US ‘No rule of law’: (Chicago) City Council members decry criminal activity outside migrant shelters - “Residents now feel that their only recourse is to take action against migrant asylum seekers. This is not the time for vigilantism. It is the time for you to step up and act.”

‘No rule of law’: City Council members decry criminal activity outside migrant shelters
Chicago Sun-Times (archive.ph)
By Fran Spielman
2023-07-27 01:52:07GMT

chi01.jpg
Asylum-seekers step out of buses at Richard J. Daley College in June. Migrants who had been housed there and at Wright College are now being. moved to American Islamic College, 640 W. Irving Park Road. Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

City Council members on Wednesday decried the lawlessness — including sex trafficking and drug dealing — they say is occurring outside Chicago’s migrant shelters and demanded a crackdown before the behavior devolves into violence.

Education Committee Chair Ald. Jeanette Taylor (20th) represents the impoverished Woodlawn neighborhood where 584 migrants are staying in the former Wadsworth Elementary School.

Downtown Ald. Brendan Reilly (42nd) represents Streeterville, location of the Inn of Chicago, home to the city’s largest shelter, with 1,468 migrants.

Although the economic circumstances could not be more different, both alderpersons described similarly chaotic and criminal conditions outside their shelters during a meeting of the Council’s Committee on Immigrant and Refugee Rights.

“There was a gentleman who said he pulled out a gun on a migrant. And while I don’t agree with him doing that, that’s what’s gonna happen if we don’t have a real plan for what happens with people” who break the law, Taylor said.

During a three-hour hearing, Taylor accused top mayoral aides of presenting a ridiculously rosy picture that doesn’t match the ugly conditions on the ground.

“Tell the issue about the people who are outside threatening [residents]. Tell them about the sex trafficking that’s happening. The drug dealing that’s happening,” she said.

“They’re outside smoking weed. They’re outside having whole parties right in front of the senior building. And the police are scared. Let’s be honest. You got two [CPD] cars sittin’ out there who do nothing until I drive up and say, ‘Hey, they can’t stand there.’”

Taylor was reduced to tears at the May 31 Council meeting explaining how torn she was supporting $51 million in emergency funding for the migrant crisis while the needs of African Americans continue to be ignored. Her tears of anger intensified when a handful of protesters in the Council chambers branded her a “traitor” and ”sellout” for that vote.

Wednesday, Taylor demanded a special Council meeting on the city’s plan to combat the lawlessness, joined by Reilly, Committee Chair Ald. Andre Vasquez (40th) and Ald. Maria Hadden (49th).

Reilly said there is “no rule of law,” especially after 10 p.m., in the 100 block of East Ohio, site of the Inn of Chicago. A constituent sent him photos showing “60 kids, many of them with guns in their waistbands, consuming alcohol and marijuana on the public right-of-way unchecked,” he said.

Reilly said he was promised “regular patrols,” with beat officers checking the Inn of Chicago lobby once or twice a day, plus rigid enforcement of the tow zone he had installed to end the “curbside partying, drug dealing” and drug use.

None of it has happened. The number of “younger males brandishing weapons” is getting worse, he said.

“The only department that’s really responsive is Streets and Sanitation cleaning up the bottles, the marijuana butts, the garbage, the human feces from these blocks. That’s it,” Reilly said.

“There are a lot of guns on the two blocks around this site, suddenly. ... We are having people call 911 to report this. We’re having them call 911 for the consumption of narcotics. Not just smoking marijuana, but heroin and crack. … I’m also hearing about teenagers allegedly being sex-trafficked in the curb cut. It’s unconscionable,” Reilly said.

Ald. Ray Lopez (15th), volunteered Gage Park field house in his ward as a shelter site, and 277 migrants are now there. He sent a letter to Mayor Brandon Johnson Wednesday voicing concerns similar to those of his colleagues, including “drugs sale and usage, male & female prostitution and associated human trafficking” and “gang recruitment.” Area residents are “reaching a boiling point,” he wrote.

“Residents now feel that their only recourse is to take action against migrant asylum seekers. This is not the time for vigilantism. It is the time for you to step up and act,” Lopez told Johnson.

