
Mayor Brandon Johnson's administration says no obligation to hand city ID records to ICE
'It's bad,' the mayor told reporters at his weekly news conference. 'It's wrong.'
The mayor's short remarks came after the Tribune reported Friday that the city received a summons April 17 requiring the city to turn over the past three years of CityKey records, according to a copy obtained by the Tribune in a Freedom of Information Act request.
Johnson corporation counsel Mary Richardson-Lowry said the administration won't cooperate with the subpoena because doing so would expose vulnerable applicants.
'We respectfully declined within the bounds of the law, given the privacy issues and specifically the exposure of groups like domestic violence victims, which would have been exposed had that information been provided, which would have been in contravention to their rights,' Richardson-Lowry said. 'We will continue to monitor … all administrative warrants, as we are doing now, and we've put a process in place should we receive future administrative warrants from this administration.'
The ICE subpoena called on the city to 'provide a copy of the application and all supporting documents for all individuals who applied for a CityKey identification card between April 17, 2022, and April 17, 2025, and used any foreign document as proof of identity, including but not limited to: consular identification card, foreign driver's license, or foreign passport.'
Richardson-Lowry noted the subpoena was an administrative warrant, meaning the city does not have to comply unless ICE chooses to escalate by seeking a court order.
'Should they move towards a court setting, we will respond in kind,' Richardson-Lowry said. 'In some other categories, we produce documents that we do think we're obligated to produce. But with respect to CityKey, we don't believe such an obligation is there.'
The ID program was launched in 2017 by former Mayor Rahm Emanuel and city Clerk Anna Valencia as part of a stand against Trump — though it is not just for immigrants. While officials trumpeted the safety of the CityKey application during its inception, promising the city wouldn't keep identifying documents in case federal officials sought to track down applicants, the situation recently changed.
After being overwhelmed by demand for the IDs by Venezuelan migrants at in-person events in fall 2023, Valencia started offering an online portal in December 2024. To meet state document requirements, the clerk's office has kept application materials for more than 2,700 people who used the online CityKey system since then, a spokesperson for Valencia told the Tribune on Friday.
On Wednesday, Valencia released a statement saying her office was in the process of discussing next steps for the program.
'I'm engaging with community stakeholders and government officials to make sure CityKey continues to serve and protect all Chicagoans,' Valencia wrote. 'Thank you to the Law Department for their work in protecting vulnerable Chicagoans from potential harm and Mayor Johnson for his commitment to CityKey's mission. Working together to fight for our communities is a priority of mine and we'll continue to stand up for our neighbors.'
Johnson spokesperson Cassio Mendoza had said Friday, 'Turning over personal information would betray the privacy and trust of residents who participated in the program. Mayor Johnson will continue to resist any attempts by the federal government to violate the rights and protections of Chicagoans.'
Tonantzin Carmona, former chief of policy for the city clerk, told the Tribune Wednesday that the office 'examined every possible worst case scenario of how data could be used against a particular group to harm them' before CityKey's 2017 launch — including a federal subpoena.
'We definitely discussed this possible scenario,' Carmona, who left the clerk's office in 2019 and is now a Brookings Institution fellow, said. 'Disabling the online portal may be the most responsible course of action.'
Carmona added that the federal government's actions could create a 'chilling effect' across the U.S. Outside Chicago, the Trump administration has been pressuring the Internal Revenue Service to share data with ICE to identify immigrants for deportations. A federal judge in May refused to block the IRS from doing so.
Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court sided with Trump in allowing his Department of Government Efficiency to access personal data stored in Social Security systems.
'City officials should be prepared for it to not be the only program that gets targeted,' Carmona said. 'This moment isn't just about records. It's about whether people feel that they can exist in public spaces, seek help from public agencies or like, fully belong in the city they call home.'
CityKey appeals to immigrants because it allows noncitizens to obtain a city government-issued ID. It's unclear how many of its 87,100-plus applicants during the time period encompassed in ICE's subpoena are immigrants. The city clerk policy is to only retain records for those who apply via the online portal.
The Tribune also obtained an ICE subpoena sent to Chicago's Department of Streets and Sanitation on March 21 that sought payroll records for current and recent employees as part of a worker eligibility audit.
'It's important to a community that wants to be an immigrant sanctuary to also be a data sanctuary, and that means to collect and retain as little information as possible about immigrants,' Adam Schwartz, privacy litigation director at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said. 'The solution is for the holders of the data — in this case, the mayor of the City of Chicago — to fight back and say, 'No. We're going to use every legal tool at our disposal to protect data privacy.''
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USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Deportations are taking a toll on California's economy - and have only just begun
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One recent study estimated that the hit to California, the world's fourth-largest economy, could be as much as $275 billion. "It's a pretty massive amount that even took us by surprise," said Bay Area Council Economic Institute Research Director Abby Raisz, author of the nonprofit's June report. "We anticipated it would be big, but we didn't realize how expansive and significant a role undocumented workers play in sustaining California's economy. It's bigger than we thought." Immigration raids led to drop in California's workforce Since the report's release, the Trump administration has expanded immigration raids to include many more people without criminal records. The Department of Homeland Security said nearly 2,800 undocumented immigrants have been arrested in Greater Los Angeles. Local media reported that many were between June 6 and 22. The raids had a dramatic and immediate impact on the workforce. Almost 465,000 California workers fled from the labor ranks during the week of June 8, as immigration authorities raided worksites across the Los Angeles area, according to a July University of California, Merced study. As a result, people working in private-sector jobs in California dropped by 3.1%, a decline not seen since the COVID-19 pandemic, the study noted, though it's unclear whether they left permanently or just for a short time. California Lieutenant Governor Eleni Kounalakis said immigrants are the backbone of the state's economic workforce. "They are the workers who feed us, the caretakers who support us, the entrepreneurs who drive innovation, and the neighbors who strengthen our communities," Kounalakis said in a statement. "The ripple effects of mass deportation in California would be felt nationwide and beyond." "Carry your papers": The Trump administration is telling immigrants 'Carry your papers.' Here's what to know. 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Newsweek
3 hours ago
- Newsweek
Pastor Detained By ICE Agents While Traveling To Help Pregnant Niece
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Newsweek
3 hours ago
- Newsweek
Man Living in Community for 26 Years Detained by ICE in Church Parking Lot
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