Usa news

Family who fled Russia faces deportation from U.S.

Good morning, Chicago. ✶

🔎 Below: The Tiulenev family spoke out against the war in Ukraine and sought asylum in the U.S., only to be thrust into an immigration system that’s become more unforgiving for Russians. Some family members have settled in the Chicago suburbs while others have been detained for months in California.

🗞️ Plus: An attempt to fix chronic flooding, kids learn the blues at summer camp and more.

📝 Keeping scoreThe Cubs lost to the Orioles, 3-2; the White Sox fell to the Red Sox, 2-1.

📧 Subscribe: Get our morning newsletter delivered to your inbox weekday mornings.

⏱️: An 8-minute read


TODAY’S WEATHER 🌤️

Partly sunny with a chance of afternoon showers and a high near 81.


TODAY’S TOP STORY 🔎

Asylum-seekers Dmitrii and Elena Tiulenev

Giacomo Cain/Sun-Times

Family who fled Russia face deportation from U.S.

By Alma Campos, Anna Savchenko and Keenan Chen

Seeking refuge: Since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, a wave of Russians have left their country and sought refuge in the United States. The number of Russian asylum cases rose sharply in the two years that followed, according to analysis by the Chicago Sun-Times and WBEZ. Since 2024, attorneys and advocates say, many Russian asylum-seekers have faced a harsher path: Longer detention, limited access to lawyers and evidence, and a greater risk of losing their cases. 

Facing barriers: Those barriers have become even more serious as immigration judges deny a growing share of asylum claims. The shift has come amid the second Trump administration’s broader efforts to increase deportations and move cases faster through the system. 

Russian risk: For those deported, the real danger begins when they land back in Russia. Attorneys and advocates say Russians known for opposing the war could be screened by security officials at the airport, questioned, searched, monitored and detained. They could then face years navigating a Russian justice system that’s accused of subjecting government critics to unfair trials, degrading prison conditions and torture.

One family’s journey: The Tiulenev family spoke out against the war in Ukraine and sought asylum in the United States, only to be thrust into an immigration system that has become more unforgiving for Russians. Some family members have settled in the Chicago suburbs, while others have been detained for months in California. In the U.S., the Tiulenevs face deportation — and in Russia, they face persecution.

READ MORE


MORE ON IMMIGRATION ✶

Community organizers and activists attend a press conference Thursday in Back of the Yards to denounce increased ICE activity.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Immigration advocates say ICE arrests are rising in Chicago again

By Kade Heather and Kaitlin Washburn

Arrests rising: Federal immigration enforcement has intensified across Chicago in recent weeks, but the Trump administration’s tactics have been far less publicized than during the height of its deportation campaign last fall, legal groups and immigration advocates say. The Southwest Side, particularly the Back of the Yards, Brighton Park and Gage Park neighborhoods, have been targeted the most over the last two weeks, legal groups said.

Response reports: Last week, at least 20 people were arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Chicago, and another 17 people have been arrested so far this week, according to reports from rapid response groups who document arrests. The vast majority of recent detainees in Chicago also have no criminal records, said Berto Aguayo, a lawyer and co-policy chair of the Latino Leadership Council.

READ MORE


COURTS ⚖️

U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

Judge finds Chicago’s U.S. Attorney Boutros violated secrecy order in Tren de Aragua case

By Jon Seidel

Courtroom scene: On July 1, Chicago’s top federal prosecutor, U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros, traveled to Washington for a press conference to tout criminal charges against three alleged Tren de Aragua gang members, along with Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and FBI Director Kash Patel. But Thursday, Boutros found himself summoned by U.S. Magistrate Judge Laura McNally in the Dirksen Federal Courthouse, where McNally said there’d been a “clear” violation of her order sealing that very case.

Key context: Thursday’s hearing, during which a crowded gallery of onlookers gathered behind Boutros, amounted to an extraordinary moment. His office is in the midst of a credibility crisis unlike any faced by his recent predecessors. It’s the second time in seven weeks a judge has rebuked Boutros in person.