Family and Support Services Commissioner Brandie Knazze, a Lightfoot administration holdover, acknowledged migrant shelters, like the city overall, have “some good actors” and “some bad apples.”

“During the [July 4] holiday, we had a shelter where people were partying in the shelter and drinking, and the shelter manager found them. It was 1 o’clock in the morning ... and those people were removed because it’s not just the safety of the residents that’s there. It’s the safety of the staff. It’s the community,” Knazze said.

At Wadsworth, Knazze said, 17 people were removed from the shelter. But arrests seldom result from the criminal behavior, and police reports are rarely generated, she said.

“CPD needs a reason, so, if they’re not on the property, then they can’t arrest them,” the commissioner said. “But if we allow that behavior, it’ll fester and grow, and that just won’t work when you’ve got that many people in a building. ... We have to protect the integrity of the shelter system because we can’t have chaos.”

Cristina Pacione-Zayas, Johnson’s deputy chief of staff, told the Sun-Times Friday night’s “altercation” between residents and migrants outside Wadsworth occurred during a power outage.

“It resulted in some broken windows at a neighbor’s property, then a retaliation with broken windows with one of the shelter resident’s cars,” Pacione-Zayas said. “We’re just trying to have some conflict mediation and some additional law enforcement presence so that we’re not having folks loitering and issues that can emerge when you’re just hanging out.”

Also during Wednesday’s meeting, Knazze said with the school year starting, the city is preparing to move migrants from Daley and Wright city colleges to the American Islamic College, 640 W. Irving Park Road.

Since August, roughly 11,500 migrants have arrived in Chicago. There has been a 19% increase in the last week, with 860 migrants still sleeping on police station floors.
 
Tensions rise over migrant shelters amid conflicts with residents and canceled park programs: ‘The community has been disrespected’
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Alice Yin, Adriana Pérez, and Laura Rodríguez Presa
2023-07-27 00:20:00GMT

chi02.jpg
People work out on exercise equipment in a room above a gymnasium at the Broadway Armory on July 26, 2023. Part of the former National Guard facility is being planned as a shelter for migrants. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune)

A bloc of aldermen want to force a special City Council meeting on Chicago’s response to the migrant crisis, with criticism rising about the city’s growing system of makeshift shelters and with hundreds of asylum-seekers still huddled on police station floors.

Ald. Jeanette Taylor, 20th, called for the special session during a heated immigration committee hearing Wednesday featuring a city presentation that she said downplayed the urgency — and her ire only grew after she began questioning officials.

“So y’all didn’t think with the (Democratic National Convention) here, nobody bothered about discussing with Biden (and his) administration about the conditions that we’re having with the shelters and the asylum-seekers?” Taylor said, confronting the department heads about Tuesday’s gathering with top Democratic Party officials to celebrate the political convention coming to Chicago in 2024.

Matt Doughtie, the city’s manager of emergency management services, answered: “I don’t believe that it was a topic of discussion.”

“How? How?” Taylor exclaimed before demanding a special council meeting and accusing the city of lacking a comprehendible plan to address the crisis. “I’m sorry, I cannot continue to be supportive of something that is not all-hands-on-deck.”

Several progressive colleagues on the committee joined Taylor in committing to a special City Council meeting, more than fulfilling the three-aldermen minimum required to force the session.It signaled the sharpest pressure yet for Chicago officials tasked with one of the new mayoral administration’s most intractable dilemmas.

Amid conflicts between migrants and neighborhood residents, and complaints over Park District programs being disrupted by migrant lodging, multiple aldermen shared Taylor’s gripes over how the shelter rollout has fared in their wards.

Others raised transparency concerns over spending, with committee chair Ald. Andre Vasquez noting that City Council members have not received one line-item budget of all the migrant costs so far.


“We inherited a flawed approach to this mission,” Beatriz Ponce De León, deputy immigration mayor, said before the committee meeting, pointing out how Mayor Brandon Johnson only began his term in May, when the number of new asylum-seeking arrivals jumped and has continued to grow.

