ICE Chicago news: Judge considers releasing hundreds arrested in Chicago immigration operation 'Midway Blitz'
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In Chicago, tensions rise as a federal judge deliberates the possible release of numerous individuals detained by federal agents during a recent immigration crackdown. This operation has sent shockwaves through the Chicago area, leaving communities on edge.

The National Immigrant Justice Center has stepped forward, representing hundreds of undocumented immigrants who were apprehended by federal immigration authorities. The center contends that these arrests breached a consent decree, which is enforced not only in Illinois but also in five neighboring states. This decree restricts the conditions under which agents can make arrests without warrants when enforcing civil immigration laws.

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In the upcoming court session scheduled for this Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Cummings is set to provide further guidance on whether he will grant “equitable relief.” Such relief could entail ordering the federal agents to release the detainees under alternative measures to detention. These measures might include participation in ankle monitor programs or regular virtual check-ins with immigration officials through mobile applications.

Just last month, Judge Cummings determined that the agents had indeed violated the terms of the 2022 Castañon Nava settlement, a consent decree specifically addressing warrantless arrests in the Chicago region. This ruling has sparked discussions on the legal boundaries of federal immigration enforcement and the rights of undocumented individuals.

Last month, Judge Cummings ruled agents had violated a previously agreed-upon consent decree over warrantless arrests in the Chicago area known as the 2022 Castañon Nava settlement.

Since that ruling, attorneys on both sides of the case have been working to identify how many people arrested by immigration agents this year violated the previously agreed-upon consent decree.

As part of that consent decree, ICE agreed to certain conditions for arresting someone in the Chicago area without a warrant, including pre-determining whether there is probable cause to believe the person is in the country illegally, and whether they are also a flight risk; two requirements that immigrant advocates say have been flouted in hundreds cases, including the recent arrest at a Chicago day care.

Diana Patricia Santillana Galeano was detained by federal agents and dragged out of the Rayito de Sol’s Spanish-language immersion day care on Chicago’s North Side on Nov. 5 in front of other parents and children.

A DHS spokesperson said Santillana Galeano fled a traffic stop and ran into the day care.

The arrest sparked outrage from the community.

“We had masked ICE agents following a day care educator into the day care, where there were parents, there were children,” 47th Ward Alderman Matt Martin said the night of Santillana Galeano’s arrest.

Santillana Galeano’s attorneys have since filed a habeas corpus petition in federal court, seeking her release on bond. A court date has yet to be set, her attorneys told the I-Team on Monday.

In her habeas petition, Santillana Galeano’s attorneys argued her arrest violated the Castañon Nava consent decree as agents arrested her in the day care without a warrant.

It’s cases like these that Mark Fleming of the National Immigrant Justice Center believes are happening daily.

“As we’re digging into it, we are very concerned that many, if not most [of ICE arrests], are violations of our consent decree,” Fleming told the I-Team.

Fleming said so far, the list of people arrested in violation of the consent decree has grown to more than 3,000 people.

“Our initial analysis is that it’s over 3,000 arrests,” Fleming told the I-Team. “We’ve started to dig into the case file that they produced to us, and the vast majority are violations. If they did not have a prior order of removal, in almost all circumstances, they’ve been uniformly violating the consent decree.”

So far, Fleming said that ICE has produced a list of 3,800 people, and U.S. Customs and Border Protection and Border Patrol has given a list of 1,200 people, but he stressed that there may be duplicate entries on both lists, so his team does not have a solid total figure yet. Also, those lists were only through the beginning of October, and do not include arrests in the last month.

Fleming has argued Judge Cummings has the ability to grant equitable relief in the form of releasing those arrested in violation of the consent decree.

“We had built in when we negotiated this with the government [in 2022], we were very clear that in the context of repeated material violations… that the court have the tools to provide any form of ‘equitable relief’ necessary, in order to fulfill the bargain that we entered into,” Fleming explained.

“The bargain was if you violate this, the individual be eligible for release,” Fleming said.

After reviewing arguments on both sides, ABC7 Chief Legal Analyst Gil Soffer said it may not be that simple.

“There’s not an obvious answer here,” Soffer said. “In the plaintiff’s favor, they have the language in the consent decree which empowers the court to exercise, really almost any equitable power.”

Soffer continued, “On the other side, there’s a statute that makes it very difficult for the district court, federal district court, to require the government to take or not take any action in the immigration space.”

Attorneys representing the Department of Homeland Security have argued that Congress stripped federal courts of their authority to grant parole to large groups of immigrants in ICE custody.

In their filings, government attorneys argue, “Congress has vested the authority to grant parole solely with the Secretary of Homeland Security… Federal courts cannot order the Department of Homeland Security to release any aliens on parole because Congress has stripped them of that authority.”

“There’s really a conflict of provisions here,” Soffer said, speaking to the statutory requirements.

In their review of people arrested by agents potentially in violation of the consent decree, Fleming said more than 1,000 people are no longer in the U.S., meaning they may have been deported already after signing voluntary removal orders.

“A lot of these folks have never had any interaction with law enforcement before, nor been subject to detention, and so it’s horrifying,” Fleming explained.

Fleming continued, “What we’ve raised to the court is if you don’t provide this interim relief, there will be no one left. At the end of this, we may find thousands of violations, but there may be no one left.”

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