New Chicago immigration campaign prompts confusion as city braces for
federal intervention
[September 09, 2025]
By SOPHIA TAREEN
CHICAGO (AP) — The Department of Homeland Security trumpeted the start
of a new immigration operation Monday in Chicago, stirring up fresh
confusion and anxiety as the city remained on alert for a federal
intervention President Donald Trump has touted for days.
Blasting so-called sanctuary laws in Chicago and Illinois, the latest
effort targets people without legal permission to live in the U.S. who
have criminal records. Like other Trump administration plans, it was
stamped with a splashy name, “Operation Midway Blitz,” and circulated on
social media with the mugshots of 11 foreign-born men it said should be
deported.
“This ICE operation will target the criminal illegal aliens who flocked
to Chicago and Illinois because they knew Governor (JB) Pritzker and his
sanctuary policies would protect them and allow them to roam free on
American streets,” said a statement from DHS.
Pritzker, who has been locked in a back-and-forth with Trump for days,
criticized the move. He and Mayor Brandon Johnson have defended the
state and city's extensive sanctuary laws which bar coordination between
local police and immigration agents. They’ve accused the Trump
administration of using scare tactics, particularly with Latino
residents in the nation’s third-largest city.
“Once again, this isn’t about fighting crime. That requires support and
coordination — yet we’ve experienced nothing like that over the past
several weeks,” Pritzker said in a statement. “Instead of taking steps
to work with us on public safety, the Trump administration’s focused on
scaring Illinoisians.”

Chicago has been bracing for an influx of immigration agents and
possibly the National Guard for two weeks. Numerous protests have
cropped up downtown, outside a suburban military base DHS plans to use
and at an immigration processing center that’s expected to be a hub of
activity.
Trump deployed the National Guard to Los Angeles over the summer and as
part of his unprecedented law enforcement takeover in Washington, D.C.,
where he has direct legal control. For the federal intervention in Los
Angeles, a judge deemed the National Guard deployment illegal, but the
Trump administration got a victory related to immigration enforcement
there when the U.S. Supreme Court lifted a restraining order barring
agents there from stopping people solely based on their race, language,
job or location.
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Masked people leave an immigration processing center Monday, Sept.
8, 2025, in Broadview, Ill., a suburb of Chicago. (AP Photo/Carolyn
Kaster)

U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the Senate's No. 2 Democrat,
rejected the latest operation announced in Chicago.
“These actions don’t make us safer," he said in a statement. “They
are a waste of money, stoke fear, and represent another failed
attempt at a distraction.”
It remained unclear what role Monday’s announced program would play
in a Chicago surge.
Adding to the confusion was a handful of immigration arrests over
the weekend in Chicago, which galvanized the city’s vocal activist
network and worries that it was the start of something bigger.
“This is about terrorizing our communities,” said Chicago City
Council member Jeylú Gutiérrez said. “But we will not be
intimidated.”
She and immigrant rights activists said that five people arrested
were “beloved community members.” Some were on their way to work
when arrested Sunday. Another works as a flower vendor.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement confirmed four arrests but
gave sparse information, noting criminal histories with previous
arrests and one conviction for driving under the influence.
“ICE has always operated in Chicago,” the agency said in a
statement. “We will continue our law enforcement and public safety
mission, undeterred, as we surge ICE resources in the city in
coordination with our federal partners.”
DHS said the operation announced Monday would be in honor of Katie
Abraham, one of two Illinois women killed in a January fatal car
crash. A grand jury indicted a 29-year-old man in the hit-and-run.
The Guatemalan national also faces federal false identification
crimes.
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