A woman was detained by immigration agents at the Rayito de Sol Spanish Immersion Early Learning Center on Chicago’s North Side on Wednesday, Nov. 5. DHS says she fled into the building after a vehicle stop and was arrested in a public vestibule; parents, staff and local officials say agents entered deeper into the preschool and acted without a warrant.
Federal officials said the incident began when ICE officers attempted a targeted traffic stop of a vehicle carrying a Colombian woman. The male driver refused to pull over, prompting a brief pursuit to a shopping plaza, where both occupants ran into Rayito de Sol, a private preschool. DHS said agents detained the woman in the entry vestibule, not inside classrooms. Witnesses and video, however, show agents in the lobby area as drop-off began and allege officers moved farther inside. The preschool closed for the day following the arrest. (apnews.com)
Bystander video shows the woman screaming as agents forced her outside; at one point she can be heard saying in Spanish, “I have papers.” In a statement to The Washington Post, DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said that “upon arrest, she lied about her identity.” Officials have not released her name. (fox32chicago.com)
DHS’s public account on Wednesday emphasized that agents did not “target a daycare,” saying the location became involved only after the woman and the driver fled into the building during the attempted stop. Local officials, including U.S. Rep. Mike Quigley and Rep. Delia Ramirez, criticized the arrest as traumatizing for children and said agents lacked a warrant and questioned staff inside. Quigley also shared video of the encounter on social media. (apnews.com)
The episode comes amid heightened immigration enforcement in the Chicago area under DHS’s “Operation Midway Blitz.” AP reports the operation has led to more than 3,000 arrests in the region since early September, while DHS earlier reported hundreds of arrests in updates through early October. (apnews.com)
Policy context: Earlier this year, the Trump administration rescinded Biden-era guidance that discouraged immigration arrests in or near “protected areas” such as schools, churches and hospitals. DHS and outside policy trackers noted the change in January, with the department saying officers would use “common sense” rather than location-based restrictions. In September, Assistant Homeland Security Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said, “ICE is not conducting enforcement operations at, or ‘raiding,’ schools” and emphasized the agency was not arresting children, while adding that officers could act if a suspect fled into a school. (nafsa.org)
Key points still in dispute include whether agents remained solely in the vestibule or went deeper into the facility, and whether officers presented a warrant before questioning staff. DHS maintains the arrest occurred in a public entryway during a lawful operation following a failed traffic stop; witnesses and school officials contend agents entered multiple rooms as children and teachers looked on. (apnews.com)