Father says ICE pepper-sprayed him and infant child outside Sam’s Club


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Summary

Accusation

A father said that he and members of his family, including his infant daughter, were pepper sprayed by an ICE agent in a parking lot.

Response

The Department of Homeland Security disputes the allegations and said that its agents do not pepper spray children.

Incident

The father said he was pepper sprayed as he drove past an ICE truck with his windows down outside a Sam’s Club in a Chicago suburb.


Full story

A father is speaking out after alleging he, his wife and the couple’s 1-year-old daughter were pepper-sprayed by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent outside a Chicago-area Sam’s Club last week. The incident occurred on Saturday in the parking lot of the store in Cicero, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, according to Rafael Veraza, the father, who provided his account at a news conference on Sunday.

According to the family and their supporters, they are American citizens and had decided to skip buying groceries and get out of the area after seeing a helicopter and hearing emergency sirens, which they believed to be from a protest nearby.

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What happened?

Veraza, the driver, said he saw an ICE truck pull into the parking lot as he was leaving with his windows down. He revealed that as he passed the ICE truck, a person inside the truck sprayed his car.

Reported video of the incident shows what appears to be pepper spray thrown by an agent into the family’s vehicle. Veraza said the spray hit the side of his head, and he soon realized his 1-year-old daughter Arinna, who was in the backseat, had been affected by the chemicals, along with his wife.

“Basically, I got sprayed all over my face,” Veraza told the press.

“I had water, water down my face and basically water down her face because I didn’t know the effects of the pepper spray towards her,” Veraza said.

He told reporters that his daughter did not require hospitalization, but he did after he took a hit to his ear, and the pepper spray caused him to have a severe asthmatic reaction. 

“When I got to the hospital, my heartbeats was at 263 per minute,” he said.

“I didn’t have to go through this,” Veraza told reporters. “My daughter neither had to go through this.”

“Us, as adults, we can handle it, but as kids? Shouldn’t be targeting kids,” Veraza added.

DHS disputes father’s account

The Department of Homeland Security, which is in charge of ICE, has refuted Veraza’s version of events, saying its officers do not pepper-spray children and denied the incident happened in a Sam’s Club parking lot, in a post on social media.

The department instead accused “rioters” of throwing objects at ICE agents and had blocked a road during an operation, before agents deployed “crowd control measures,” but noted that this did not occur in the parking lot of the retailer.

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U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has more than 20,000 personnel and an annual budget of roughly $8 billion.

Immigration agents shot at on the same day

According to DHS, the same day Veraza said he and his family were pepper-sprayed, immigration agents were shot at by a man driving a black Jeep about 2 miles from the Sam’s Club, in a part of town called Little Village. DHS said a male suspect, who is from Mexico and has a criminal history, including a felony weapon charge, entered the U.S. illegally and has since been arrested. 

Following that incident, federal agents said they were followed into a Sam’s Club parking lot and one of the agents’ vehicles was hit. According to CBS News, witnesses said there was violence in the area that day. Gregory Bovino, a U.S. Border Patrol commander heading immigration enforcement efforts in Chicago, was present during the incident.

“They threw flash bang grenades into the street, and I saw right next to my van, Bovino pull the pin on another grenade, threatening to throw it,” Pastor Matt DaMateo, who works with Life Centers Chicagoland, told CBS News Chicago.

Injunction issued against use of pepper spray, tear gas

ICE and Bovino have previously faced accusations of overstepping authority in recent immigration enforcement efforts in Chicago, which the Trump administration has labeled “Operation Midway Blitz.” 

The latest incident involving Bovino comes after a federal judge last week issued a preliminary injunction that restricts immigration authorities’ use of tear gas or pepper spray to only people who are believed to pose a threat.

Judge Sara Ellis specifically mentioned Bovino as she delivered her ruling, stating that he “admitted that he lied” about being hit in the head by a rock before using tear gas, per The Washington Post.

CBS News Chicago reports that the Department of Justice (DOJ) has filed an appeal in the case.

