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Armed Neighbors from Hell

Bessie T. Dowd by Bessie T. Dowd
January 16, 2026
in Uncategorized
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Armed Neighbors from Hell

South Shore Residents Return To Ransacked Apartments After ICE Raid: ‘It Looks Like Hell’

A “now renting” sign outside touts granite countertops. Inside, residents are trying to make sense of the raid that made their already neglected building even worse.

SOUTH SHORE — He’s an Army veteran now retired after three decades working for the U.S. Postal Service.

Federal agents pounded on the door of his South Shore apartment about 2 a.m. Tuesday.

Dan returns to his apartment unit, which was completely ransacked and had items left behind that were not his — at 7500 S. South Shore Drive in South Shore on Oct. 1, 2025. The apartment building was raided by federal agents the morning before. Credit: Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago

“I told them they must have the wrong apartment,” the man said.

But armed agents busted open many doors after arriving in U-Haul trucks to raid the 130-unit apartment building at 7500 S. South Shore Drive. They woke up residents to handcuff them with zip ties and led them into unmarked vans.

Rodrick Johnson, a U.S. citizen, said he heard “people dropping on the roof” before FBI agents kicked in his door. He was stuffed inside a van with his neighbors for what felt like several hours until agents told them the building was clear, he said.

“They didn’t tell me why I was being detained,” Johnson said. “They left people’s doors open, firearms, money, whatever, right there in the open.”

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A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said federal agencies arrested at least 37 people in the operation at the building, which they claimed is frequented by members of Venezulan gang Tren de Aragua. About 300 federal agents, some landing on the roof from helicopters, descended upon the building, according to NewsNation, which was invited along for the operation.

The report didn’t mention women and children appear to be among the detained, said Brandon Lee, a spokesman with the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights. Organizers worry many people were taken without warrants.

“These were families with their children escorted out in the middle of the night,” Lee said. “This administration is using PR efforts to try to turn communities against their neighbors.”

Residents said the building had become home to Venezuelan migrants. The raid saw people’s apartments turned upside down, citizens held for hours and their neighbors taken away to unknown places. Belongings were stolen from apartments after the agents left the building open.

The Army veteran, who went blind recently and asked not use his name, said the agents moved on to the next apartment after coming to his home.

“I was trying to protect myself,” he said. “My nerves were shook.”

By Wednesday afternoon, the building appeared largely abandoned by residents.

Unsigned waivers allowing DHS to disclose “records about you to a third party” were on front gates near “Know Your Rights” flyers. Broken windows scattered the property. Anyone could just walk in.

An apartment unit’s door is seen busted open to a room flooded with water damage at 7500 S. South Shore Drive in South Shore on Oct. 1, 2025. The apartment building was raided by federal agents the morning before. Credit: Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago

Dan Jones stood outside with police officers to file a report after his valuables — from his mattress and iPad down to his air fryer — were stolen after agents broke his door.

Jones slept at an aunt’s house following the raid and returned to find clothing and garbage that wasn’t his all over his apartment floor.

A small moving crew said they had been hired after the raid to clear out now-vacant units — but didn’t say by who. Doors were boarded up. In one room, there were zip ties and blood stains on the floor next to baby shoes. Flies swarmed around open fridges.

Water damage had caved in ceilings. Strollers and air conditioners and more things left behind blocked the middle of dark hallways. The lobby elevators were broken, with their buttons perpetually lit on the down arrow.

There was a strong odor everywhere.

Jones said the building’s “dirty” conditions predated the raid, but this was the worst he’d seen the place. It was the first of the month and his rent was due.

“It looks like hell,” Jones said. “ICE really just a gang.”

Jones said he’d been cordial with the Venezuelans who moved onto his floor.

“They were cool people,” Jones said. “We took it upon ourselves to at least keep it clean over here.”

Shattered apartment windows at 7500 S. South Shore Drive in South Shore on Oct. 1, 2025. The apartment building was raided by federal agents the morning before. Credit: Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago

Residents said problems at the property started after a new management company was brought on over a year ago. Cleanings became less regular, and two armed security guards were removed, they said.

That led to squatters, Jones said.

The Army veteran was guided through the mess in the lobby Wednesday by a caretaker. He couldn’t see the worst of it. The former postman complained of his mail being routinely stolen — and that he’ll have to keep living in the building as he tries to find somewhere else.

“It was a good place to live when I first got here,” he said.

The building’s ownership traces back to Wisconsin-based investor Trinity Flood, according to public records. Flood is facing a $27 million foreclosure lawsuit for not making loan payments on three South Shore properties she bought for $18 million in 2020, according to The Real Deal.

