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American Focus > Blog > Crime > Mexican cartel ‘bounty system’ targets immigration officers in Chicago, feds claim – CWB Chicago
Crime

Mexican cartel ‘bounty system’ targets immigration officers in Chicago, feds claim – CWB Chicago

Last updated: October 15, 2025 5:41 am
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Mexican cartel ‘bounty system’ targets immigration officers in Chicago, feds claim – CWB Chicago
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Federal authorities have revealed alarming intelligence suggesting that Mexican criminal gangs are offering monetary incentives to target U.S. immigration officials, including agents based in Chicago. This announcement coincides with skepticism from at least one federal judge regarding the validity of the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) accounts of recent immigration enforcement actions throughout the city.

As per a DHS bulletin released on Tuesday, networks tied to cartels in Mexico are collaborating with local extremists and street gangs to observe, intimidate, and assault federal immigration personnel. The agency reported that gang members in areas such as Pilsen and Little Village have assumed the role of rooftop “spotters,” armed with radios and weapons to monitor Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) vehicles during “Operation Midway Blitz.”

The document claims that Mexican drug cartels have introduced a structured bounty system that offers $2,000 for intel on federal agents or their relatives, between $5,000 to $10,000 for assaults or abductions, and up to $50,000 for the assassination of high-ranking officials. DHS officials stated that this initiative is a systematic effort to “terrorize” federal law enforcement agents.

“These criminal organizations are not merely opposing the law; they are conducting an organized terror campaign against the courageous individuals who defend our borders and communities,” Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem expressed. “Our agents are confronting ambushes, drone surveillance, and threats to their lives, simply for enforcing laws enacted by Congress. We will not yield to these threats, and every offender, terrorist, or illegal immigrant will be held accountable by American justice.”

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DHS has further implicated certain “Antifa-aligned” factions in Chicago and Portland for assisting cartel affiliates by organizing protests, hindering deportation efforts, and “doxxing” federal employees. The agency has urged the public to report any suspicious rooftop surveillance or organized actions obstructing federal operations via the ICE tip line at 1-866-DHS-2-ICE.

Just last week, federal prosecutors filed charges against a Chicago man, identified as a prominent member of the Latin Kings gang, for allegedly placing a $10,000 bounty on the life of Gregory Bovinio, the commander responsible for local immigration enforcement.

Concerns Over Federal Credibility

In light of the DHS warning, several recent court decisions and events have raised questions about the department’s reliability in portraying its immigration enforcement activities.

Last week, U.S. District Judge April Perry noted that the Justice Department’s legal justification for deploying the National Guard in Chicago seemed to be part of an emerging trend indicating that DHS’s accounts are unreliable. Judge Perry remarked that the administration’s descriptions of immigration protests “cannot be reconciled” with the accounts provided by local and state law enforcement in court documents.

Justice Department attorney Eric Hamilton, who advocated for the Guard’s deployment, referenced recent arrests of protesters and episodes involving federal agents as validation for the National Guard’s need. However, many of those instances have since fallen apart.

For example, Hamilton pointed to the arrests of individuals accused of assaulting officers during a protest. Both individuals held concealed carry licenses. A federal grand jury subsequently chose not to indict them.

In a separate incident, a controversy arose two weekends ago when a CBP agent shot a woman in Brighton Park during a confrontation with drivers who agents claimed were “tailing and boxing in” federal vehicles. DHS depicted this incident as a coordinated effort to disrupt enforcement activities. However, the woman’s attorney argued that body-camera footage contradicts this narrative, depicting an agent shouting “do something b****” before the shooting. Both the woman and another driver were arrested, charged, and later released by a judge.

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Judge Perry highlighted this inconsistency, along with the dropping of charges against multiple protesters, a temporary injunction against ICE inhibiting arrests of journalists and peaceful demonstrators, and another ruling indicating ICE violated a consent decree that prohibited warrantless arrests as examples of discrepancies in the government’s narrative.

“To summarize, in the past 48 hours, four separate, unrelated judicial decisions from four different impartial entities have cast doubt on DHS’s account of events,” Perry stated from the bench last week.

Perry also pointed out that the Trump administration had activated National Guard units during the same weekend a senior immigration official in Broadview noted a “great weekend” in an internal email, citing successful collaboration with local police agencies to secure federal property with fencing and joint command arrangements.

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TAGGED:BountycartelChicagoClaimCWBfedsImmigrationMexicanOfficersSystemtargets
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