Federal judge releases man who lawfully carried gun during ICE protest in Broadview

The man found lawfully carrying a loaded firearm during protests outside the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview last weekend will be released from custody on conditions that he steer clear of the building, a federal judge ruled Thursday.

U.S. District Judge Sunil Harjani concluded that Ray Collins, 31, is an employed homeowner with no history of crime or serious substance abuse. Therefore, the judge said conditions could be fashioned to allow Collins’ release without endangering the community.

Federal authorities have pointed to the cases of Collins and his partner, Jocelyne Robledo, to argue ICE agents have been endangered by protesters. They were each found outside the Broadview ICE facility with a loaded 9mm semiautomatic pistol — carried lawfully — days after a shooter opened fire on an ICE facility in Dallas and killed a detainee.

The Department of Homeland Security has sought to deploy 100 military troops to Illinois to protect ICE personnel and facilities, according to Gov. JB Pritzker. That deployment has yet to materialize, though.

Now, Harjani’s ruling means that all five people who face criminal charges stemming from Saturday’s chaotic protest have been ordered released pending trial.

Neither Collins nor Robledo are charged with any crime directly related to their possession of the firearms outside the Broadview building. Rather, they’re charged with assaulting and resisting officers. But during a hearing Monday, U.S. Magistrate Judge Gabriel Fuentes questioned Collins’ judgment in bringing the gun to a volatile situation.

Fuentes ordered Collins detained during that Monday hearing. He found Robledo ineligible for a detention hearing, in part, because she is not accused of injuring an officer like Collins, so she was released.

Richard Kling, Collins’ defense attorney, filed a motion challenging Fuentes’ ruling, which led to Thursday’s ruling by Harjani. Though he’s being released, Collins must now stay 500 feet away from the ICE facility in Broadview, follow a curfew, not possess any firearms and surrender his firearm owner’s identification card and concealed carry license.

Harjani acknowledged the allegations against Collins represent “a level of danger to the community,” but he noted that Collins “did not brandish or use the weapon in any way.”

Harjani also cited Robledo’s charges during the hearing and noted that, aside from allegedly injuring an officer, she “did exactly the same thing, and she’s free.”

The criminal complaint alleges that Collins and Robledo “refused to retreat” Saturday when agents sought to widen a perimeter around the Broadview ICE facility. When agents began to push people away, Robledo allegedly pushed back.

That apparently prompted a struggle. As agents tussled with Robledo, they allegedly found the pistol she was carrying in a band around her waist. Then, Collins allegedly yelled at agents to get away from her and charged toward them, leading to another struggle and the discovery of his gun, according to the complaint.

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