The city also filed suit in February against Flood’s LLCs for over 15 building code violations at the South Shore Drive property dating back to 2023, seeking that it be put under receivership, according to court records. The building failed its past 14 annual inspections, according to data from the city’s Department of Buildings.

“Building throughout has fire extinguishers that are missing,” city lawyers wrote in its legal complaint. “All stairways are filthy with strong smell of urine.”

Flood could not be reached, and the building’s management company, Strength In Management, did not return requests for comment.

A blind first floor resident shows his apartment unit, with heavy water damage on the ceiling and reeking of mold at 7500 S. South Shore Drive in South Shore on Oct. 1, 2025. The apartment building was raided by federal agents the morning before. Credit: Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago

The property was most recently estimated at an under $3 million market value, according to the Cook County Assessor’s Office. An online listing has it up for sale for more than $15 million as part of a “Jackson Park Portfolio” with two other South Shore buildings. The listing agent, Finley Askin, did not return a request for comment.

“Capital improvements to the portfolio consist of updated electric/plumbing, newer windows, on-site laundry, and renovated units,” the listing reads.

A “now renting” sign outside lists a number for Safe Harbor Reality, but agent Curtis Krolak said the company hasn’t managed the property in over two years.

“They never took it down,” Krolak said.

Since June, police have reported multiple gun crimes in the 7400 and 7500 blocks of South South Shore Drive, including two homicides, a shooting and two armed robberies, according to city data.

City crime outlet CWB reported that Jose Coronado-Meza, 25, accused of being a Tren de Aragua member, was charged with murder in June, with officials saying he killed another migrant inside the building.

Jonah Karsh, a community organizer with Metropolitan Tenants Organization, had tried to unionize tenants in August 2024 after a gas leak left some without functional stoves for over a month.

“The conditions were deplorable before the raid and have only deteriorated,” Karsh said. “The management was primarily responsible for failing to maintain the property and security.”

A door is tagged with “Venezula” [sic] at 7500 S. South Shore Drive in South Shore on Oct. 1, 2025. The apartment building was raided by federal agents the morning before. Credit: Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago

Walls on the building’s second floor were spray-painted with “Venezuela,” but it was unclear when. Many of the floor’s units had broken doors and appeared to be home to young children.

South Shore had been a landing spot for many Venezuelans when tens of thousands of migrants were bused from the southern border to Chicago and other Democrat-led cities.

“People stayed at shelters there and then found apartments,” Lee said.

At one point, migrants who received help through a state rental assistance program were living in the building, Karsh said. That funding was set to run out within months.

Karsh has kept contact with leasing tenants who did not have their doors broken or marked during the raid.

Those residents have since been sent instructions about receiving new keys.

“As of today, all points of entry to the building will be secured,” a Strength in Management employee wrote in an email. “Keys will be delivered to active tenants.”

Jones’ eyes welled with tears as he looked around his destroyed apartment. He wants to move. Rebuilding will be harder.

“My place was nice,” he said.

On his way out, he still tried to close the door.

Block Club’s Mick Dumke contributed to this report.

An apartment unit with severe water damage — and standing water — is seen at 7500 S. South Shore Drive in South Shore on Oct. 1, 2025. The apartment building was raided by federal agents the morning before. Credit: Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago
A worker tosses out items from an apartment at 7500 S. South Shore Drive in South Shore on Oct. 1, 2025. The apartment building was raided by federal agents the morning before. Credit: Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago
Large zip tie handcuffs are seen amid various personal items including children’s clothing and diapers, blood, makeup and others strewn on an apartment’s floor at 7500 S. South Shore Drive in South Shore on Oct. 1, 2025. The apartment building was raided by federal agents the morning before. Credit: Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago

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Neighbor shielded 7-year-old during South Shore federal raid: ‘I didn’t want them to take her’

During the Sept. 30 raid, one tenant protected a terrified girl and her mom. Remnants at the complex, including a detailed map of all the units, offer clues to what authorities may have known before that night.

By  Sophie Sherry and Mariah Woelfel | WBEZOct 10, 2025, 5:30pm 16/1/2026Listen

A hallway of a South Shore apartment building raided by federal agents during an anti-immigration campaign.
The South Shore apartment building was in disarray after federal agents raided during a night operation Sept. 30. Tenants had been speaking up about conditions in the building long before the building was targeted.

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Amid the smoke bombs and screams that ricocheted throughout a South Shore building last month during a massive military-style immigration raid, one man heard a knock on his door.

On the other side was a mom and her 7-year-old daughter, pleading for his help.

