U: Live Blog! Before The Able USDC Judge Perry… In The Chi…

We will capture it by cellphone… and we are underway!

➣ By agreement, the TRO against militarized national guard forces here — will remain in place until final judgment in this federal district court — or a final US Supreme Court ruling changing the posture.

MINUTE entry before the Honorable April M. Perry:

Continued status hearing held 10/22/2025 at 3:00 p.m.

Defendants propose an extension of the TRO until a final decision on the merits is reached, without prejudice to Defendants’ continued pursuit of appellate relief and subject to any relief granted on appeal. Plaintiff accepts Defendants’ proposal. The Court will enter an order consistent with the agreement of the parties on 10/23/2025, because extending the TRO will allow Defendants to allocate their legal resources in the way they feel is most appropriate and give the parties time to conduct fact discovery and submit well-reasoned legal briefs and motions on the complex and weighty topics raised in this matter. Defendants to answer or otherwise plead to the complaint consistent with the timeframes set forth in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The parties are asked to meet and confer about a discovery schedule and file a joint status report regarding discovery by 11/4/2025.

The parties agree that should the Supreme Court issue any ruling in this case, they will submit a joint status report within 24 hours….

We are adjourned.

This all started at 9 AM CDT, sharp — but it seems that the Noemites haven’t made themselves available to the State of Illinois and City of Chicago counsels to discuss these matters. That won’t do, for Judge Perry — under our local IL ND rules of procedure.

So now we are adjourned until 3 pm this afternoon — then live again — in the Dirksen Building, on the 17th Floor:

…MINUTE entry before the Honorable April M. Perry:

Status hearing held 10/22/2025 at 9:00 a.m. via telephone, to discuss next steps in this matter.

Status hearing to resume at 3:00 p.m. CST after the parties have consulted with their clients and conferred with each other….

Now you know. Onward, resolutely — and look for a live blog, if I do get over there — at 3 PM, local.

नमस्ते

U: Live Blog! The Able USDC Judge Perry Has Continued The Matter, To 3 PM CDT — Now I May Be Able To Walk Over, And Pop In On It, Live.

We will capture it by cellphone… and we are underway!

➣ By agreement, the TRO against militarized national guard forces here — will remain in place until final judgment in this federal district court — or a final US Supreme Court ruling changing the posture.

MINUTE entry before the Honorable April M. Perry:

Continued status hearing held 10/22/2025 at 3:00 p.m.

Defendants propose an extension of the TRO until a final decision on the merits is reached, without prejudice to Defendants’ continued pursuit of appellate relief and subject to any relief granted on appeal. Plaintiff accepts Defendants’ proposal. The Court will enter an order consistent with the agreement of the parties on 10/23/2025, because extending the TRO will allow Defendants to allocate their legal resources in the way they feel is most appropriate and give the parties time to conduct fact discovery and submit well-reasoned legal briefs and motions on the complex and weighty topics raised in this matter. Defendants to answer or otherwise plead to the complaint consistent with the timeframes set forth in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The parties are asked to meet and confer about a discovery schedule and file a joint status report regarding discovery by 11/4/2025.

The parties agree that should the Supreme Court issue any ruling in this case, they will submit a joint status report within 24 hours….

We are adjourned.

This all started at 9 AM CDT, sharp — but it seems that the Noemites haven’t made themselves available to the State of Illinois and City of Chicago counsels to discuss these matters. That won’t do, for Judge Perry — under our local IL ND rules of procedure.

So now we are adjourned until 3 pm this afternoon — then live again — in the Dirksen Building, on the 17th Floor:

…MINUTE entry before the Honorable April M. Perry:

Status hearing held 10/22/2025 at 9:00 a.m. via telephone, to discuss next steps in this matter.

Status hearing to resume at 3:00 p.m. CST after the parties have consulted with their clients and conferred with each other….

Now you know. Onward, resolutely — and look for a live blog, if I do get over there — at 3 PM, local.

नमस्ते

The Able USDC Judge Perry Has Continued The Matter, To 3 PM CDT — Now I May Be Able To Walk Over, And Pop In On It, Live.

