Loyola Student’s Killing Spurs National Sanctuary and Media‑Coverage Fight as Chicago Mayor Defends Welcoming Policies and ICE Limits After Alleged Shooting by Venezuelan National
Eighteen-year-old Loyola University Chicago freshman Sheridan Gorman was fatally shot near campus on March 19; police arrested 25‑year‑old Venezuelan national Jose Medina‑Medina, who has been charged with first‑degree murder and other counts and, according to DHS/ICE and court records, was earlier taken into U.S. Border Patrol custody in May 2023 and later arrested and released in Chicago on a shoplifting charge; he is currently held in custody and has been quarantined for treatment of tuberculosis. The killing has sparked a national political and media fight — with DHS, Republican lawmakers and “angel parent” advocates blaming sanctuary‑city policies and urging greater ICE cooperation, while Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson defended the city’s long‑standing welcoming ordinances and limits on honoring ICE detainers; local student papers and the Loyola Phoenix have also faced scrutiny over how they labeled the suspect and tracked ICE activity.
📌 Key Facts
- Sheridan Gorman, an 18‑year‑old freshman at Loyola University Chicago from Westchester County, N.Y., was fatally shot while walking with friends near the Tobey Prinz Beach pier in Rogers Park around 1:06–1:15 a.m. on March 19, 2026; she was pronounced dead at the scene.
- Chicago police arrested 25‑year‑old Jose Medina‑Medina and have charged him with first‑degree murder, first‑degree attempted murder, three counts of aggravated assault with discharge of a firearm, and aggravated unlawful possession of a weapon; investigators recovered a firearm believed connected to the killing and are awaiting gunshot‑residue results.
- Police say surveillance video captured the shooter leaving the scene and later showed an unmasked man in a residential building lobby; a building engineer identified the suspect by a distinct limp, images were run through databases and U.S. Customs and Border Protection helped positively identify and locate Medina‑Medina at his Rogers Park apartment.
- DHS and other federal officials say Medina‑Medina is a Venezuelan national who was apprehended by U.S. Border Patrol on May 9, 2023 and later arrested in Chicago for shoplifting on June 19, 2023; federal officials say he was released after both encounters and ICE has since lodged a detainer following the fatal shooting.
- Medina‑Medina was quarantined and hospitalized for a potentially contagious condition (reported as tuberculosis), delaying his initial court appearance; prosecutors say he is being held in the medical division of the Cook County Jail.
- Gorman’s family and supporters have publicly demanded accountability, blamed immigration‑system 'policies and failures,' held vigils and a funeral in Yorktown Heights, and said they will push for full prosecution and policy change; the family asked that every failure that allowed the suspect to remain free be examined.
- The killing intensified a national debate over sanctuary policies and media coverage: DHS and White House officials blamed 'sanctuary politicians' and open‑border policies, Republican and Angel Parent advocates cited the case to push for tougher enforcement and hearings (including a Senate subcommittee), while Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson defended the city’s long‑standing 'welcoming' policies and declined to apologize; Gov. J.B. Pritzker called the death a 'senseless murder' but framed enforcement largely as a federal responsibility.
- Local campus media responses included Loyola’s student paper briefly labeling the suspect an 'illegal immigrant' then issuing an editor’s apology for the wording and emphasizing journalistic standards; Loyola’s Phoenix and other area student papers have launched public 'ICE tracker' maps to document local enforcement activity, drawing further controversy and national attention.
📊 Relevant Data
Illinois officials have ignored 1,768 ICE detainers since January 2021, according to DHS.
Ignored ICE detainers 'put lives at risk,' DHS says, targeting Newsom, Pritzker, Healey — Fox News
The primary causes of Venezuelan migration to the US since 2023 include economic and political instability, accentuated by the COVID-19 pandemic, leading to over 800,000 Venezuelan immigrants in the US by 2023, with population percentages showing Venezuelans as a growing Hispanic subgroup.
Venezuelan Immigrants in the United States — Migration Policy Institute
Chicago's population grew for the third straight year despite a decline in immigration, with 33,708 more people leaving than arriving domestically in 2025, offset by international migration; Chicago's demographics include about 33% White, 29% Black, 29% Hispanic as of recent estimates.
Chicago population grows despite immigration decline — Crain's Chicago Business
In Chicago, Black residents experience significantly higher homicide victimization rates compared to White residents, with Black individuals comprising a disproportionate share of victims (around 70-80% while being 29% of population), leading to a per capita rate disparity where Black Chicagoans are approximately 19 times more likely to be homicide victims than White Chicagoans based on 2025 data.
