Crime & Safety

Kristi Noem Joins IL ICE Raid, U.S. Citizens Arrested By Mistake: Reports

In recent days, ICE agents took several into custody in Elgin amid its "Midway Blitz" operation in the Chicago area.

On Tuesday, ICE busted through the front door of a home in the 900 block of Chippewa Drive in Elgin just before 5:30 a.m. and took at least one U.S. citizen into custody, according to media reports. Two of the six roommates at the home were released.
On Tuesday, ICE busted through the front door of a home in the 900 block of Chippewa Drive in Elgin just before 5:30 a.m. and took at least one U.S. citizen into custody, according to media reports. Two of the six roommates at the home were released. (U.S ​Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem via X)

ELGIN, IL — U.S Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem joined armed ICE agents who used military vehicles, helicopters, bright lights and smoke bombs in a raid during the early morning hours Tuesday.

During the raid, ICE busted through the front door of a home in the 900 block of Chippewa Drive in Elgin just before 5:30 a.m. and took at least one U.S. citizen into custody, according to media reports. Two of the six roommates at the home were released following questioning by ICE, and four others were detained.

I told them I was a U.S. citizen, that my ID was in my wallet,” Joe Botello told the Chicago Sun-Times. He said federal agents woke him early Tuesday, put him in handcuffs and lead him out of his home before eventually releasing him.

Find out what's happening in Elginfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

A second U.S. citizen was also arrested during the raid, according to several media reports.

Botello is among the men shown on a video shared by Noem, who joined the operation on Tuesday.

Find out what's happening in Elginfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

"President Trump has been clear: if politicians will not put the safety of their citizens first, this administration will. I was on the ground in Chicago today to make clear we are not backing down," Noem said in a statement posted on X.

The ICE operation was one of many that happened in the Elgin area in recent days.

On Monday, ICE took a known gang member, who was convicted in 2005 of killing Fernando Diaz Jr., 21, into custody, according to a news release from ICE. He was released from prison on Sept. 12 after serving a 20-year sentence.

ICE Chicago filed an immigration detainer with the Stateville Correctional Center, where Salazar was being housed prior to his release, but "state officials refused to transfer him directly to ICE custody," according to ICE officials. Under the Illinois TRUST Act, local law enforcement is generally prohibited from cooperating with federal immigration authorities to detain or deport undocumented immigrants.

"Salazar was locked away in one of Illinois’ maximum-security prisons for two decades for murder, but the state saw fit to release him despite the fact that he had a final order of removal from a Department of Justice immigration judge dated Sept. 26, 2016," acting ICE Director Todd M. Lyons said in a statement. "Sanctuary policies, by design, protect criminals — and in this case, a murderer — over the safety of American communities. Luckily, ICE was there to effectuate his lawful arrest and removal from the streets."

The arrests this past week are a part of the Department of Homeland Security "Midway Blitz" operation, which includes all of Illinois as well as Lake County, Indiana. The operation is currently focused on the Chicago area and suburbs and law enforcement taking part in the blitz are from ICE, the U.S. Marshall's Office, the DEA and the ATF.

Also read: Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson's Order Protects Protesters' First Amendment Rights Amid Rising ICE Presence

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