This all started at 9 AM CDT, sharp — but it seems that the Noemites haven’t made themselves available to the State of Illinois and City of Chicago counsels to discuss these matters. That won’t do, for Judge Perry — under our local IL ND rules of procedure.

So now we are adjourned until 3 pm this afternoon — then live again — in the Dirksen Building, on the 17th Floor:

…MINUTE entry before the Honorable April M. Perry:

Status hearing held 10/22/2025 at 9:00 a.m. via telephone, to discuss next steps in this matter.

Status hearing to resume at 3:00 p.m. CST after the parties have consulted with their clients and conferred with each other….

Now you know. Onward, resolutely — and look for a live blog, if I do get over there — at 3 PM, local.

नमस्ते

Illinois Has The Upper Hand At The Supremes, Tonight — On Odious Trump’s “Operation Midway Blitz”…

The Tangerine 2.0 lawyers have again tried illicitly to cut to the front of the SCOTUS red velvet rope demarked line… and get Alito to rule that Trump can use the National Guard as a private army any time he likes. That will not happen. Not on my watch — nor on that of Gov. Pritzker or Mayor Johnson.

Here is how the excellent local lawyers have responded to the Manchurian Cantaloupe, at the Supremes (in 46 well-reasoned pages) this afternoon — and a bit:

…The Framers carefully apportioned responsibility over the “militia” — today, the National Guard — between the federal government and the States, granting the federal government the authority to call up the militia only for specific purposes and at specific times….

Although the district court concluded that those unusual circumstances were not present in Illinois, and so enjoined the federalization and deployment of the National Guard at the TRO stage, the Seventh Circuit’s decision partially staying that order — and permitting federalization — both safeguards the careful balance of power struck by the Constitution and affords the federal government appropriate solicitude while this fast-moving case proceeds in the lower courts. [Trumpian] applicants’ contrary arguments rest on mischaracterizations of the factual record or the lower courts’ views of the legal principles….

As the district court found, state and local law enforcement officers have handled isolated protest activities in Illinois, and there is no credible evidence to the contrary. The Court should decline applicants’ request to unsettle the equitable judgment reflected in the Seventh Circuit’s order and to take the dramatic step of permitting deployment of National Guard troops over Illinois’s objection for the handful of days the TRO currently remains in effect….

On September 8, the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) announced “Operation Midway Blitz,” an effort to ramp up immigration-related arrests and deportations in and around Chicago, Illinois. Doc. 13-12.

Within two weeks, DHS announced that the operation had yielded over 500 arrests. DHS touted its arrest numbers again in another press release, declaring that it “remain[ed] undeterred.”

Within a month, DHS announced it had made over 1,000 arrests and that “Operation Midway Blitz is making Illinois safe again….” [On the contrary, all it has done is to teargas peaceful protestors asserting their First Amendment rights, on public sidewalks and streets.]

On September 26, ICE agents deployed tear gas and pepper spray on a group of about 100 to 150 protesters outside the facility. Doc. 13-5 at 8. Broadview’s police department requested assistance from Illinois’s law enforcement mutual aid network, prompting the Illinois State Police and several other local police departments to send support. Id. at 8-9. To ensure public safety, the combined law enforcement team closed three blocks of a nearby street for about three hours in the morning and another two hours that night. Id. at 9. The same day, DHS issued a request (which was not acted upon) to the Department of War for “100 DoW personnel” to “integrate with federal law enforcement operations, serving in direct support of federal facility protection, access control, and crowd control measures.” Doc. 13-2 at 15-16.

The next day, which featured only a small crowd of quiet protesters closely monitored by local police, federal agents told Broadview Police to prepare for a “shitshow” — specifically, that they intended to increase ICE’s presence in Broadview and escalate their use of chemical agents on the protesters. Doc. 13-5 at 9.

Throughout the rest of the day and into the evening, agents pushed the protesters up the street and deployed tear gas and pepper balls. Id. at 9-10. Following that incident, 11 protesters were arrested, id. at 10, but only five were charged with crimes, and federal grand juries declined to indict at least three of those five….

Do stay tuned. The Supremes, to retain credibility, should defer this case until a full trial on the merits of an injunction has occured — at a minimum. We shall see.

नमस्ते