Dozens of residents addressed the St. Charles City Council during an extended public-comment period, urging action after reported regional immigration-enforcement activities that speakers said have created fear and disrupted daily life.
Tim Kane, who said he frequently spends time in St. Charles but lives in Wheaton, cited press reporting about "Operation Midway Blitz" and referenced a Chicago Tribune estimate that placed the operation's cost at $59 million. Kane and other speakers warned of local consequences such as civil-rights claims, legal-defense costs, and erosion of trust in public institutions if federal enforcement operations occur without transparency.
Several speakers recounted firsthand or reported instances they said showed federal agents detaining people without judicial warrants, and called on the council to bar staging or detentions on city property and to require judicial warrants and identification in cases where enforcement occurs. Howard Miller, a Batavia resident, said the Fifth Amendment protects "no person" from deprivation of liberty without due process and asked the council not to "give aid" to federal agents by permitting operations on municipal property.
Other residents emphasized the community's welcoming values and described public demonstrations and petition drives: one speaker said roughly 300 people gathered at a downtown rally and organizers have collected more than 550 signatures asking that ICE "keep out." Lauren Carter and Mary Beth Finch appealed to the council's sense of empathy and legacy, with Finch asking, "do you care that your constituents are afraid and suffering?"
Not all public speakers urged a categorical ban. Bruno Hilgert, a longtime resident, urged lawful, pragmatic solutions and said there ought to be a compromise that allows federal enforcement to do its work within legal bounds while protecting residents. Several speakers urged clarity on limits of local authority and asked the council to pursue measures that are legally enforceable.
In response, multiple councilmembers thanked speakers and noted ongoing stakeholder meetings. At least three council members requested staff explore what a proclamation on due process and opposition to racial profiling might look like. City staff (Speaker 11) said that is a policy directive council can receive and that proposed language could be presented for council consideration on an agenda.
No ordinance or binding policy was adopted at the meeting; the council's immediate action was a staff direction to draft possible proclamation or resolution language and return with options for council consideration.
Next steps: staff will draft possible proclamation language for council review and place it on a future agenda if directed.