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US drops case against protesters of Chicago immigration blitz

By Thomson Reuters May 21, 2026 | 3:53 PM

By David Thomas

May 21 (Reuters) – Chicago U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros said his office is dropping all remaining criminal charges against four people who were indicted after protesting last year outside a holding facility in Broadview, Illinois.

A trial had been scheduled to start Tuesday, May 26, in the incident at the Broadview facility, ​which became a flashpoint of President Donald Trump’s immigration blitz. The prosecution’s decision to drop the charges made ‌it the latest Justice Department case to fall apart.

Boutros told a federal judge on Wednesday that the charges against Kat Abughazaleh, a former journalist who recently lost a Democratic primary race for a U.S. House seat, Andre Martin, Michael Rabbitt and Brian Straw are being dismissed with prejudice, meaning they cannot be refiled, a spokesperson for his office said.

The four defendants had faced misdemeanor charges of impeding a federal officer after prosecutors last ‌month ​dismissed a felony conspiracy charge against them. They were part of the “Broadview Six” ⁠along with two others — Catherine Sharp and Joselyn ⁠Walsh — whose cases were completely dropped by prosecutors earlier this year.

“I am relieved to be exonerated today, but I want to state clearly that fighting these unjust federal charges over the past seven months was never just about me or my co-defendants in this case,” Straw, a shareholder at U.S. law firm Greenberg Traurig and a member ​of the Village Board for Chicago suburb Oak Park, said in a statement.

Terence Campbell and Valerie Davenport, attorneys for Martin, said in a statement that their client and his codefendants have been “living under the threat of going to prison simply ⁠for exercising their First Amendment rights as decent, honorable citizens and seeking ⁠to protect their fellow human beings.”

A spokesperson for the Chicago U.S. Attorney’s Office declined to ​comment further. Boutros last month said his office was “constantly evaluating the facts and law in our Operation Midway Blitz cases, as ​well as new information when it is brought to our attention.”

Prosecutors had accused Abughazaleh and the ‌others of crowding around a government vehicle driven by a federal agent, hindering its progress into the Broadview facility during a September 26 protest. They allegedly banged and pushed on the vehicle, scratched the word “pig” into its body, and broke a rear windshield wiper.

The Trump administration’s crackdown, dubbed Operation Midway Blitz, led to thousands of arrests as federal immigration agents clashed with protesters from ⁠September until December. Agents shot two people, including one person fatally, and threatened to shoot others, body-cam footage shows.

Agents repeatedly deployed tear gas, pepper balls and rubber bullets at protesters outside the Broadview immigration holding center during near-daily demonstrations and across many ⁠Chicago neighborhoods. An independent commission created by ‌Illinois Governor JB Pritzker last month recommended that local prosecutors investigate federal agents for misconduct.

This ⁠month, Illinois State Police said they were investigating the death of Silverio Villegas Gonzalez, ​killed by ‌an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in suburban Chicago.

In another case that fell apart, ​the Chicago U.S. ⁠Attorney’s Office on November 20 dropped charges against Marimar Martinez, who was shot five times by a Border Patrol agent after she allegedly tried to ram agents with her car. On October 5, Martinez, a U.S. citizen and Montessori school teacher in Oak Park, was indicted on charges of impeding a federal officer with a deadly weapon.

In January, a Chicago jury acquitted Juan Espinoza Martinez, whom the Justice Department had charged with plotting a hit on a high-profile Border Patrol official.

(Reporting by David Thomas. Editing by ​Emily Schmall and David Gregorio)