CHICAGO – A federal judge on Oct. 6 decided to allow National Guard members to deploy to Illinois over the objections of Gov. JB Pritzker, who slammed the Trump administration’s mobilization of troops as an "invasion of Illinois by the federal government."

U.S. District Judge April M. Perry decided at an emergency hearing on Oct. 6 that National Guard troops can deploy at least until Oct. 9, when the federal judge for the Northern District of Illinois scheduled a hearing over the matter. Perry’s decision came in response to a lawsuit filed on Oct. 6 by the Illinois Attorney General’s Office asking Perry to stop Trump from deploying troops.

The hearing at the Everett McKinley Dirksen United States Courthouse in Chicago came hours before Texas National Guard members were expected to board a flight bound for Illinois and as troops from the Illinois National Guard are expected to begin training for deployment as soon as Oct. 7, according to Trump administration lawyers.

Attorneys for the White House said troops from Texas could deploy "tomorrow at the earliest." The federal government attorneys could not answer Perry’s questions regarding where exactly the troops would deploy.

Pritzker called a news conference shortly after Perry made her decision to reiterate that the Trump administration is deploying troops despite vociferous objections from local leaders.

"He clearly has decided to declare war on a great American city," the governor said of Trump. "Our people have been subjected to violence, intimidation and harassment."

Perry said in court on Oct. 6 that she could not immediately issue a decision regarding the troop deployment because the court had to review hundreds of pages of court filings in the case.

Anything deployed troops did before then could potentially be used as evidence against the Trump administration, said Perry: "If I were the federal government, I would strongly consider taking a pause on this until Thursday."

Around 300 Illinois National Guard members are expected to deploy. As many as 400 members from Texas are expected to deploy.

Midway Blitz ramps up

Judge Perry’s decision comes amid a rush of activity in and around Chicago related to the White House’s Chicago-area immigration crackdown known as Operation Midway Blitz which President Donald Trump launched last month. Trump has said the crackdown is necessary to catch "the worst of the worst" criminals who are immigrants.

Earlier on Oct. 6, Illinois State Attorney Kwame Raoul filed a 69-page lawsuit over the Trump administration’s move to deploy the National Guard, prompting the hearing in Perry’s courtroom. Across the hall on the 17th floor of the downtown Chicago courthouse, a detention hearing was held for a woman accused of ambushing federal agents; she appeared in court in bandages after being shot by agents.

In another courtroom, a hearing was held in a case brought by local news organizations against the Trump administration over federal agents’ aggressive tactics towards journalists covering protests. Across the Chicago River, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Mayor Brandon Johnson held a news conference slamming the upcoming deployment.

"The only radical is a president trying to deploy the National Guard on our city from across the country," said Johnson, a progressive who is frequently targeted by the White House. "We do not want the National Guard on our streets.

Also on Oct. 6, Johnson issued an executive order prohibiting federal immigration agents from using city property to stage operations. It’s unclear what legal authority the order holds.

Hundreds arrested, Black Hawk helicopters, alderperson detained

The numerous hearings and words of condemnation from Illinois officials come on the heels of a heated week in the city.

Immigration agents rappelling from Black Hawk helicopters stormed a South Side apartment building they said held members of Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua. The raid left the building a wreck. Among 37 people arrested were two "confirmed" members of the Venezuelan gang, according to a Department of Homeland Security statement.

In addition to Johnson, some city officials have taken prominent stances against immigration enforcement agents. Alderperson Jessie Fuentes, a City Council member representing a historically Puerto Rican neighborhood, was handcuffed and detained by immigration agents after asking agents whether they had a warrant to arrest a local resident.

Homeland Security officials are facing challenges in federal court in Chicago to making arrests without a warrant. But a hearing regarding the arrests was delayed following the government shutdown.

Immigration enforcement authorities say that they have arrested over 800 "illegal aliens including worst of the worst criminals" since launching the blitz.

Among people Homeland Security officials recently celebrated the arrest of were Stefan Cseve, a "criminal illegal alien from Austria" convicted of sexual assault; Cristobal Carias Masin, a native of El Salvador convicted of statutory rape; and Angel Galindo Viveros, a Mexico native convicted of armed carjacking.

A full account of the people arrested by immigration enforcement agents, including their immigration status and criminal background, could not be independently verified.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: 'Invasion of Illinois': Pritzker slams Trump troops headed to Chicago

Reporting by Michael Loria, USA TODAY / USA TODAY

USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect