Police scuffle with protesters outside Chicago ICE facility, arrest several
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Police taking a demonstrator into custody during a protest outside an immigrant processing and detention centre in Broadview, Illinois, on Oct 3.
PHOTO: AFP
Follow topic:
- Protests intensified outside a Chicago ICE facility due to increased immigration enforcement, with arrests made on October 3rd.
- Federal agents, led by Gregory Bovino, clashed with protesters, using force and leading to arrests, including an elderly woman.
- Broadview Mayor Katrina Thompson raised concerns about ICE's actions, including tear gas affecting residents and blocked emergency access.
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BROADVIEW, Illinois - Police arrested several people on Oct 3 as hundreds of demonstrators gathered outside a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in suburban Chicago that has been the focus of protests since a federal immigration enforcement surge began in September.
Tensions have been high in recent weeks in Chicago as the administration of US President Donald Trump has ramped up his efforts to deport immigrants living in the US illegally, arresting many without criminal records.
This week, Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker said the Trump administration had requested the Pentagon to send troops to the Democratic-run state.
Outside the detention facility in Broadview, behind barriers erected by ICE, protesters initially stood peacefully on Oct 3, singing Christian hymns and Jewish morning songs.
Then, Mr Gregory Bovino, the US Customs and Border Protection commander who is leading the federal enforcement effort in Chicago, arrived with agents in gas masks and armoured vehicles.
Protesters began jeering and scuffling with police, some shouting obscenities.
Illinois State Police officers, some carrying rifles, night vision goggles and clubs, made several arrests, including of an elderly woman, who appeared to hyperventilate as she was shoved to the ground and handcuffed.
“It’s outrageous. I’m just out here silently protesting and they’re pushing us off the street and sidewalk, and they’re using violence against us,” said Mr Kevin Ryan, a US Marine Corps veteran and Democratic US Senate candidate.
An Illinois State Police spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
A federal law enforcement officer standing next to a sniper rifle on the roof of the immigrant processing and detention centre in Broadview, Illinois.
PHOTO: AFP
Escalating protests
People in the Chicago area have staged repeated protests condemning the stepped-up federal presence, and the facility in Broadview, a majority-black village about 20km west of Chicago, has become a focus of them.
On at least four occasions, about a dozen demonstrators sitting on the ground attempting to block ICE vehicles from carrying detainees into the facility have been repelled by heavily armed ICE agents using physical force, chemical munitions and rubber bullets, evoking combat scenes.
Protesters have decried what they call similar heavy-handed policing in other Democratic-run cities, including New York, Los Angeles, Washington, and Portland, Oregon.
Protesters clash with police officers.
PHOTO: JAMIE KELTER DAVIS
Attorney-General Pam Bondi ordered Department of Justice officials on Sept 29 to “defend ICE facilities, specifically in Portland and Chicago.”
At Broadview, masked ICE agents have regularly fired volleys of rubber bullets, tear gas and pepper powder into the crowd.
Broadview Mayor Katrina Thompson said earlier this week that the clouds of tear gas were affecting residents who lived near the facility, and that a fence ICE had erected without village approval was blocking access for emergency vehicles.
Police take a demonstrator into custody.
PHOTO: AFP
The city’s police department has opened two criminal investigations into ICE officers’ actions at the facility, including allegedly targeting the vehicle of a local TV news reporter.
“We will not allow sanctuary politicians or violent rioters to stop us from enforcing the law,” Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said on Oct 1. REUTERS