In total, more than 11,500 asylum-seekers have arrived since August 2022, when Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott sent the first busload of migrants north to Chicago. More than 5,400 are currently staying at city-run shelters, up 43.5% from January.

More concerning still is that 941 are waiting inside Chicago police stations or at O’Hare and Midway airports for a place to stay, with the vast majority sleeping on the floors of police district lobbies. A probe into whether some officers engaged in sexual misconduct with some of the migrants is ongoing, though as of last week investigators said they haven’t found any victims yet. Johnson has vowed to get all new arrivals out of police stations “as soon as possible. That is our top priority.”

But freshman Ald. Leni Manaa-Hoppenworth, 48th, said the haste to remove the migrants from stations is going to lead to similarly inadequate housing.

“Sometimes going fast is not the best,” said Manaa-Hoppenworth, who also expressed displeasure with plans to open a migrant shelter at the Broadway Armory Park facility in her ward in Edgewater. “Sometimes you have to hit pause and really listen to each other and really listen to the community, because oftentimes they have the answer.”

chi03.jpg
The Broadway Armory in Chicago's Edgewater neighborhood on July 26, 2023. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune)

Brandie Knazze, commissioner of the Department of Family and Support Services, responded: “Having almost 1,000 people in police stations is not the best solution, so we are working very diligently to find alternatives.”

The Broadway Armory, a former National Guard facility with five gyms and 13 meeting rooms, runs senior and teen centers as well as a flying trapeze school, a computer lab and a pingpong room. The latter two amenities will be shut down while the migrant shelter is in operation, and summer programming will cease or move elsewhere. The senior center that provides free meals will remain open, however.

In a letter to her constituents, Manaa-Hoppenworth said that “despite our ongoing efforts to facilitate a community-driven process, the city has decided to move forward with using the Armory as a shelter beginning August 1.”

“I am disappointed with the way that this process has unfolded,” Manaa-Hoppenworth continued. “While I disagree with the decision-making process, I agree with the mission of supporting new arrivals wholeheartedly. We have a moral responsibility to help those who arrive in our ward.”

Pedestrians passing by the Armory on Wednesday expressed conflicting feelings toward what they described as a moral responsibility to help people staying in their neighborhoods but also resentment that the city wants to repurpose the space without community input.

chi04.jpg
Quynh Hoang, a mother of three, talks about the possibility of sharing space with migrants, outside the Broadway Armory on July 26, 2023. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune)

Quynh Hoang, a mother of two picking up her son from summer camp at the Armory, said there are no other options available at affordable prices in nearby parks.

”This park means a lot to different people. They could use a different building,” Hoang said.

A group of senior women gathered to join in on sharing discontent.

”It is unrealistic to share this space with asylum-seekers,” said Ginger Williams, a senior woman who runs Edgewater Village Chicago inside the Armory.

Downtown Ald. Brendan Reilly, in the moderate faction of the City Council, shared Taylor’s fury that aldermen have been left to fend for themselves.

“God knows how many migrant families are fearing for their health and safety in the Inn (of Chicago) and on a daily basis,” Reilly, 42nd, said about the Streeterville hotel that is hosting more than a thousand migrants right now. “There’s no rule of law.”

Reilly argued that while the majority of asylum-seekers are “doing the right thing,” there are some making the neighborhood less safe. He said his own observations and those of constituents include littered alcohol bottles and marijuana butts, drug dealing and teens with apparent guns in their waist bands.

Knazze and other city officials acknowledged that migrant shelters have grappled with misbehaving residents, a few of whom had to be removed. She said her department has secured Chicago police special attention posts to troublesome locations for traffic enforcement and crackdowns on narcotics, which have been sold around the shelters.

“A shelter is a microcosm of what we experience in our city,” Knazze said. “We got good actors, and we have bad apples.”

Officials added that the city is moving nimbly to expand shelter capacity and resettle asylum-seekers into permanent housing. About 1,340 migrants have secured their first apartments, though only a fraction have moved out by now to start their leases, Knazze said.

And Doughtie, the city emergency manager, said city staffers have visited sites in other municipalities, including Berwyn and Aurora. But either location would have a long way to go given that the city must still engage with a suburb’s leaders, as well as the state.

