Chicago, No Kings
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US District Judge Sara Ellis still has questions. During a hearing Monday, she pressed two federal officials over the response to ongoing and intense protests in Chicago amid Operation Midway Blitz, especially after she expanded her temporary restraining order to include having agents on the ground turn on their body worn cameras when encountering demonstrators.
But the federal judge limited the deposition of Gregory Bovino to “how” federal officers are aggressively enforcing immigration law, not “why” they're doing it in Chicago.
The No Kings “Hands off Chicago” protest was one of roughly 2,500 similar demonstrations against the Trump administration planned across the country and globe, according to organizers.
Chicago’s Anti-Trump ‘No Kings’ Protest Fills Downtown Streets With Huge Crowd: ‘We Need to Act Now’
The gatherings are part of a mass mobilization across the U.S. and globe positioned as a denouncement of President Donald Trump and his administration’s policies. In Chicago, they come amid sustained immigration raids.
Residents troubled by an immigration crackdown air dissent—and warnings—with devices typically favored by athletic coaches.
A federal judge on Monday will question two officials from Immigrations and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Patrol after she called an emergency hearing last week concerned that the Department of Homeland Security was not following her Oct.
At least 11 protesters were arrested amid clashes with local police outside the Broadview, Ill., Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility on Friday morning.
Chicago organizers predict the “No Kings” protest on Saturday will be bigger than events in June, fueled by anger at Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.
A Chicago elementary school teacher, Lucy Martinez, faces backlash after a viral video showed her simulating an assassination during a protest. The incident, captured by a passenger in a truck displaying a flag honoring Charlie Kirk,
A federal judge ordered immigration agents this month not to use tear gas on journalists and protesters who pose no threat — yet the incidents have continued.