They plotted, they arrested, and now they are facing a federal counter-strike! 🏃♂️💨

Venezuelan Migrant Arrested After Chicago Student Fatally Shot Near Campus

A masked gunman shot and killed an 18-year-old Loyola University Chicago student along the city’s lakefront shortly after 1:30 a.m. Thursday, while she was walking with friends. The gunman struck Sheridan Gorman, a resident of Westchester County, New York, in the head, causing her death at the scene.
There is a 25-year-old man in jail for her death who is a Venezuelan migrant, according to Fox News.
The Chicago Tribune obtained records indicating that a “distinct limp” led to the suspect’s discovery just minutes after the shooting. The Tribune didn’t say who the suspect was. Police haven’t said yet if the man has been charged in connection with the Gorman case.
In a letter sent to students on Thursday, Mark C. Reed, President of Loyola University Chicago, confirmed Gorman’s death.
“It is with profound sadness that I write to share that one of our students, Sheridan Gorman, was killed earlier today. This is a tragic loss, and our hearts go out to Sheridan’s family, loved ones, and all who knew her,” Reed wrote in the letter.
Sheridan Gorman was only 18 years old. She was walking along the lakefront with friends in the early morning. A man with a mask shot at her, and now her family in New York is planning a funeral instead of a summer visit.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) filed an arrest detainer asking sanctuary politicians not to let Jose Medina-Medina go free.
Medina-Medina is a Venezuelan criminal illegal alien who was arrested for killing 18-year-old Sheridan Gorman in Chicago, Illinois.
The U.S. Border Patrol caught Medina-Medina on May 9, 2023, and the Biden administration let him into the country. He was arrested for shoplifting in Chicago, Illinois, and then let go again on June 19, 2023.
“Sheridan Gorman had her whole life ahead of her before this cold-blooded killer decided to end her life. She was failed by open border policies and sanctuary politicians who RELEASED this illegal alien TWICE before he went on to commit this heinous murder,” said Acting Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis.
“We are calling on Governor J.B. Pritzker and Chicago’s sanctuary politicians to commit to not releasing this criminal illegal alien from jail back into American neighborhoods,” Bis added.
In December 2025, ICE Director Todd Lyons wrote to Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and asked him to put the safety of Americans first and honor ICE arrest warrants for more than 4,000 criminal illegal aliens in the state’s custody, including murderers, sexual predators, and people who have been convicted of or charged with weapons offenses.
The pace of ICE arrests nationwide has topped 1,100 per day on average this year, far higher than the rate last spring of roughly 600 arrests per day, according to new data reviewed by the New York Times.
“New data analyzed by The New York Times reveals that the pace of these arrests has varied across the country in sometimes surprising ways. Some places that did not have high-profile ICE operations this year, such as Florida and San Antonio, have still seen high and steadily increasing numbers of arrests,” the article stated.
“In other areas like Los Angeles and Chicago that were targeted by ICE with aggressive enforcement operations last year, the number of arrests has fallen steeply in recent months. And in some areas — notably many places with so-called sanctuary policies in place — the arrest rate is flat, or up only slightly.
The article added, “The administration’s high-profile operation in Minnesota this year, resulted in a steep increase in arrests there: ICE’s St. Paul field office arrested more than 5,000 people from mid-December through March 10. But four other field offices arrested more people during this same time period, led by the Miami area — with nearly 10,000 arrests — followed by the field offices in Dallas, Atlanta, and San Antonio.”
CHAPTER 2 THE FATHER THEY FAILED TO SEE The next morning, Logan called me. I watched his name appear on my phone screen. Once. Twice. Three times. I didn’t answer. Not because I hated him. Because for the first time in my life, I needed to hear my own thoughts without someone else interrupting them. A few hours later, he left a voicemail. His voice sounded different. Not angry. Not demanding. Broken. “Dad… please call me back.” I listened carefully. Then I deleted it. Not because I wanted to punish him. Because apologies mean nothing when they only arrive after consequences. For years, I had been sitting in the same house. Eating at the same table. Breathing the same air. And somehow, I had become invisible. Now suddenly, when the money disappeared, I was visible again. That hurt more than anything. Three days later, Logan showed up at my apartment. He looked exhausted. Older. Like a man who had finally realized he had been asleep for years. When I opened the door, he looked at me for a long moment. Then he said: “Dad.” Just one word. But it carried everything he had failed to say before. “I’m sorry.” I stayed quiet. He looked down. “I should have stood up for you.” Yes. He should have. But regret is a strange thing. It arrives after the damage is already done. “I thought you were okay,” he whispered. I looked at him. “No, Logan.” “I was quiet.” “There is a difference.” Those words hit him harder than anger ever could. Because they were true. He told me Chelsea had been panicking. She had discovered the house was not as financially secure as she thought. The lifestyle. The vacations. The expensive purchases. All of it had depended on the support they never acknowledged. She wanted me back. Not because she missed me. Because she needed me. And that was the part Logan finally understood. The woman who asked me to leave was now the same person asking where I had gone. Funny how quickly people notice the empty chair when they need someone sitting in it. “Will you come home?” Logan asked. I looked past him. At the quiet hallway. At the small apartment I had built for myself. For the first time in years, I felt peaceful. “No.” His face fell. “I’m your son.” I nodded. “And I’m your father.” A pause. “That should have mattered before.” He looked away. Because there was no argument against that.
CHAPTER 1
THE THREE ENVELOPES
The first envelope contained something Chelsea never expected.
Not a lawsuit.
Not a threat.
Something much worse.
A reminder.
Inside were copies of every financial agreement I had signed during the last six years.
The mortgage assistance.
The vehicle loan guarantee.
The renovation payments.
The emergency transfers.
Every time Logan and Chelsea had said:
“Dad, we’ll pay you back.”
Every time they promised:
“This is only temporary.”
Temporary had a funny way of becoming permanent when someone else was carrying the weight.
Chelsea flipped through the pages faster.
Her face became colder with every line.
“What is this?” she whispered.
Logan took the papers from her hand.
At first, he looked confused.
Then his expression changed.
Because he recognized his own signature.
He remembered every conversation.
Every request.
Every time he came to my room late at night saying:
“Dad, I hate asking you this, but we’re in a difficult situation.”
And every time, I helped.
Not because I had to.
Because I was his father.
The second envelope was different.
It contained a notice from the bank.
My name had been removed from their financial obligations.
The accounts I had guaranteed were no longer protected by me.
The safety net they never appreciated was gone.
Chelsea sat down slowly.
“This can’t be happening.”
But it was.
For years, they believed my quietness meant weakness.
They confused patience with permission.
They thought because I never complained, I never noticed.
They were wrong.
The third envelope was the one Logan was afraid to open.
Because it had his name written on the front.
He stared at it for almost a minute.
Then he slowly opened it.
Inside was a letter.
Not from an attorney.
From me.
Logan,
If you are reading this, it means I finally stopped protecting you from the consequences of your choices.
I want you to understand something.
I never wanted revenge.
I wanted respect.
I spent six years in your home believing that love meant patience.
I believed if I stayed kind enough, helpful enough, quiet enough, you would eventually remember that I was your father.
I was wrong.
The money was never the important part.
The $800,000 was never what mattered.
What mattered was whether you would still choose me when you thought I had nothing.
That was the only answer I needed.
And now I have it.
Dad.
Logan read the letter twice.
Then a third time.
Chelsea watched him carefully.
“What did he say?”
Logan didn’t answer.
For the first time in years, my son had no excuse.
Because the truth wasn’t hidden in paperwork.
It was hidden in his own silence.
And silence has a way of becoming very loud when there is nobody left to blame.