But for Taylor, whose ward contains a migrant shelter inside the former Wadsworth Elementary School, the clock is ticking.

At a community meeting between city officials and Woodlawn residents Monday, grievances included claims of migrants loitering, littering and participating in illicit activities such as drug use and prostitution.

City officials also confirmed an incident July 14 in which a shelter resident blocked the driveway of a neighboring homeowner with a parked car, leading to a physical altercation and another car being subsequently vandalized. Afterward, the city expelled 17 residents from the shelter, four of whom were permanently banned from the system.

And after complaints from its residents, a nearby senior living facility managed by the Chicago Housing Authority, Kenneth Campbell Apartments, has filed a criminal trespass affidavit that will be enforced by Chicago police.

“The community has been disrespected,” Taylor said during the Monday meeting. “But it is time for us to try to fix what has happened and know that we all have to work together. It’s never too late.”
 
The order part of law and order has gone. The law part is selectively enforced.
Socoety allows the state a monopoly on justice becasue the alternative is blood feud chaos. We give up our right to go out and take revenge becasue we feel the state overall does it in a way that’s more controlled.
When that breaks down, and the state no longer fulfills it’s part of the bargain, people’s desire for justice doesn’t magically go away. Even animals have responses to being cheated, and will establish punishment for those who cheat the group.
You are going to see a massive rise in vigilantism because people can no longer trust the state. It’s a massive crack in socoety
 
The order part of law and order has gone. The law part is selectively enforced.
Socoety allows the state a monopoly on justice becasue the alternative is blood feud chaos. We give up our right to go out and take revenge becasue we feel the state overall does it in a way that’s more controlled.
When that breaks down, and the state no longer fulfills it’s part of the bargain, people’s desire for justice doesn’t magically go away. Even animals have responses to being cheated, and will establish punishment for those who cheat the group.
You are going to see a massive rise in vigilantism because people can no longer trust the state. It’s a massive crack in socoety
Liberals don't understand that because they genuinely believe that the reason people don't murder each other is because the state says it's illegal, and if the state made it legal, people would murder each other in droves like The Purge. While there probably would be some vendettas getting settled, what's more likely to happen are people banding together for defense and creating vigilante groups to deal with killers. (In other words, they'd form another police force to deal with lawbreakers.)
 
Liberals don't understand that because they genuinely believe that the reason people don't murder each other is because the state says it's illegal, and if the state made it legal, people would murder each other in droves like The Purge. While there probably would be some vendettas getting settled, what's more likely to happen are people banding together for defense and creating vigilante groups to deal with killers. (In other words, they'd form another police force to deal with lawbreakers.)

Libs believe the only reason people murder each other is white people are mean and think bad thoughts. Since we're gonna think good, non-racist thoughts about illegal aliens, allowing them in unlimited numbers should cause no problems at all.
 
City Council members on Wednesday decried the lawlessness — including sex trafficking and drug dealing — they say is occurring outside Chicago’s migrant shelters and demanded a crackdown before the behavior devolves into violence.
Have you considered barricading all possible exits and lighting the building on fire?
 
You are going to see a massive rise in vigilantism because people can no longer trust the state. It’s a massive crack in socoety

This is how small-scale organized crime forms, which Chicago is no stranger to.

Locals get fed up, form gangs, start protecting turf, ect.
I'm kind of surprised this shit hasn't started yet. Are we just waiting for the powder keg to have a spark? Are we waiting for weapons to be issued?
Have you considered barricading all possible exits and lighting the building on fire?
Apparently the answer to that question is "no".
 
  • Agree
Reactions: The Nothingness
Importing millions of useless foreigners was always about destroying multiple societies. America has been almost entirely out of opportunities for native poor people for over two decades. What other fucking sense does it make to chop up societies abroad, where the people have established social hierarchy, families, some work, and homes, then shove them randomly into slipshod dormitories made from abandoned municipal buildings? Where they have no hope of ever being self sufficient, because every extra dollar earned is offset by 10x higher housing and medical costs.
 
Back