
Federal agents detain construction worker in Old Irving Park, fear disrupts local parade
The family of Luis Villegas says he was working on a now-unfinished project before he was chased down and arrested by federal agents in front of a house in Old Irving Park. That's when neighbors came outside their homes in his defense before, witnesses say, tear gas was deployed. The concern impacted a Halloween tradition in the neighborhood for kids.
A teenager pleaded with federal agents as his oldest brother was led away in handcuffs by immigration officers.
"It takes a toll on me because I'm the one that's responsible for him, at the end of the day," Julian Villegas said. "He's working over here for me, and all this happening, putting him in danger is just... I feel guilty."
It happened Saturday morning while Luis Villegas, a 35-year-old father and construction worker with his brother's business, was working on this home near Kildare and Waveland. Neighbors were seen trying to assist as whistles are blaring.
Villegas' family says he is an undocumented immigrant and has lived in the Chicago-area for most of his life after coming from Mexico with his family at 4 years old.
Witnesses say a woman and man, seen in a video obtained by ABC7, were detained. ABC7 has blurred their faces since it's unclear if they face charges.
"The man is my neighbor, who lives right here. He's 70-years-old or about," neighbor Brian Kolp said. "They essentially hauled him out the driver side of his car and threw him on the ground."
During the confrontation, apparent tear gas was deployed, clouding the very street where kids, in their costumes, were supposed to march in a neighborhood Halloween parade.
"We were supposed to be standing on this corner with hundreds of families just walking around, and we're just being terrorized by ICE," neighbor Anna Ware said. "Instead, we're keeping ourselves together, resisting with joy at Disney II [Magent School], doing a parade around the track."
City leaders are condemning the federal actions that unfolded.
"Lawyers are doing their job of holding these agents accountable, and working through the courts, using the legal process that we have to challenge what is happening," said Beatriz Ponce de León, Chicago Deputy Mayor of Immigrant, Migrant and Refugee Rights.
ABC7 reached out to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and Border Patrol for comment on Saturday's operations but have not heard back.







