in major sanctuary cities like Chicago is yet to be seen.

    “It’s a lot of rhetoric designed to fear and terrorize people, especially immigrants,” said the Rev. Beth Brown of Lincoln Park Presbyterian Church in Chicago. “If they don’t have a signed judicial warrant, they still cannot enter church buildings or faith community buildings, because it’s not just churches — it’s all houses of worship.”

    DHS also officially reinstated Migrant Protection Protocols, or what was commonly known as the “Remain in Mexico” policy, which had asylum-seekers wait in Mexico until they were scheduled to appear before immigration judges in the United States.

    Mexican Foreign Minister Juan Ramón de la Fuente said the United States made the decision to reinstate Remain in Mexico “unilaterally” and that it was not part of an agreement with Mexico.

    Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum told reporters Tuesday that Mexico has its “own migratory policies” and will engage in future discussions with U.S. agencies about the matter.

    Will there be ICE raids? 

    Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, told Fox News on Tuesday that there would be “targeted enforcement action,” which is similar to what ICE already does throughout the country every day. NBC News asked Homan how those operations would be different.

    “We have more people assigned to the mission,” he said. He declined to say how many people had been assigned.

    The Justice Department issued a memo Tuesday with a series of directives instructing Justice Department officials to significantly overhaul its approach to immigration enforcement and prioritize identifying illegal immigrants and prosecuting immigration violations. 

    The memo orders the FBI, DEA, ATF, the U.S. Marshals and the Bureau of Prisons to “review their files for identifying information and/or biometric data relating to non-citizens located illegally in the United States.”

    It also instructs officials to investigate for potential prosecution any state or local officials who resist the enforcement of federal immigration laws, and it directs the Civil Division to examine possible legal action against states or cities with laws barring officials from cooperating with immigration enforcement officers.

    There is no precedent for prosecuting state or local officials who are deemed to have resisted federal immigration enforcement.

    Where could they be?

    While the Trump administration has not said where the first raids will take place, officials familiar with discussions about possible targets say they will be arresting migrants in major metropolitan cities first. Some of the locations under consideration include the Washington, D.C., area, Denver, Los Angeles, Chicago and New York. 

    What’s next for Trump’s promises of mass deportation?

    The Trump administration is sending 1,500 more troops to the southern border, including helicopter crews and intelligence analysts, Acting Secretary of Defense Robert Salesses said in a statement Wednesday.

    “This represents a 60 percent increase in active-duty ground forces since President Trump was sworn in Monday,” he said.

    Salesses added that the department would be conducting a military airlift to deport more than 5,000 people detained by Customs and Border Protection in San Diego, Calif., and El Paso, Texas.

    It is not clear what parts of the government the troops will come from or what their aim will be, according to a defense official and a senior White official.

    Trump will most likely have to secure more funding from Congress to make good on his promises for mass deportations. He pledged in his inaugural address to deport “millions and millions” of immigrants back to their home countries. But ICE is already short $230 million to fund its current level of deportations, which removed over 230,000 migrants last year.

    In his Day One executive orders, Trump declared a national emergency and ordered the military to help expand detention space and help transport migrants to use Defense Department funding on deportations.



    President Trump’s immigration executive orders have sparked fears of mass deportations and increased ICE raids across the country. Here is what we know about these plans:

    1. The executive orders signed by President Trump call for the hiring of 10,000 additional immigration officers and the expansion of detention facilities to accommodate the increased number of individuals being detained.

    2. The orders also prioritize the removal of undocumented immigrants who have been convicted of crimes, but they also broaden the definition of what constitutes a criminal offense, potentially putting more individuals at risk of deportation.

    3. ICE has already begun conducting raids in various cities, targeting undocumented immigrants who have been ordered to leave the country but have not complied with the order. These raids have sparked fear and anxiety within immigrant communities.

    4. The Trump administration has also threatened to cut federal funding to so-called “sanctuary cities” that limit cooperation with federal immigration authorities, further escalating tensions between the federal government and local governments.

    Overall, the mass deportation plans and increased ICE raids are part of President Trump’s broader crackdown on illegal immigration. The impact of these policies on immigrant communities and the country as a whole remains to be seen, but they have already generated significant controversy and concern.

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    #Trumps #mass #deportation #plans #ICE #raids #immigration #executive #orders

  • Trump Border Czar Denounces Leak On Chicago Immigration Raids, Says No Decision Made Yet


    CHICAGO — Incoming President Donald Trump’s “border czar” Tom Homan is hesitating to carry out a leaked plan to flood Chicago with immigration officers during the president-elect’s first week in office, he said in an interview with the Washington Post Saturday.

