(CHICAGO) On the Southwest Side and beyond, corner tamales and elotes stands have thinned as federal agents carry out an aggressive sweep known as Operation Midway Blitz. Launched in early September 2025 under President Trump, the surge has sent hundreds of Homeland Security personnel into Chicago, prompting many immigrants—and the street vendors who help define their neighborhoods—to stay home. Advocates say the chill is visible block by block, with familiar carts gone and customers asking if it’s safe to step outside.
City officials say the operation targets those with criminal records, but community groups report a wider dragnet. Since the start of the operation, at least four people have been arrested in Chicago, all on criminal charges—aggravated assault of a minor, domestic battery, and armed robbery. The Department of Homeland Security has not publicly clarified the current status of those arrested.

Immigrant rights organizations argue the enforcement wave feels broader than the charges suggest, and that fear has spread fast in Latino and Black immigrant neighborhoods. The timing matters: the sweep follows a 2025 Supreme Court decision that permits broader immigration-related stops and allows agents to consider race as a factor. Supporters call the ruling a course correction; critics call it a green light for racial profiling.
In a city with 69,484 Black immigrants from African countries and large Latino communities, the ruling has raised alarms about overpolicing and wrongful detentions. Policy researchers caution that a numbers-first approach to deportations can weaken due process and deepen mistrust, especially in Black and brown communities.
Local political response and public reaction
As enforcement expanded, Mayor Brandon Johnson signed an executive order directing Chicago police not to cooperate with ICE, reaffirming the city’s long-standing sanctuary policy. Governor JB Pritzker condemned the federal push across Illinois. Both moves echo years of sanctuary measures in the city and state.
Yet fear on the street has not eased. Residents describe empty sidewalks at night, quieter bus stops, and missing vendors who often serve as informal hubs of community life. “These detentions appear to be random,” said Rey Wences of the Illinois Coalition of Immigrant and Refugee Rights, “with agents profiling and approaching individuals in the community on the streets.”
The decline in public life lands on an economy still trying to keep small businesses afloat. When vendors disappear, cash flow dries up, along with the cultural heartbeat that street food brings to many blocks. Some shop owners say their workers are calling in sick or asking for fewer hours. Others are closing early.
Chicago’s overall crime picture adds a twist: homicides fell 31% in the first eight months of 2025 compared with the previous year, reaching a modern low. Still, that has not tempered the sense of risk for noncitizen families who worry any stop could lead to detention.
Community organizing and rapid response
Local organizers have mobilized about 30 rapid response teams statewide to track federal activity and help people learn their rights. They report patrols around transit hubs, outside grocery stores, and near schools.
- Latino neighborhoods on the Southwest Side show the sharpest drop in street activity, though impacts ripple across the map.
- Black immigrant residents describe a mix of desensitization—rooted in past overpolicing—and solidarity with Latino neighbors facing the current wave.
“It has never been about apprehending the worst offenders,” said Alderwomaneyl Gutirez of the 14th Ward. “It is about instilling fear in our communities.”
Alternatives to Detention and surveillance trends
Behind the scenes, the enforcement system is also tightening.
- Chicago’s ICE office is the country’s top user of ankle monitors in Alternatives-to-Detention programs, with 3,259 people tracked as of late July 2025.
- Nationwide, the ATD program dipped from 185,824 in May to 182,799 in July.
While monitors allow some people to live at home, they also bind families to check-ins and tracking that can disrupt work and school. According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, the heavy use of electronic monitoring in Chicago reflects an enforcement model that stretches beyond jail walls, reshaping daily life for thousands.
Trump administration orders this year authorized the National Guard and boosted federal action in sanctuary cities, including Chicago, while federal officials pressed states to open more detention beds. Advocacy groups say the expanded footprint increases the chance of errors and misidentifications, especially under a Supreme Court standard that gives wider discretion during stops.
Valerie Lacarte of the Migration Policy Institute warns that a drive to produce more deportations can sideline due process and public safety goals. That tension is now on full display in neighborhoods where street vendors often operate in the open, making them easy to find—and easy to scare away.
Policy moves and legal backdrop
Chicago’s sanctuary stance dates to 1985, and Illinois passed statewide protections in 2017. Those rules limit local cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.
In early September 2025:
- Mayor Brandon Johnson’s executive order doubled down on the sanctuary approach, instructing city police not to coordinate with ICE.
- Governor JB Pritzker publicly opposed the federal surge, arguing it disrupts local priorities and community trust.
At the federal level, new executive actions under President Trump in 2025 expanded enforcement in sanctuary jurisdictions and increased pressure for detention space. The Supreme Court’s 2025 ruling, which allows ICE to consider race as a factor during enforcement, looms over daily encounters. Community groups say that standard has fueled accusations of racial profiling.