2025 End-of-Year Analysis: Chicago Crime Trends — University of Chicago Crime Lab
📊 Analysis & Commentary (1)
"A critical opinion piece faulting Chicago and other politicians for failing Sheridan Gorman—both in policy/oversight and in making politicized, tone‑deaf public remarks that deepened the family’s pain."
📰 Source Timeline (25)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time
- White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt used the March 30, 2026 briefing to accuse ABC, CBS, and NBC of giving ‘minimal’ airtime to Sheridan Gorman’s killing, citing a Media Research Center study (CBS: 2:01, ABC: 1:19, NBC: 0:23).
- Leavitt said Gorman’s killing by an alleged ‘illegal immigrant’ exemplifies why President Trump ‘believes so strongly in deporting illegal aliens from our communities’ and linked the case to Democrats’ continued blockade of DHS funding over ICE.
- Fox reports that MS NOW has not mentioned Gorman’s case at all, and CNN has only referenced it indirectly — once via Rep. Mike Lawler and once when airing a prior White House briefing where Leavitt brought it up.
- DHS characterization, repeated here, frames suspect Jose Medina-Medina as ‘a Venezuelan criminal illegal alien’ who was apprehended by Border Patrol and released into the U.S. in 2023, then released again after a Chicago shoplifting arrest before Gorman’s death.
- A White House official confirmed that President Donald Trump has spoken with the family of Sheridan Gorman.
- The article reiterates that Medina-Medina was apprehended by U.S. Border Patrol on May 9, 2023 and released into the U.S. under the Biden administration, and that he was later arrested for shoplifting and released before the alleged murder.
- Gorman’s mother, Jessica Gorman, delivered public remarks at a vigil in Yorktown Heights, New York, vowing to “fight for justice” and “fight for change,” signaling the family’s intention to push for broader accountability.
- Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson told MSNBC during the March 28 'No Kings' protest that 'we have to end the assaults against immigrants' and said his administration has 'signed multiple executive orders to force ICE out of the city of Chicago.'
- At a separate March news conference, Johnson declined to directly apologize to Sheridan Gorman’s parents when asked if his policies 'directly caused her death,' instead emphasizing shared grief and noting that Chicago’s welcoming-city ordinance dates back roughly 40 years and the SAFE-T Act was passed under a Republican governor.
- Johnson’s comments were made the same day Gorman’s family held her funeral and memorial service in Yorktown Heights, New York, where her mother, Jessica Gorman, said she is 'angry' and vowed the family will 'fight for justice' and 'fight for change.'
- Victim’s mother, Jessica Gorman, spoke at a vigil in Yorktown Heights, New York, vowing to 'fight for justice' for Sheridan and to 'fight for change.'
- The article pins the time and place of the killing more precisely: around 1:06 a.m. March 19 near a pier in Chicago’s Rogers Park neighborhood while Sheridan was walking with friends near campus.
- DHS is quoted as saying suspect Jose Medina-Medina, a 25-year-old Venezuelan national, was apprehended by U.S. Border Patrol on May 9, 2023 and released into the U.S. under the Biden administration.
- A family attorney, Thomas Tripodianos, warned at the vigil that accepting the situation 'even silently' means accepting that young people are less safe, calling for 'real justice.'
- The story notes that the suspect appeared in court Friday and was ordered held in custody on multiple charges including first-degree murder, attempted first-degree murder, aggravated assault and unlawful possession.
- Dominican University's student newspaper, the Dominican Star, has launched its own ICE tracker mapping 'confirmed ICE activity' around Dominican and in neighborhoods with large commuter-student populations.
- The Dominican Star explicitly states it was inspired by Loyola University Chicago’s Loyola Phoenix ICE tracker, and that its editors met with the Phoenix’s editor-in-chief and managing editor to gather information before launching.
- The tracker relies on reader submissions of reported ICE activity, which staff will vet and then pin on a public map focused on areas around the campus.
- Fox notes that the Dominican Star did not respond to requests for comment about the tracker’s launch.
- The article reiterates that the Loyola Phoenix’s tracker went viral after the paper briefly labeled the suspect an 'illegal immigrant' and then issued a public editor’s note walking that language back to avoid 'harm to affected community members.'
- Loyola University Chicago’s student newspaper, the Loyola Phoenix, maintains an ICE‑activity tracking map and solicits public tips about ICE operations near campus, which it promotes on Instagram.
- After publishing a story titled 'Immigrant Man Charged in Murder of Sheridan Gorman, DHS Involved,' the Phoenix quickly pulled and retitled it and removed references to Jose Medina‑Medina as an 'illegal immigrant' despite that terminology coming from DHS.
