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CHICAGO () The increase in federal immigration agents and officers patrolling Chicago neighborhoods and the city’s downtown district will continue indefinitely as federal officials say they sense a “subtle” change in attitude from residents amid continued vocal opposition from leaders like Mayor Brandon Johnson.
U.S. Border Patrol commander-at-large Gregory Bovino told on Monday that Chicago residents can expect to continue to see federal officers “anywhere in Chicago” as a large-scale, multiagency federal focus on the region continues.
Bovino told Sunday that the operation will continue as long as it is needed, as he and other federal immigration officials insist they are making Chicago and its neighborhoods safer. That’s despite Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker saying their presence has nothing to do with public safety.
“I think he’s got a problem with crime,” Bovino told on Monday, citing Chicago’s 573 homicides in 2024. “I think he’s got a bigger problem than Greg Bovino downtown cleaning his city up because he sure hasn’t cleaned it up.”
Border Patrol agents were visibly noticeable in downtown Chicago on Sunday, as clashes between demonstrators and federal officers continued at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement processing center in suburban Broadview.
reported that multiple people, including a family, were detained by federal officers Sunday, with witnesses telling that a baby was crying as the arrests were made.
At a news conference on Monday, Pritzker directed his anger at Bovino and ICE for their presence in Chicago on Sunday and in recent weeks. Pritzker said his officer received numerous confirmed reports of ICE and Customs and Border Protection officers “abusing their power,” intimidating innocent people and waging war on local neighborhoods.
Pritzker said that the Illinois National Guard received a memo announcing that the Department of Homeland Security has asked the Department of War to deploy 100 troops to be deployed to Chicago to protect ICE officers and facilities.
“What I have been warning of is now being realized,” Pritzker said at a news conference on Monday. “One thing is clear. None of what Trump is doing is making Illinois safer.”
Border Patrol Commander defends agents’ interaction as legal and ethical
Bovino said that while arrests were made during the downtown patrols on Sunday, many more “in-depth encounters” took place that did not lead to people being taken into federal custody. A Border Patrol official told on Sunday that eight arrests were made and that two people were detained until their paperwork was verified.
The two detainees were permanent residents, but were not carrying their required immigration documents. One the detainees were verified, they were given citations and were released, the agency told .

Pritzker, referencing a Chicago Sun-Times report, said that Bovino admitted on the record to admitting to arresting people “based on how you look.”
“That’s the baseline,” Pritzker said, adding that ICE is arresting tamale vendors and delivery drivers and “shaking down families” and “harrassing people for not being white.”
Bovino told early Monday that comments made to the newspaper were taken out of context and was “grossly inaccurate.”
Bovino told that agents use a myriad of “articulable facts” that, when combined with agents’ field experience, known intelligence and the observed demeanor of those encountered by agents, determine whether enough reasonable suspicion exists to take a person into federal custody.

Many of those that Border Patrol agents spoke with Sunday were legally documented residents, such as green-card holders and those holding valid immigration documents, Bovino said. Pritzker and other elected officials have accused federal immigration officials, including White House border czar Tom Homan, of racially profiling potential targets based on their skin color and accent as Pritzker inferred on Monday.
Despite the allegation, however, Bovino insists that agents working in Chicago are carrying out their duties in a “legal, ethical and moral” manner that is used by Border Patrol in its everyday operations across the United States.
“It’s not based on the way (someone), looks,” Bovino said. “We don’t go after white people, we don’t go after Black people, we don’t go after brown people, I don’t go after Oriental people. … I go after (those who violate) immigration laws. It’s as simple as that.”
He added: “This is no different than normal operating procedure.”
Who has been arrested by federal agents in recent days?
Among those arrested over the weekend was an Austrian national, who Bovino said was an aggravated sex offender. A Polish resident, whom Bovino said had overstayed his visa, was also taken into custody as part of the downtown operation.
Bovino also said agents arrested a suspected criminal drug cartel member who had been targeted for suspected drug trafficking, who was arrested in the downtown area Sunday.

Bovino declined to specify which cartel the person is associated with, but the arrest came just days after federal agents arrested a suspected Tren de Aragua member during a different enforcement operation in the Chicago area.
The arrests were made in addition to 11 that were made outside of the ICE processing center in Broadview on Saturday. Two of those arrested, who the Department of Homeland Security identified as Jocelyn Robledo and Ray Collins, now face federal charges after Bovino posted on social media that two of those protesting outside of the facility were found with loaded handguns.
Two other protesters taken into custody at the Broadview facility, Paul Ivery and Hubert Mazur, have been charged with forcibly resisting and interfering with federal officers, ABC7 in Chicago reported.
How Chicago residents and leaders are reacting to the federal presence
Bovino said the encounters involving Border Patrol agents “ran the gamut” of responses but said that many involved residents who are thankful that federal officers have been brought in. Both Johnson and Pritzker continued to heavily criticize the deployment of federal officers. A spokesperson for Johnson wrote on X Sunday that Border Patrol agents were “flaunting automatic weapons for no apparent reason.”

“This is another brazen provocation from the Trump administration that does nothing to make our city safer,” the spokesperson wrote.
Some elected officials, including Alderperson Raymond Lopez, have remained vocal in their opposition to Johnson’s lack of cooperation with the Trump administration. Lopez has said repeatedly that he has urged Johnson and Pritzker to work with the administration to help protect local residents.
Lopez told on Monday that by failing to cooperate, Johnson is putting Chicagoans and federal officers assigned to Operation Midway Blitz at risk. Lopez said there is a simpler way for ICE officers to be able to peacefully remove those being targeted by the federal agencies in Chicago and said that could be achieved if local officials cooperated.
“In the interim, what we are seeing is this chaos playing out in neighborhoods all over Chicago and in the suburbs, and we’re basically putting targets on everyone’s back on both sides because we simply refuse to work together,” Lopez told ‘s “Morning In America”.
Despite the continued opposition from many Democrats across the city and state, Bovino senses change coming based on conversations he had on Sunday. He characterized at least 95% of encounters as being positive.
Other encounters, including one caught on video, involved a man on a bicycle who taunted Border Patrol agents by saying he was not a legal U.S. resident and dared agents to detain him. When they attempted to do so, the man eluded capture and was able to speed off on his bike.
However, Bovino senses that more Chicago residents feel differently. He said that some supporters voiced their backing of federal agents during encounters Sunday but did so under their breath out of fear of going against the opinion that federal agents and officers are inciting fear in local communities and neighborhoods.
“You can feel this subtle change in culture and attitude,” Bovino told . “And I think it starts here in Chicago.”
‘s Mills Hayes and Anna Kooiman contributed to this story.