    Homan, the former acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, told the Washington Post he “hasn’t made a decision yet” regarding a plan first reported by the Wall Street Journal and New York Times to send 150-200 ICE officers to the city as soon as Tuesday.

    “We’re looking at this leak and will make a decision based on this leak,” Homan told the Washington Post. “It’s unfortunate because anyone leaking law enforcement operations puts officers at greater risk.”

    He went on to say he didn’t know “why Chicago was mentioned specifically” and explained the incoming administration’s intended scope was far broader than just Chicago.

    The “Operation Safeguard” plan was slated to launch the day after Trump’s inauguration and run until the following Monday, according to two unnamed current federal agents and a former official who spoke with the New York Times. Now, Homan wants to make it clear that ICE’s commitment to specifically target undocumented immigrants with criminal records or who have evaded deportation in the past will be a “nationwide thing,” he said to the Washington Post.

    “ICE will start arresting public safety threats and national security threats on day one,” he said. “We’ll be arresting people across the country, uninhibited by prior administration’s guidelines. … We’re not sweeping neighborhoods. We have a targeted enforcement plan.”

    The Trump administration is gearing up for what it says will be the largest mass-deportation operation in United States history. An executive order declaring a state of emergency on the southern border will most likely be signed on Monday, Trump’s first day in office, according to Politico.

    Previous announcements of big raids by the Trump administration created panic, but did not lead to mass deportations. In 2019, 2,000 migrants were targeted in raids across the country, but only 35 were actually arrested, the Times reported.

    The Congressional Hispanic Caucus released a statement Sunday denouncing the Trump administration’s “unconstitutional” deportation aspirations, saying ICE raids violate a person’s Fourth Amendment rights against unlawful searches and seizures.

    “We recognize the profound anxiety, fear and apprehension these actions bring to our communities,” the caucus said. “The CHC is committed to serving as a resource and advocate for all families impacted by the unconstitutional actions of the incoming administration, and we will continue to fight for the rights, safety and the dignity of all communities.”

    Meanwhile, Homan condemned the people who leaked the operation and declined to comment on whether or not there was a specific plan to send ICE agents to Chicago, opting to defer to regional ICE officials.

    Just last month, Homan announced mass deportations efforts would “start right here in Chicago” at an event on the Northwest Side, prompting widespread backlash across the city.

    Mayor Brandon Johnson was absent from a Saturday morning press conference addressing the Trump administration’s targeting of Chicago, but touted his administration’s dedication to progressive values in an X post on Sunday.

    “Chicago stands strong: regardless of the circumstances, our commitment to protecting and supporting this city remains unwavering. We will continue to fight for the justice and safety of all who call this place home,” he said.

    The back-and-forth frenzy comes after Chicago stood by its Sanctuary City status in a 39-11 City Council vote against changes on Wednesday, meaning local law enforcement still cannot assist ICE officials with deportations or raids. That doesn’t mean ICE agents can’t conduct operations within Chicago city limits, though.

    Prior to Homan’s confirmation that plans to raid Chicago weren’t set in stone yet, Ald. Andre Vasquez (40th) told Block Club he and other city officials were privately doubting the Trump administration’s ability to mobilize ICE so soon after taking office.

    ”I don’t believe [the Trump administration] really has the resources to really amp up the way they’re starting to, but they want people to believe a big change is happening,” Vasquez explained. “It is really all about the communication and messaging.”

    Anyone has the right to refuse an ICE agent entry, even undocumented immigrants. Read more about what immigrant communities should know about their rights here.


    Listen to the Block Club Chicago podcast:





    In a recent statement, Trump’s newly appointed Border Czar has denounced a leak regarding potential immigration raids in Chicago. The official stated that no decision has been made yet regarding the raids and that any leaked information should be taken with caution.

    This announcement comes amidst growing concerns and tensions surrounding immigration policies in the United States. The leaked information had sparked fear and anxiety within the immigrant community in Chicago, prompting swift action from the Border Czar to clarify the situation.

    The Border Czar emphasized the importance of following proper procedures and protocols when discussing potential immigration enforcement actions. They also encouraged the public to refrain from spreading unverified information that could cause unnecessary panic and confusion.

    As the situation continues to develop, it is crucial for all parties involved to remain calm and await official updates from the appropriate authorities. The Border Czar has assured that any decisions regarding immigration raids in Chicago will be made with careful consideration and in accordance with the law.

    Stay tuned for further updates on this developing story.

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