Ald. Fuentes sues federal government, alleging abuse during Operation Midway Blitz

One of Mayor Brandon Johnson’s closest City Council allies on Monday followed through on her threat to file a lawsuit accusing federal agents of shoving, handcuffing and nearly arresting her after she went to a hospital emergency room to check on a constituent whose leg was severely injured during Operation Midway Blitz last fall.


“Throughout Operation Midway Blitz, masked federal agents were terrorizing our communities, including using violence against this elected official. We must stand up for our rights and demand accountability,” said Ald. Jessie Fuentes (26th) said in statement released Monday.

Her attorney, Jan Susler of the Peoples’ Law Office, said the federal tort claims lawsuit is aimed at “showing her community and her constituency the importance of standing up and holding accountable a government whose agents act as if they are above the law. ”

The lawsuit seeks $100,000 in damages from the Oct. 3 confrontation.

Fuentes told the Sun-Times last fall that she couldn’t “care less about the money,” adding her motive is to hold federal agents accountable for “terrorizing and brutalizing” her constituents in the name of the Trump administration’s deportation campaign.

“What I want to prove is that federal agents who are supposed to be law enforcement are not above the law. They’re coming to Chicago and believing they can violate every single local law we have,” Fuentes said at the time.

“They are not operating with signed judicial warrants… These federal agents are just picking day laborers and construction workers up in parking lots at Home Depots and Menards. We are watching individuals being chased and not at all asked what their name is, where they live or if they have an ID. People are being physically harmed. These individuals are operating recklessly.”

  How the Met Gala Transformed Into the Tacky ‘Bezos Ball’

The confrontation captured on video and prominently displayed on Fuentes’ social media pages occurred Oct. 3 at Humboldt Park Health, 2511 W. Division St.

Fuentes went there after being alerted by the hospital president about a hospitalized constituent who had been taken from the street and detained by masked federal agents. The individual had suffered severe leg injuries.

When Fuentes arrived at the emergency room, she was taken to the room where ICE agents were meeting.

The confrontation began as soon as agents stepped out of the room, she said. “I asked them if they had a signed judicial warrant, then I was shoved by one of the ICE agents, who was fully masked [and] not wearing any identification. I asked again did they have a signed judicial warrant, and I was shoved again. Then I asked again, and I was handcuffed,” Fuentes said at the time.

As the masked agents walked Fuentes out of the emergency room, the alderperson said she asked again why she was being handcuffed and what she had done wrong.

She told the agents she did not trespass, nor “touch” the agents or attempt to “impede arrest.” Fuentes said she was an elected official “exercising my right to ask questions” after being summoned by hospital staff.

According to Fuentes, the agents could not articulate their reasons for handcuffing her. Instead, they called for a backup vehicle that arrived with two Border Patrol agents inside, she said. Both of those agents got out of the car and opened the back door. A brief debate ensued about whether to arrest Fuentes, she said.

  Vikings Share Telling Update on Pass-Rusher Jonathan Greenard

Only after Fuentes repeatedly identified herself as an elected official, asked again what she did wrong and reiterated that she did not “impede arrest” or “put my hands on anyone” did the agents remove the handcuffs and set her free with a warning that, if she ever “set foot in the hospital again, she would be arrested.”


Fuentes has said she is convinced that if the federal agents had not been informed that she was an elected official, and had hospital staff not taken cellphone video of the incident or been there to advocate for her, she “could very well have been arrested on that day.”

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *