By SOPHIA TAREEN and CHRISTINE FERNANDO
CHICAGO (AP) — Baltazar Enriquez starts most mornings with street patrols, leaving his home in Chicago’s Little Village on foot or by car to find immigration agents that have repeatedly targeted his largely Mexican neighborhood.
Wearing an orange whistle around his neck, the activist broadcasts his plans on Facebook.
“We don’t know if they’re going to come back. All we know is we’ve got to get ready,” he tells thousands of followers. “Give us any tips if you see any suspicious cars.”
Moments later, his phone buzzes.
As an unprecedented immigration crackdown enters a third month, a growing number of Chicago residents are fighting back against what they deem a racist and aggressive overreach of the federal government. The Democratic strong

Orlando Sentinel Politics

PennLive Pa. Politics
Boston Herald
Associated Press US and World News Video
Reuters US Domestic
AlterNet
Reuters US Politics
San Bernardino Sun
The Daily Beast
Wheeling Intelligencer
FOX News Food
IMDb TV