READ MORE


MORE NEWS YOU NEED 🗞️


ENVIRONMENT 🌧️

A concrete water storage unit is seen in Austin.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

Underground storage project aims to fix chronic flooding in Chicago

By Brett Chase and Elijah James

Flood solution: Acknowledging the city’s persistent flooding problem, Mayor Johnson, flanked by other elected officials Tuesday, touted a West Side pilot project aimed at temporarily capturing rain underground before it can overwhelm Chicago’s outdated sewers. The city is splitting the $12 million cost to build the underground storage along two streets in Austin with the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District.

Key context: The West Side, where Johnson owns a home, experienced historic floods in 2023 due to a combination of storms intensified by climate change and aging sewer infrastructure that should have been replaced. Designed many decades ago, Chicago’s sewers can handle 2 inches of rain in a 24-hour period before flooding becomes likely. About a month’s worth of rain was dumped across Chicago during the recent Fourth of July weekend.

Casting a smell: In the south suburbs, the Thornton Quarry is nearly full after weeks of heavy rainfall — and emitting a foul odor. The reservoir is part of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District’s Deep Tunnel flood-control system. It reached 94% capacity earlier this week.

READ MORE


MOVIES 🎥

Christopher Nolan is seen on set of his film “The Odyssey.”

Melinda Sue Gordon/Universal Pictures

Christopher Nolan speaks on adapting ‘The Odyssey’ and what he learned about movies in Chicago

By Richard Roeper

New movie: Christopher Nolan’s “The Odyssey” is one of the most anticipated films of the century so far. Out next week, Nolan wrote and directed a 172-minute, R-rated, $250 million epic adaptation of Homer’s epic poem — the first feature ever shot entirely on IMAX cameras.

Chicago connection: For Chicago-area audiences, that boundary-pushing ambition carries a particular resonance. The city and suburbs are woven into Nolan’s youth, as he and his siblings spent their summers in Evanston.

In conversation: After seeing the movie, critic Richard Roeper sat down with Nolan to discuss the film’s making and his Chicago memories for the Sun-Times.

READ MORE


ON WBEZ 91.5 FM 📻

In the Loop with Sasha-Ann Simons, 9 a.m.

Say More with Mary Dixon and Patrick Smith, 10 a.m.

LISTEN LIVE 🎧

 


FROM THE PRESS BOX 🏀⚾📺


CHICAGO MINI CROSSWORD 🌭

Today’s clue: 1 D: ___ of Chicago (food festival running this weekend at Grant Park)

PLAY NOW


BRIGHT ONE 🔆


At Blues Camp Chicago, kids connect with city tradition

By Neil Steinberg

At Blues Camp Chicago, the world of summertime childhood fun meets the snap-brim hat and two-tone shoes discipline of blues musicianship. There are studio rehearsals, sound checks and sing-alongs, plus snacks, skating and “sneakerball.”

“We want them to be kids, of course. We want them to understand and appreciate blues, as American roots music,” said Fernando Jones, the veteran Chicago blues man who founded Blues Camp Chicago 17 years ago.

About 80 campers, ages 5 through 17, from all over the country take part in the five-day program. They perform several concerts — at Navy Pier, at Reggie’s blues club on South State — and are guided by 15 instructors and staff. Some kids arrive barely able to carry a tune. Others are aspiring professionals — one brought along a pricey PRS guitar signed by Buddy Guy.

The camp is free, funded by Jones’s Blues Kids Foundation, and Jones says that while applicants are required to create a video, there isn’t a culling process — Blues Camp Chicago accepts everyone who applies, across a range of age, talent and ability. Many have been coming for years.

Ricky, 10, who plays guitar, is here for his third year. What prompted an 8-year-old to go to blues camp?

“He heard about the camp and registered, and I can say he’s become a little blues head now,” said his mother, Nina Garcia-Carpintero.

READ MORE


YOUR DAILY QUESTION ☕️

Describe your perfect summer day in Chicago.

Reply via email (please include your first and last name). We may run your answer in a future newsletter or story.


Thanks for reading the Sun-Times Morning Edition!
Got a story you think we missed? Email us here.


Written and curated by: Matt Moore
Editor: Eydie Cubarrubia


The Chicago Sun-Times is a nonprofit supported by readers like you. Become a member to make stories like these free and available to everyone. Learn more at suntimes.com/member.

Exit mobile version