- In a lengthy editor’s note, the Phoenix said the term 'illegal immigrant' does not align with AP style or the paper’s values, declared that 'no human’s existence is illegal,' and acknowledged the original wording 'caused harm' to affected community members.
- Sen. John Fetterman publicly criticized fellow Democrats for not talking about the Loyola student killing and other violent crimes by undocumented immigrants with prior arrests, saying, "If you’re here in the country illegally already, and you’re breaking the law, like — ya gotta go."
- Fetterman specifically rebuked Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner for threatening to arrest ICE agents over raids, telling him to "lighten up" and to stop targeting federal officers.
- The Department of Homeland Security issued sharply worded statements blaming "open border policies and sanctuary politicians" for the releases of alleged killers Jose Medina‑Medina in Illinois and Abdul Jalloh in Virginia, and called on Governors J.B. Pritzker and Abigail Spanberger not to release them without ICE notification.
- Fetterman linked his comments to his support for the Laken Riley Act, which Congress passed in early 2025 to mandate detention of non‑citizens convicted of certain crimes causing bodily harm, including burglary and theft.
- Alderwoman Maria Hadden told Fox 32 that victim Sheridan Gorman was in the ‘wrong place at the wrong time’ and may have ‘startled’ the accused killer, comments that went viral and drew heavy backlash.
- Hadden announced via Facebook that her ward office would be closed for the rest of the week due to safety concerns amid the uproar, while saying she would still be ‘out and about’ in the ward.
- Hadden issued a written apology saying her remarks were not intended to blame the victim and accusing some outlets of ‘intentionally creating sound bites’ that misconstrued her words.
- The article reiterates that suspect Jose Medina-Medina was apprehended by U.S. Border Patrol in May 2023 and released into the U.S. under the Biden administration, then later missed a court date on a 2023 shoplifting case, leaving an active warrant when Gorman was killed.
- Medina-Medina’s initial court appearance on the murder case was postponed because he is hospitalized with tuberculosis; he is being held in the medical division of the Cook County Jail.
- The Gorman family released a detailed written statement directly criticizing Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, rejecting their descriptions of the killing as merely a 'senseless tragedy' or generic 'tragedy' and insisting on a 'clear and honest accounting of what went wrong.'
- The family explicitly says they 'are not interested in political arguments or in watching responsibility shift from one place to another' and that 'our daughter is not a policy debate,' demanding that every failure in the system that allowed Medina‑Medina to remain free be 'identified, examined, and addressed directly.'
- Fox reports DHS confirmation that Jose Medina‑Medina, a Venezuelan national, was apprehended by U.S. Border Patrol on May 9, 2023 and released into the U.S. under the Biden administration, and that he was later arrested for shoplifting and released before the alleged murder.
- Gov. Pritzker is quoted shifting some blame to 'national failures,' including lack of comprehensive immigration reform and what he characterizes as the president’s failure to target 'the worst of the worst,' while Johnson called the shooting 'senseless violence' and also faulted President Trump.
- The piece reiterates that Gorman was killed around 1:06 a.m. on March 19 while walking near campus with friends at a Rogers Park pier when Medina‑Medina allegedly fired a single fatal shot.
- Angel Parents Jennifer Bos and Joe Abraham publicly characterize Loyola student Sheridan Gorman’s killing as a ‘preventable’ tragedy directly tied to Illinois sanctuary policies.
- Bos says Illinois families ‘have to fight for themselves and for their daughter’ because ‘Illinois does not give’ justice, underscoring victim‑family distrust of state leadership.
- Pritzker’s office gave Fox News Digital a written statement offering condolences and vowing the perpetrator will be held ‘to the fullest extent of the law,’ which Angel Parents frame as inadequate absent policy changes.
- The article ties Gorman’s death to earlier Angel Parent cases in Illinois, including Abraham’s daughter Katie and Bos’s daughter Megan, both killed by immigrants who were in the U.S. illegally, reinforcing claims of a pattern under current policies.
- The Loyola Phoenix, Loyola University Chicago’s student newspaper, issued an editor’s note apologizing for an Instagram headline that referred to the suspect in Sheridan Gorman’s killing as an 'immigrant man' and described him in the post body as an 'illegal immigrant.'
- The paper said it used 'illegal immigrant' based on language from a DHS press release but later removed the post 'minutes later' and stated that 'no human’s existence is illegal,' adding that the term does not align with AP style or the paper’s values.
