By Chief Tom Weitzel (Ret.)
The fundamental duty of journalism is not to support a political agenda but to convey the truth, even when the facts are uncomfortable.
For over a year, various Chicago media outlets consistently questioned the Venezuelan criminal group Tren de Aragua’s presence in Chicago or elsewhere in Illinois. Reports often downplayed the threat, suggesting that law enforcement’s warnings were politically driven rather than evidence-based. Some commentators even labeled the concerns as election-year scare tactics.
However, criminal investigations are guided by evidence, not political narratives.
Now, the evidence has moved beyond speculation. It is present in search warrants, detention petitions, guilty pleas, federal investigations, and criminal prosecutions in Illinois courts. Public records reveal that individuals linked to Tren de Aragua have been active in both Chicago and its suburbs.
CWB Chicago has reported on several prosecutions involving defendants with alleged ties to Tren de Aragua. One case involves accusations that gang members kidnapped an 18-year-old from a Chicago park, fatally beat and shot him, abandoned his body, and later informed his mother in Venezuela of his whereabouts. These allegations are yet to be proven in court and originate from federal charges and prosecutors, not from political campaigns or social media.
In another recent case, a defendant identified as having ties to Tren de Aragua admitted to selling firearms during an undercover sting. Additionally, in Will County, another defendant pleaded guilty to unlawful gun sales, also allegedly linked to the gang. These instances are criminal prosecutions, not mere internet rumors.
Yet, many media outlets have not highlighted these developments. Where are the stories acknowledging that previous reports underestimated the issue? The same outlets that doubted the gang’s presence now report individual cases without connecting them to the broader context of prior dismissive coverage.
This is more than an editorial oversight; it sways public opinion. When the public repeatedly hears that law enforcement’s concerns are exaggerated, trust in those working against these criminal groups diminishes.
The implications go beyond a single gang.
Public policy increasingly prioritizes narratives over evidence. Illinois lawmakers continue proposing laws that limit proactive policing, restrict investigative technology, hinder collaboration with federal agencies, and remove vital crime-fighting tools from local police. Tools like license plate readers, facial recognition, and surveillance cameras are viewed as threats, while criminal groups exploit encrypted communication, stolen vehicles, and fake identities to evade detection.
While the regulation of these technologies is open to debate, their effectiveness in solving murders, rescuing kidnapping victims, dismantling gun trafficking rings, and identifying violent offenders is indisputable.
Good journalism demands scrutiny of government and law enforcement. Police should not be above questioning, yet skepticism must be consistent, challenging evidence regardless of political alignment. Responsible journalism evolves with changing facts.
Illinois residents deserve journalism that pursues evidence wherever it leads, with reporters ready to acknowledge when previous assumptions are outdated. An honest discussion about organized crime should be rooted in court records, criminal prosecutions, and documented investigations, not ideology.
Public safety depends on an informed populace. When the media downplays confirmed criminal activities because they conflict with a preferred narrative, it damages its credibility and erodes public trust. It weakens society’s ability to comprehend community threats and the necessary policies to counter them.
This is more than simply poor journalism.
It is a disservice to every law-abiding citizen relying on truth to hold both the government and the media accountable.

About Tom Weitzel
Tom Weitzel is a retired Chief of Police in Riverside, Illinois, and a longtime advocate for evidence-based policing and officer safety. He is a fellow at Awake Illinois and an ambassador for the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. He also serves on the advisory council for Citizens Behind the Badge in McLean, Virginia. He can be reached at tqweitzel@outlook.com.

