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Home Leadership

Federal agents tear-gassed my block

October 28, 2025
in Leadership
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Federal agents tear-gassed my block
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Now we are facing the growing threat from federal agents together. The outpouring of concern and the desire to help has been unlike anything I’ve seen in a lifetime of social justice activism. And yet it’s a sign of how awful this situation is that so many people feel they have to do something.

Even before the latest incident, many neighbors were staying inside out of fear. Federal agents had taken several of our neighbors, including one incident right next to a school with students inside. In response, we began school watches, to be present with children and their families as they come and go.

Although it is October in our notoriously chilly city, we had an extended summer. Warmth enveloped us as neighbors and staff stood on street corners during the watches, smiling and greeting students as they arrived for classes. At the same time, fear thrummed in the air all around us, and the streets were far emptier than usual.

At the start of the month, agents conducted a military-style raid a few blocks from the hospital where I worked as a chaplain for three years, in a neighborhood that is dear to me. One of my core values as a chaplain is to honor the inherent dignity of each person. Federal agents did the opposite. They dragged people from their beds, where, because of the unseasonably hot temperatures, many folks were sleeping without clothes. Agents pulled men, women and children from their apartments, some of them naked, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. Neighbors watched in horror as agents separated parents from their children, taking them without clothing into waiting trucks, those who witnessed it told local reporters.

Chicago is known for its tradition of organizing. One practice is to form block clubs, something I’ve learned about while working on the South and West Sides. The local news source I trust the most is called Block Club, a nonprofit online newspaper that reports on local and neighborhood news. In an article about the school watches, there was a partial summary of the brutality of the past month:

…federal agents have shot at least two people, killing one; repeatedly tear-gassed protesters and first responders; shot rubber bullets at protesters; detained U.S. citizens, including children; handcuffed a Chicago alderperson in a hospital; smoke bombed and tear-gassed a Chicago street; fired a chemical weapon at a TV reporter and detained a journalist, among other incidents.

More than 1,000 people have been detained, Russell Hott, [then] ICE field director in Chicago, told Block Club.

They call the assault on our city Operation Midway Blitz. In the worldview of the people carrying out this action, terrifying the children and elders of our community some keeps their community safe. And if the rest of us resist, they count us as enemies. Where I see blocks with a resilient, caring communities, agents see battlegrounds.

I know that I trust my housemates and neighbors. I trust what I see with my own eyes. I have seen no evidence that my neighbors who are being taken by federal agents are involved in criminal activity.

I know when I hear members of this federal administration talking about the murder rate in Chicago that they are lying. Our murder rate is lower than it has been in previous years and is lower than the current murder rate of other cities. Our efforts to end gun violence are showing signs of success.

Yes, Chicago still has its problems. But we are working to solve them. If there’s chaos, it’s because federal agents created it. I’ve tried not to speculate, but it’s hard not to imagine that agents are trying to escalate the situation to a point where they can justify sending in the military.

In recent months I’ve heard from loved ones in my hometown of Washington, D.C., which has been occupied by the National Guard since August. I saw a photograph of guard members picking up trash in the park where I used to catch the city bus home from high school. It was so absurd I almost laughed and cried at the same time.

So far, the courts have blocked guard members from entering Chicago. If they do come into the city, will it be less chaotic than it is now? Or will it be worse? I can scarcely imagine anything worse than intentionally making children and elders afraid.

Less than two weeks after the tear-gassing, federal agents showed up again at the same intersection. I heard honking and looked out my dining-room window, where I saw two agents in head-to-toe miliary-style camouflage great taking a handcuffed worker from the crew rebuilding a neighbor’s front steps. 

I rushed outside and learned that two others had been taken as well. I talked with a father of one of them. He doesn’t know when he’ll see his young adult son again. The group that gathered made connections with local nonprofits to help locate the men, who were likely transported to the ICE facility in Broadview.

Many of my clergy colleagues and other concerned people have been praying and protesting there, and some have been assaulted and arrested. I’m grateful for those who are taking on the risks of being there. Bearing witness to the suffering of my neighbors and showing compassion is now the form of my chaplaincy ministry.

I continue looking out for my neighbors in every way I can, wearing my whistle and carrying know-your-rights cards. While I can’t end the harm, I will continue to show up as we stand in solidarity with each other.



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