Federal officers have also stepped up use of Alternatives to Detention tools. Chicago leads the country in ankle monitor usage—a trend that can keep families together but adds a layer of surveillance. ICE argues monitoring helps track people who do not pose flight risks while court cases move forward. Critics say the devices are stigmatizing and can feel like house arrest, especially when check-ins interrupt work shifts.
For background on ATD, readers can review the ICE overview: https://www.ice.gov/about-ice/ero/alternatives-to-detention.
Amid the surge, the Department of Homeland Security has not released detailed updates on recent arrests or how agents choose whom to stop. Advocates introduced hotlines and rapid response teams to fill the information gap. They’re advising residents to keep documents in a safe place, avoid opening doors to unknown visitors, and ask to see judicial warrants.
The city’s Office of New Americans and local legal aid groups are fielding calls from families who want to plan for childcare and power of attorney in case a parent is detained. Street vendors, meanwhile, are weighing whether to return to popular corners or switch to delivery and preorders to limit exposure.
Community response and practical guidance
To reduce panic and help people stay safe, local organizations are sharing a straightforward set of steps:
- Know Your Rights
- Do not open the door to ICE unless agents present a warrant signed by a judge with your name and address.
- You have the right to remain silent. You do not have to answer questions about where you were born or your status.
- You can ask to speak to a lawyer and not sign any documents without legal advice.
- Report ICE Activity
- Call trusted hotlines set up by immigrant rights groups to report sightings of federal agents in your area.
- Rapid response teams will try to verify the report, document the event, and connect families to support.
- Seek Legal Help
- Contact local legal aid for guidance if someone is detained.
- Ask about screenings for relief, including options that may apply to victims of crime or people with long ties to the United States 🇺🇸.
- Build Community Support
- Join neighborhood meetings and online forums that share real-time updates.
- Check on neighbors who are street vendors or work outdoors and may face contact with agents during early morning hours.
Street vendors remain a focal point. Their absence carries economic and cultural costs:
- Many are sole providers who rely on daily cash sales to pay rent and buy groceries.
- When they stay home, households lose income immediately and customers lose everyday contact that knits communities together.
- Regulars report eerie quiet on some corners and rumors of agents nearby on others.
Organizers urge residents to rely on verified reports rather than social media clips without dates or locations.
Impact on schools, clinics, and public life
Officials say they are tracking impacts on schools and clinics. Reports have emerged of:
- Parents keeping children home
- Missed medical appointments
- Lower turnout at some public events
Community groups remind families that public schools and hospitals provide core services and are central to family stability. The City of Chicago’s Office of New Americans is promoting legal clinics and rights workshops while advising residents to carry emergency contact cards and avoid carrying foreign IDs when possible.
The political debate remains heated. Supporters of the operation argue that federal officers are arresting people with criminal records and that communities want safer streets. Critics point to the broader pattern—mobile teams, ankle monitors, and open-ended stops—and say it amounts to intimidation. The context of budget strains also looms: a 2024 lawsuit spotlighted about $30 million in taxpayer funds for migrant housing since 2022, intensifying tough conversations about resources.
What’s next
Community leaders warn that Operation Midway Blitz is ongoing, and groups expect more activity as federal resources continue to arrive. Organizers are expanding rapid response coverage, legal education, and support for families—including help with school pickups if a caregiver is detained.
Policy experts expect legal challenges to continue against the Supreme Court framework and federal tactics. For now, the guidance is simple:
Know your rights, keep calm, and stay connected to trusted networks.
If people keep avoiding public spaces, the city’s famed street food scene could fade, taking with it jobs and traditions. If enforcement narrows and communication improves, some trust might return. For now, Chicago’s street vendors carry the cost of uncertainty. Neighbors who miss the morning tamales and afternoon fruit cups say they understand the pause—they’re hoping the familiar carts roll back soon—and that when they do, the people behind them can work without fear.
This Article in a Nutshell
Operation Midway Blitz, launched in early September 2025, has deployed hundreds of Homeland Security agents across Chicago, prompting fear and a reduction in public street activity, especially among Latino and Black immigrant communities. While federal officials assert the operation targets individuals with criminal records, advocates report a broader dragnet and at least four arrests on serious criminal charges in the city. Chicago leads the nation in ankle-monitor use within Alternatives-to-Detention programs, with 3,259 people monitored as of late July 2025. The surge follows a 2025 Supreme Court decision permitting broader immigration stops and consideration of race, raising concerns about racial profiling, due process, and erosion of community trust. Local leaders reinforced sanctuary protections, and organizers set up about 30 rapid-response teams and hotlines to document activity and provide legal help. The enforcement wave has economic and cultural effects: fewer street vendors, reduced cash flow for small businesses, missed appointments, and quieter public spaces. Policy experts expect continued legal challenges and caution that a numbers-driven deportation approach can undermine public safety goals and deepen mistrust.