Chicago area residents mourn immigrant fatally shot after injuring ICE agent

Chicago area residents mourn immigrant fatally shot after injuring ICE agent
Mourners gather during a protest and candlelight vigil, a day after a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer fatally shot 38-year-old Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez during a traffic stop which officials said he resisted, days after US President Donald Trump ordered increased federal law enforcement presence and stepped-up immigration enforcement actions by the Department of Homeland Security, in Franklin, Illinois, US, September 13, 2025. (Reuters)
Short Url
Updated 15 September 2025
Follow

Chicago area residents mourn immigrant fatally shot after injuring ICE agent

Chicago area residents mourn immigrant fatally shot after injuring ICE agent
  • The death of Villegas-Gonzalez has angered community members like Repa and heightened safety fears among the region’s Latino residents

FRANKLIN PARK, Illinois: Rudy Repa, a 27-year-old resident of Franklin Park, Illinois, placed a single marigold at a makeshift memorial near the spot where a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer fatally shot a man from Mexico during an attempted arrest in the Chicago suburb.
The US Department of Homeland Security said an officer shot Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez, 38, during a traffic stop on Friday in Franklin Park. In a statement, the agency said Villegas-Gonzalez was in the country illegally and had attempted to flee in his car, dragging and injuring the officer.
The death of Villegas-Gonzalez has angered community members like Repa and heightened safety fears among the region’s Latino residents.
On Saturday, about 100 people, including Repa, turned out for a vigil for Villegas-Gonzalez in Franklin Park, a community in which around half of the residents are Hispanic or Latino.
“I’m incredibly mad and I want justice for our community,” said Repa.
DHS on September 8 launched a deportation crackdown in Illinois that it said was targeting criminals among immigrants in the US without legal status. The department said the operation was necessary because of city and state “sanctuary” laws that limit cooperation with federal immigration authorities.
Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson have called for an accounting of the incident involving Villegas-Gonzalez. On Saturday, Johnson said on X it was an “avoidable tragedy.”
US Representative Delia Ramirez said at a press conference Villegas-Gonzalez was shot immediately after dropping off his children at a nearby school.
ICE declined to provide more details on the incident over the weekend. It referred to a press release that said Villegas-Gonzalez had a history of reckless driving and the ICE agent fired his weapon because he feared for his life.
Alexandra Calleja, 34, teared up as she spoke at Saturday’s vigil about the killing.
“I think he might have gotten scared,” she said. “He might have wanted to leave because it crossed his mind that, ‘If I get taken away I’ll never see my kids again’.”
Many residents attending the vigil on Saturday were also immigrants, born in places like Guatemala and Chile.
Pritzker said last month he thought President Donald Trump’s administration was timing ICE operations to coincide with celebrations for Mexican Independence Day, which falls on September 16 and is a major event in Chicago’s large Mexican-American community.
A large Mexican Independence Day parade in Chicago’s Little Village neighborhood on Sunday still drew thousands of attendees to enjoy music, singing and dancing. There were anti-ICE signs along the route and volunteers on the lookout for federal agents.
Marco Villalobos, 46, who was part of the parade, said he did not bring his three children because he worried ICE agents might be there.
“It’s a terrible thing; they’re trying to hunt people down,” he said of Villegas-Gonzalez’s death.


Myanmar junta says demolishing 150 scam hub buildings

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Myanmar junta says demolishing 150 scam hub buildings

Myanmar junta says demolishing 150 scam hub buildings
YANGON: Myanmar’s military said Sunday it was demolishing nearly 150 buildings in a crackdown on a notorious Internet scam compound bordering Thailand — including a gym, a spa and a karaoke parlour.
Sprawling fraud factories have boomed in war-torn Myanmar’s loosely governed border regions, housing workers targeting unsuspecting Internet users with romance and business cons worth tens of billions of dollars annually.
Many workers are trafficked into the Internet sweatshops, but others go willingly to the compounds which are often furnished with luxury amenities for criminal bosses and their high-earning staff.
Last month Myanmar’s military announced a raid on infamous scam center KK Park — discovering more than 2,000 scammers and sending 1,500 people fleeing over the border to Thailand.
In an update in state mouthpiece newspaper The Global New Light of Myanmar the junta said it found 148 buildings including dormitories, a four-floor hospital and two-story karaoke complex.
“101 buildings have been demolished, and the remaining 47 buildings are in progress,” said the newspaper.
AFP was not able to immediately verify the claims, but locals in Myanmar and over the border in Thailand have reported hearing intermittent explosions since the Myanmar military raid began.
Experts say the junta raids are likely limited, choreographed and intentionally publicized as the military walks a tightrope trying to alleviate international pressure to crack down on scam centers without too badly denting profits.
China is a key military backer of the junta, but analysts say Beijing is increasingly irate at the rampant scams targeting and enlisting its citizens.
But cracking down too hard would erode profits enriching militias the junta relies on as key allies in the civil war which has consumed the country since it snatched power in a 2021 coup, monitors say.
Back in February a pressure campaign led by China saw some 7,000 scam workers repatriated in a highly-publicized exodus from Myanmar, while Thailand enacted a cross-border Internet blockade in a bid to throttle off the fraud factories.
The military announced initial raids on KK Park on October 19 after an AFP investigation revealed centers including KK Park were expanding despite the apparent crackdown — with Starlink satellite Internet receivers installed en masse to skirt the Thai web cut-off.
After the AFP investigation Starlink parent company SpaceX said it had cut signal to more than 2,500 satellite Internet terminals in the vicinity of suspected Myanmar scam centers.