Using helicopters and chemical agents, immigration agents become
increasingly aggressive in Chicago
[October 06, 2025]
By SOPHIA TAREEN
CHICAGO (AP) — Storming an apartment complex by helicopter as families
slept. Deploying chemical agents near a public school. Handcuffing a
Chicago City Council member at a hospital.
Activists, residents and leaders say increasingly combative tactics used
by federal immigration agents are sparking violence and fueling
neighborhood tensions in the nation’s third-largest city.
“They are the ones that are making it a war zone,” Illinois Gov. JB
Pritzker said Sunday on CNN. “They fire tear gas and smoke grenades, and
they make it look like it’s a war zone.”
More than 1,000 immigrants have been arrested since an immigration
crackdown started last month in the Chicago area. The Trump
administration has also vowed to deploy National Guard troops in its
agenda to boost deportations.
But U.S. citizens, immigrants with legal status and children have been
among those detained in increasingly brazen and aggressive encounters
which pop up daily across neighborhoods in the city of 2.7 million and
its many suburbs.
Arriving by helicopter
Activists and residents were taking stock Sunday at an apartment
building on Chicago’s South Side where the Department of Homeland
Security said 37 immigrants were arrested recently in an operation
that's raised calls for investigation by Pritzker.
While federal agents have mostly focused on immigrant-heavy and Latino
enclaves, the operation early Tuesday unfolded in the largely Black
South Shore neighborhood that’s had a small influx of migrants resettled
in Chicago while seeking asylum.

Agents used unmarked trucks and a helicopter to surround the five-story
apartment building. NewsNation, which was invited to observe the
operation, reported agents “rappelled from Black Hawk helicopters.”
Agents then went door to door, woke up residents and used zip ties to
restrain them.
Residents and the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights,
which canvassed the area, said those who were zip tied included children
and U.S. citizens.
Rodrick Johnson, a U.S. citizen briefly detained, said agents broke
through his door and placed him in zip ties.
“I asked if they had a warrant, and I asked for a lawyer," the
67-year-old told the Chicago Sun-Times. "They never brought one.”
Dixon Romero with Southside Together, an organization that’s also been
helping residents, said doors were knocked off the hinges.
“Everyone we talked to didn’t feel safe,” he said. “This is not normal.
It’s not OK. It’s not right.”
Pritzker, a two-term Democrat, directed state agencies to investigate
claims that children were zip tied and detained separately from their
parents, saying “military-style tactics” shouldn’t be used on children.
Several Democratic members of the Illinois congressional delegation met
near the site Sunday, calling for an end to immigration raids.
DHS officials said they were targeting connections to the Tren de Aragua
gang. Without offering details on arrests or addressing how children
were treated, DHS said “some of the targeted subjects are believed to be
involved in drug trafficking and distribution, weapons crimes, and
immigration violators.”
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on Saturday posted
heavily edited video clips of the operation to X showing agents blasting
through doors, helicopters and adults in zip ties, but music played over
most of the roughly 1 minute video.
Agency officials did not return a message left Sunday.
Brandon Lee, with ICIRR, said while some residents were placed on ankle
monitors, others remained unaccounted for.

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Federal officers stand guard in the Brighton Park neighborhood of
Chicago, on Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025, after protesters learned that
U.S. Border Patrol shot a woman Saturday morning on Chicago's
Southwest Side. (Anthony Vazquez/Chicago Sun-Times via AP)

More tear gas and smoke bombs
Meanwhile, the use of chemical agents has become more frequent and
visible in the past week. Used initially to manage protesters,
agents used it this week on city streets and during immigration
operations, according to ICIRR.
An emergency hotline to report immigrant agent sightings topped 800
calls on Friday, the same day activists said agents threw a
cannister of a chemical near a school in the city’s Logan Square
neighborhood. The activity in the northwest side neighborhood
prompted nearby Funston Elementary School to hold recess indoors.
The same day Chicago Alderperson Jessie Fuentes was placed in
handcuffs at a hospital. She said she asked agents to show a warrant
for a person who'd broken his leg while chased by ICE agents who
then transported him to the emergency room.
“ICE acted like an invading army in our neighborhoods,” said state
Rep. Lilian Jiménez, a Democrat. “Helicopters hovered above our
homes, terrifying families and disturbing the peace of our
community. These shameful and lawless actions are not only a
violation of constitutional rights but of our most basic liberty:
the right to live free from persecution and fear.”
Immigration agents shot a woman they allege was armed and tried to
run them over after agents were “boxed in by 10 cars.” She and
another person were charged Sunday with forcibly assaulting,
impeding and interfering with a federal law enforcement officer.
However, activists said immigration agents caused the multi-vehicle
crash and detained the woman, who is a U.S. citizen.
Noem has defended the aggressive tactics, calling the mission
treacherous to agents and alleging threats on officers’ lives.
“It’s an extremely dangerous situation,” she said Sunday on the “Fox
& Friends” weekend show.
Going to court
Leaders of a Chicago suburb that’s home to an immigration processing
center have taken their fight against federal agents to court.
The village of Broadview has become a front line in the immigration
operation. The center in the community of 8,000 people is where
immigrants are processed for detention or deportation.

Protests outside have become tense with near daily arrests. Civil
rights organizations have blasted aggressive tactics by agents,
while village officials have launched three separate criminal
investigations against federal agents.
City officials have demanded the federal government remove an 8-foot
fence they say was “illegally” put up outside the facility. They
filed a federal lawsuit Friday seek a temporary restraining order
and the immediate removal of the fence they say blocks fire access.
“The fence also constitutes an immediate public safety hazard,” the
lawsuit said.
Also pending is an expected ruling on alleged violations of a 2022
consent decree on how federal immigration agents can make arrests in
six states including Illinois. While the order expired in May,
attorneys have sought an extension and filed dozens of more alleged
violations in the past month.
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Associated Press writer Ali Swenson contributed to this story from
New York.
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