“I wasn’t planning on letting her stay, but I didn’t know what the hell was going on,” the man said of his Venezuelan migrant neighbors. But he quickly relented. The little girl was inconsolable and hid under his bed.

“I didn’t want them to take her,” said the man, who didn’t want to be named because he fears he’ll be targeted by federal authorities for his actions.

“I gave her my bedroom, and I just told her, ‘Just stay there. Don’t open, don’t, shh, just stay quiet,’” he recalled telling the mom and daughter as he choked back tears.

At one point, he went outside to check on things. He said ICE shouted at him to “shut my door, get the f–kinside, and don’t open my door again.”

The man had befriended the mom and girl in the building’s laundry room. They are among a group of Venezuelan immigrants who moved in over the past year, some with state rental assistance for asylum seekers and others without a lease, according to one longtime resident.

During the Sept. 30 raid, residents, migrants, including the woman’s husband, and squatters alike were zip-tied in the middle of the night. Other residents — like the man who helped his neighbors hide — were left undisturbed by ICE agents, prompting questions about what federal authorities knew about the building’s occupants ahead of time and how they obtained that information.

Remnants of the raid and interviews with residents who lived through it reveal some hints, including a mysterious map of the building found in the complex and makeshift door stickers that took inventory of occupants in some units.

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Federal agents that night arrested 37 people. They claimed some arrested “are believed to be involved in drug trafficking and distribution, weapons crimes and immigration violators.”

Federal officials also said the surrounding South Shore neighborhood was “a location known to be frequented by Tren de Aragua members and their associates.”

Few details have been disclosed about how federal agents came to that conclusion about that Venezuelan gang or determined who to target. None of the residents who spoke with WBEZ and Sun-Times reporters in the days after the raid said they had seen any signs of an international criminal enterprise operating out of the building.

A map of the units and stickers on the doors

Days before the raid, the man who sheltered the mother and her daughter saw someone he believed to be a worker from the building taking pictures of the units “where the Venezuelans lived.”

WBEZ and Sun-Times reporters also found a map crumpled up on the floor in the entryway of an apartment. It labeled each unit inside the five-floor building as “vacant,” “tenant” or as “firearms.” Some units appeared to be marked as both “tenant” and “firearm.”

The units marked “vacant” on the map had clearly been raided, with doors broken down and items scattered everywhere. Most units marked as “tenant” appeared intact, though not all.

This is a re-creation of a map found in the apartment complex at 7550 S. South Shore Drive after the Sept. 30 federal raid. This map does not include unit numbers and is not an exact replica of any of the floors in building to protect the safety of residents. But otherwise it is an exact replica of how the four floors of the building were mapped.
This is a re-creation of a map found in the apartment complex at 7550 S. South Shore Drive after the Sept. 30 federal raid. This map does not include unit numbers and is not an exact replica of any of the floors in building to protect the safety of residents. But otherwise it is an exact replica of how the four floors of the building were mapped.

Doors of raided units were also marked with what appeared to be some sort of makeshift sticker system. White stickers, made with duct tape and a marker, labeled as “PC” hung on doors of units that had been broken down.

Those units largely lined up with those on the map marked “vacant.” That’s where non-paying migrants or squatters may have been living, according to residents.

Residents at the raided South Shore building said white stickers labeled with “PC” hung on doors of units that had been broken down.
Residents at the raided South Shore building said white stickers labeled with “PC” hung on doors of units that had been broken down.

It’s unclear if the stickers went up before, during or after the raid.

One resident indicated a separate set of orange stickers, some listing the occupants inside the apartment, went up during the raid.

Larry, a resident of five years who didn’t share his last name due to safety concerns, said federal agents attempted to break down his door that night. Larry said he went back and forth with agents, as they banged on his door, telling them they didn’t have the right to enter.

Eventually, he said they left and placed an orange sticker on his door, labeled “no go.” There were orange stickers left on other doors in the building, one labeled “2 adults, 2 kids” another “1 adult male.”

A resident at the South Shore building said make-shift stickers labeled with the number of occupants per apartment like this one labeled "2 adults, 2 kids" were stuck on the unit doors during the raid on Sept. 30.
A resident at the South Shore building said make-shift stickers labeled with the number of occupants per apartment were left on the unit doors during the raid on Sept. 30. 

A building employee said they had never seen the map identifying the “firearms” units but said, “I’d like to have that myself.” He said that the map was not created by building employees “of course.”

The building’s management company, Strength in Management, did not answer questions about the map or apparent sticker system.

The apartment where the mother and her 7-year-old daughter hid from ICE that night was marked “vacant.”

The mom and girl stayed with their neighbor for three days, he said. He doesn’t know where they are now.

“Hopefully, she’s safe,” he said.

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