- The editor’s note explicitly cites concern about 'harm' to 'affected community members' and frames the wording change as part of the paper’s commitment to its journalistic standards and role in the Loyola, Rogers Park and Chicago communities.
- Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker said there have been 'real failures' on immigration and criticized President Donald Trump for failing to 'follow his own edict' to target 'the worst of the worst.'
- Pritzker framed immigration enforcement as a federal responsibility and said local and state law enforcement are responsible for catching and prosecuting violent criminals, implicitly defending Illinois’ role.
- Homes and buildings in victim Sheridan Gorman’s hometown of Yorktown Heights, New York, were lit in green, one of the local school colors, as a public tribute to her.
- Gorman’s family issued a written statement saying they are disappointed in policies that allowed Jose Medina‑Medina to remain in the country, writing that when 'systems fail—whether through release decisions, lack of coordination, or unwillingness to act—the consequences are not abstract.'
- A U.S. Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, chaired by Sen. Eric Schmitt (R-Mo.), will hold a hearing Wednesday titled "Protecting American Citizenship II: Federalism, Sanctuary Cities, and the Rule of Law."
- Angel parent Joe Abraham, whose daughter Katie was killed in a 2025 hit-and-run by a previously deported Guatemalan national, will testify and explicitly link his daughter’s death and Sheridan Gorman’s killing to sanctuary policies.
- Schmitt says the hearing was planned before Gorman’s death but calls it the first Senate hearing on sanctuary-city policies following her killing and frames sanctuary jurisdictions as refusing to notify ICE when serious offenders are released.
- The article notes DHS says alleged shooter Jose Medina-Medina, a Venezuelan national, was taken into federal custody twice in 2023 under the Biden administration—first by Border Patrol and later on a shoplifting case in Illinois—and was released both times.
- Alderwoman Maria Hadden, a progressive ally of Mayor Brandon Johnson, drew backlash after telling Fox 32 that Sheridan Gorman was in the 'wrong place at the wrong time' and may have 'startled' the shooter.
- Hadden issued a written apology Tuesday, saying her comments were an attempt to make sense of a 'senseless situation,' insisting she did not intend to blame the victim, and acknowledging her words 'landed wrong with some people.'
- Gorman’s family publicly rejected the 'wrong place at the wrong time' framing in a statement, saying Sheridan 'deserved the future that was stolen from her' and warning against becoming desensitized to violence.
- Hadden accused some media outlets of 'intentionally creating sound bites to misconstrue' her remarks and noted her Fox 32 interview had gone viral on conservative media.
- Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson publicly addressed Sheridan Gorman’s killing for the first time and was directly asked whether he would apologize to Gorman’s parents for city immigration policies that critics say 'directly caused her death.'
- Johnson declined to apologize, instead emphasizing that Chicago’s 'welcoming city' ordinance dates back about 40 years and that both the ordinance and the state Safe-T Act were enacted under earlier leadership, including a Republican governor.
- Johnson said he has not yet spoken with the Gorman family but intends to do so and offered public condolences.
- Johnson criticized President Donald Trump, saying Trump 'refuses to be held accountable' and 'points the finger at everything and everyone else' instead of examining his own responsibility.
- The article reiterates DHS information that suspect Jose Medina, a Venezuelan national, was first apprehended by U.S. Border Patrol in May 2023 and released into the U.S. under the Biden administration, and notes the Gorman family’s statement blaming policy failures that allowed him to remain in position to commit the crime.
- Prosecutors say Jose Medina missed his first court appearance on Monday because he is hospitalized and undergoing treatment for tuberculosis.
- CBS reiterates that Medina faces multiple charges in the fatal shooting, including first-degree murder.
- DHS characterization in this piece is that Medina is a Venezuelan man living in the U.S. illegally.
- Arrest report says Jose Medina was captured unmasked on lobby video in his apartment building shortly after the shooting, waiting for an elevator.
- A building engineer told police he recognized Medina from the video because of his very distinct limp and gait, which matched the masked gunman seen leaving the scene.
- Timeline details: the shooter in black clothing and a black mask with a distinct limp was seen leaving the scene at 1:12 a.m., walking toward Pratt Boulevard and then through an alley to the rear of his apartment complex.
- Images from the building were run through a police database, and U.S. Customs and Border Protection positively identified the suspect as Jose Medina, leading to his arrest at his Rogers Park apartment.
- Fox includes fuller biographical and obituary details about victim Sheridan Gorman, emphasizing her activities, personality and community role.
- Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker’s office issued its first public statement on Sheridan Gorman’s killing, calling it a 'senseless murder' and accusing the Trump administration of 'politicizing heinous tragedies.'