Chicago mayor’s statement

It’s unclear what the latest allegations may mean for Bovino, but Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, D, issued a statement on Sunday about the Little Village operation, saying in part that federal agents’ “reckless behavior and indiscriminate use of chemical agents have caused chaos and fear in our communities.

“While I do not welcome federal agents operating in this capacity, I unequivocally condemn violence directed at them,” Johnson added.

Mathew Grisham (Digital Producer) contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

Allegations of excessive force by federal immigration agents raise concerns about the use of chemical agents in populated areas and highlight conflicting accounts from officials and affected individuals, prompting legal and public scrutiny over law enforcement practices.

Law enforcement use of force

The incident centers on claims of pepper spray being used by immigration agents on a family, bringing attention to protocols around force and their impact on bystanders.

Conflicting accounts

Divergent descriptions from the affected family and government officials underscore challenges in verifying events and addressing public trust in law enforcement.

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Behind the numbers

Articles cite more than 3,200 arrests in Chicago area enforcement operations over about two months, with DHS stating eight or nine people were arrested on the specific day of the incidents and that no federal agents were reported injured.

Context corner

The operation occurred amid an ongoing nationwide crackdown on immigration enforcement, particularly in sanctuary cities like Chicago, and shortly after a federal judge limited agents’ use of force as a result of prior clashes and complaints.

Diverging views

Left-leaning articles highlight eyewitness video and family testimony, stressing community impact and harsh enforcement. Right-leaning articles emphasize DHS denials and frame federal actions as responses to violence from protesters or hostile crowds.

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Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

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Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

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Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left frame the incident involving federal agents and a 1-year-old with outrage, using terms like "thugs" and highlighting broader actions such as a "photo op" or tear-gassing.
  • Media outlets in the center maintain a neutral tone, attributing claims and cautiously noting what "appears to show," while including both the family's "nightmare" account and DHS's denial, alongside community condemnation.
  • Media outlets on the right also employ "thugs" but focus on the specific event and de-emphasize wider context, often mentioning "Operation Midway Blitz" while reporting DHS denials.

Media landscape

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100 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • A Berwyn family was pepper-sprayed by federal agents while driving with their 1-year-old child, as stated by Rafael Veraza, who said, "I didn’t have to go through this, and my daughter didn’t have to go through this."
  • State Sen. Celina Villanueva labeled the actions of federal immigration agents as "state-sponsored terrorism," asserting the need for civil rights in America during a news conference with Rep. Jesús "Chuy" Garcia.
  • The Department of Homeland Security has not commented specifically on the incident, citing ongoing operations in Little Village, where federal agents were allegedly shot at, according to the agency.
  • Alderman Byron Sigcho-Lopez expressed doubt about the claims made by Homeland Security, describing the environment created by agents as a "reign of terror" for residents.

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Key points from the Center

  • On Saturday, Rafael Veraza said a masked federal agent pepper-sprayed his Berwyn family, including one-year-old Arianna Sofia Veraza, at a Sam's Club parking lot in Cicero as they tried to leave.
  • Amid the federal crackdown, agents were conducting Operation Midway Blitz across Chicago neighborhoods; DHS said agents encountered gunfire, bricks and vehicle rammings, prompting crowd control in Little Village and Cicero, Illinois.
  • Veraza said, "He started spraying from the front of the car towards the back. Basically I got sprayed all over my face." He reported his daughter struggled to breathe, and hospital staff called poison control Saturday.
  • U.S. Customs and Border Protection use‑of‑force policy advises against pepper spray on small children, as a federal judge restricted riot control weapons amid credibility questions about Gregory Bovino.

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Key points from the Right

  • A confrontation occurred in a Sam's Club parking lot in Cicero, Chicago, where Border Patrol allegedly pepper-sprayed Rafael Veraza and his one-year-old daughter, Arianna.
  • Rafael Veraza reported that he struggled to breathe due to asthma and that his daughter had difficulty opening her eyes after inhaling the spray.
  • The Department of Homeland Security claimed its agents faced gunfire and attacks during immigration enforcement operations but did not explain the incident involving Veraza's family.
  • Activists criticized the Border Patrol's actions as excessive, while the DHS denied using pepper spray in the parking lot.

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