
403
Sorry!!
Error! We're sorry, but the page you were looking for doesn't exist.
A Price On U.S. Immigration Officers: What Chicago's“Bounties” Reveal About Cross-Border Crime
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) U.S. homeland security officials say Mexican cartel networks working with Chicago gangs have put a price on federal immigration officers.
The alleged“bounty list” is blunt: $2,000 for gathering or leaking agents' personal details, $5,000–$10,000 for kidnappings or non-lethal assaults on rank-and-file officers, and up to $50,000 to kill senior officials.
The warning coincides with an enforcement surge in the city-Operation Midway Blitz-now in its second month. Agents report rooftop lookouts with radios in the predominantly Mexican neighborhoods of Pilsen and Little Village tracking federal teams as they move.
Officials say some threats include drone surveillance and menacing messages targeting officers' families. The aim, in plain terms, is to make routine arrests feel like walking into an ambush.
One case shows how online talk can become a crime. On October 6, federal prosecutors charged a 37-year-old alleged Latin Kings member with murder-for-hire after he allegedly offered cash on social media for information on a senior immigration official-and $10,000 if the official was“taken down.”
The amounts mirror the tiered system described by homeland security, and the suspect was arrested the same day. The danger is not theoretical.
Social media fuels organized crime threats
On September 24, a gunman opened fire at an ICE facility in Dallas, killing two detainees and wounding another before taking his own life. That attack was not tied to cartels, but it underscores how heated the environment around immigration enforcement has become.
Behind the story is a simple driver: opportunity. Cartels and affiliated gangs know immigration operations are predictable in time and place, and social media makes it easy to crowdsource tips or advertise payouts.
Chicago's crackdown has produced more than 1,500 arrests since early September, raising the stakes for criminals who see intimidation as a counter-move.
Why this matters outside the United States: cross-border crime adapts fast, and tactics perfected in one city often travel.
Putting prices on officers invites violence in crowded neighborhoods, risks bystanders, and forces governments to shift resources from everyday policing to guard duty.
For countries across the Americas-including Brazil-the lesson is clear: when organized crime mixes with social media, threats can scale quickly from a post to a plan.
Editor's note: This account draws on official statements and court filings. No figures or claims have been invented.
The alleged“bounty list” is blunt: $2,000 for gathering or leaking agents' personal details, $5,000–$10,000 for kidnappings or non-lethal assaults on rank-and-file officers, and up to $50,000 to kill senior officials.
The warning coincides with an enforcement surge in the city-Operation Midway Blitz-now in its second month. Agents report rooftop lookouts with radios in the predominantly Mexican neighborhoods of Pilsen and Little Village tracking federal teams as they move.
Officials say some threats include drone surveillance and menacing messages targeting officers' families. The aim, in plain terms, is to make routine arrests feel like walking into an ambush.
One case shows how online talk can become a crime. On October 6, federal prosecutors charged a 37-year-old alleged Latin Kings member with murder-for-hire after he allegedly offered cash on social media for information on a senior immigration official-and $10,000 if the official was“taken down.”
The amounts mirror the tiered system described by homeland security, and the suspect was arrested the same day. The danger is not theoretical.
Social media fuels organized crime threats
On September 24, a gunman opened fire at an ICE facility in Dallas, killing two detainees and wounding another before taking his own life. That attack was not tied to cartels, but it underscores how heated the environment around immigration enforcement has become.
Behind the story is a simple driver: opportunity. Cartels and affiliated gangs know immigration operations are predictable in time and place, and social media makes it easy to crowdsource tips or advertise payouts.
Chicago's crackdown has produced more than 1,500 arrests since early September, raising the stakes for criminals who see intimidation as a counter-move.
Why this matters outside the United States: cross-border crime adapts fast, and tactics perfected in one city often travel.
Putting prices on officers invites violence in crowded neighborhoods, risks bystanders, and forces governments to shift resources from everyday policing to guard duty.
For countries across the Americas-including Brazil-the lesson is clear: when organized crime mixes with social media, threats can scale quickly from a post to a plan.
Editor's note: This account draws on official statements and court filings. No figures or claims have been invented.

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.
Most popular stories
Market Research

- Casper Network Advances Regulated Tokenization With ERC-3643 Standard
- Forex Expo Dubai Wins Guinness World Recordstm With 20,021 Visitors
- Superiorstar Prosperity Group Russell Hawthorne Highlights New Machine Learning Risk Framework
- Freedom Holding Corp. (FRHC) Shares Included In The Motley Fool's TMF Moneyball Portfolio
- Versus Trade Launches Master IB Program: Multi-Tier Commission Structure
- Ozzy Tyres Grows Their Monsta Terrain Gripper Tyres Performing In Australian Summers
Comments
No comment