- Pritzker’s office declined to answer whether he will direct Illinois authorities to comply with the Laken Riley Act requirement to hold undocumented suspects like Medina-Medina for federal pickup.
- The article foregrounds Illinois’s TRUST Act limits on honoring ICE detainers without a federal criminal warrant and highlights that this state framework remains in place despite the new federal Laken Riley Act.
- The piece notes GOP criticism that Pritzker responded quickly to separate federal-agent-involved killings in Minneapolis but stayed silent for days on Gorman’s case.
- It confirms that Medina-Medina’s Monday detention hearing was continued because he is being quarantined amid concerns he may have tuberculosis.
- DHS confirmation, as cited here, that Medina-Medina entered the U.S. illegally under the Biden administration and was then apprehended and released into the country.
- DHS-confirmed prior Chicago arrest of Medina-Medina for shoplifting, plus William J. Kelly’s claim—presented as his allegation, not proven fact—that Medina had been arrested multiple times for what he calls 'deportable offenses.'
- On-the-record reaction from Gorman’s family explicitly blaming 'policies and failures' and rejecting the idea of 'second chances that put others at risk,' calling the killing a 'violent and preventable act.'
- Detailed criticism from veteran Chicago reporter William J. Kelly of Mayor Brandon Johnson’s alleged 'catch-and-release' approach to migrant crime and claims that CPD is being told 'not to touch the illegals, not to detain them, not to turn them over to ICE.'
- Confirms the suspect, 25‑year‑old Venezuelan national Jose Medina, has been formally charged by Chicago police with first‑degree murder, first‑degree attempted murder, three felony counts of aggravated assault with discharge of a firearm, and aggravated unlawful possession of a weapon.
- Specifies that the victim, 18‑year‑old Loyola University Chicago freshman Sheridan Gorman from Westchester County, New York, was allegedly shot while trying to flee with friends around 1 a.m. Thursday near Tobey Prinz Beach Park and was pronounced dead at the scene.
- Details the suspect’s prior U.S. encounters: apprehended by U.S. Border Patrol on May 9, 2023 and released under the Biden administration, then arrested for shoplifting in Chicago and released on June 19, 2023.
- Reports that ICE has now lodged an immigration detainer against Medina following the alleged murder.
- Includes a new, pointed statement from DHS Acting Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis publicly urging Gov. JB Pritzker and Chicago’s ‘sanctuary politicians’ not to release Medina from jail back into American neighborhoods.
- Carries a lengthy statement from Sheridan Gorman’s family blaming ‘policies and failures’ in the immigration system for allowing the suspect to remain in a position to commit the crime and demanding full prosecution under both state and federal law.
- Quotes local Alderwoman Maria Hadden framing the killing as a possible ‘wrong place at the wrong time’ encounter with an armed individual while students were ‘doing normal things’ in the neighborhood.
- DHS identifies the suspect as 25‑year‑old Venezuelan national Jose Medina‑Medina and confirms he was first apprehended by U.S. Border Patrol on May 9, 2023, then released into the country during the Biden administration.
- DHS confirms Medina‑Medina was arrested for shoplifting in Chicago on June 19, 2023, and released again prior to the alleged murder.
- ICE says it has lodged an immigration detainer on Medina‑Medina and publicly calls on Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Chicago sanctuary‑city officials not to release him from local custody.
- Chicago police sources say Medina‑Medina is being quarantined for a potentially contagious condition, possibly tuberculosis, and describe the shooting as an apparent ambush by a masked gunman.
- Investigators have recovered a firearm believed connected to the killing and are awaiting gunshot‑residue test results.
- Chicago police have arrested a 25-year-old man in connection with Sheridan Gorman’s death, according to an arrest report obtained by the Chicago Tribune.
- Sources cited by Fox News say the suspect is a migrant from Venezuela.
- Records indicate the suspect was identified within minutes of the shooting because of a 'distinct limp.'
- Loyola University Chicago President Mark C. Reed sent a letter to students confirming Gorman’s death and calling it a tragic loss.
- Family issued a statement to NBC Chicago explicitly calling Sheridan Gorman’s killing 'murder' and describing her as someone who 'made people feel seen, safe, and loved.'
- Fox cites Chicago police as believing Gorman was not the intended target of the shooting.
- Article reiterates that the shooter was masked and that a suspect description has not yet been released, with no arrests made.
- Loyola’s campus alert specified the shooting occurred on the Tobey Prinz Beach pier around 1:15 a.m. and noted police are probing possible ties to other recent violent incidents nearby.