- What you should know
- Philly protesters are blocking vehicles from leaving an ICE parking garage in Center City.
- The protest comes following a deadly incident in Minneapolis earlier this month, where an ICE agent shot and killed Renee Good, a U.S. citizen.
- Four people were arrested during anti-ICE protests in Philadelphia back in October.
- Protestors want ICE agents banned from the Criminal Justice Center in Center City, where immigrants have been trailed and arrested.
// Timestamp 01/20/26 9:39am
Anti-ICE demonstrators end their protest
Rev. Jay Bergen, a leader of No ICE Philly, said the group had accomplished its goal – and that the brutal cold had become too much for older demonstrators, some of whom have medical conditions.
In his closing prayer, Bergen hoped the nearly 2 hour stretch was enough for ICE’s target to be somewhere else.
“All of us here have proven in our song and our prayer that we can slow down the machine of authoritarianism, of fascism, that we can delay the operations that will detain and kidnap and destroy our neighbors, our families, our community,” Bergen said.
// Timestamp 01/20/26 9:37am
Video: Anti-ICE protesters in Philly
// Timestamp 01/20/26 9:33am
ICE vehicle able to exit garage, helped by Philly police

Just before 9:30 a.m., a white sedan – which had initially been blocked by protesters – was able to exit the ICE headquarters parking bay with the help of Philadelphia Police.
No one was arrested.
// Timestamp 01/20/26 9:03am
Philly Council member joins protest

Protestors saw their ranks boosted by City Council member Nicholas O’Rourke, who is also a pastor of the Living Water United Church of Christ in Oxford Circle.
O’Rourke said it was only natural for him to join fellow clergy at Tuesday’s frigid demonstration.
A pastor of the Living Water United Church of Christ in Oxford Circle, O’Rourke said Tuesday’s action was part of a long tradition of faith leaders being at the forefront of the “struggle against oppression,” as seen with Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and others.
“We are a day after King’s Day, and it’s important that we don’t just wax eloquent about the nice things that King said or the image that he’s been painted of now, but we continue in that tradition of resisting the oppression as he saw it, we’re doing in our own time,” said O’Rourke.
// Timestamp 01/20/26 8:40am
‘We need more people every day willing to do this’

The group of clergy and immigration advocates continued to sing in locked arms in front of the parking bay in front of ICE headquarters in Center City after its initial “ICE block” in an effort to disrupt immigration enforcement.
Rev. Hannah Capaldi, minister at the Unitarian Society of Germantown, described the selection of participants as an intentional one as they face warnings from police, possible arrests, and citations.
Those present are leveraging a certain level of privilege, she said. All are citizens and many are clergy wearing collars, taluses, and stoles.
“We’re saying, listen, we have some level of moral authority in this city, and we’re trying to tell you where to look and what to pay attention to,” she said.
But in addition to drawing attention to ICE operations in Philadelphia, Capaldi hopes to plant “seeds of resistance” in the broader public, encouraging people to get involved.
“It doesn’t have to just be us, and we need more people every day willing to do this, to stand between the vehicles and the work that they’re doing to kidnap our neighbors,” she said.
“What ICE is doing in our communities is against our faith tradition,” said Rev. Jonny Rashid, a protest organizer. “We are gathered clergy, priests, rabbis, imams, and we are here to say no to ICE, and we want to demonstrate that publicly, and we’re willing to get arrested to do that. We’re blocking ICE’s garage as a symbol of saying you are not welcome in Philadelphia.”
He said he was not surprised by the lack of an overt Philadelphia police presence, though in the past groups of officers have been sent to anti-ICE protests.
“I don’t think the Philly police want to engage. They don’t want to make Philadelphia look like Minneapolis.”
// Timestamp 01/20/26 8:38am
Police warn anti-ICE protesters to clear the area
Philadelphia police officers are warning demonstrators to clear the area.
About 30 immigration advocates are blocking the garage entrance of ICE headquarters in Center City.
// Timestamp 01/20/26 8:02am
Protestors block ICE parking garage

A group of about 30 immigration advocates, including local clergy, kicked off the frigid morning shortly before 8 a.m. with song in front of ICE headquarters.
They carried signs that read “Who would jesus deport?” and approximately at 7:55 a.m. the group locked arms calmly shouting “ICE block” as a white sedan tried to make its way out of a garage.
The gate to the garage closed back down almost immediately as the car pulled back in and the group continued in song.
// Timestamp 01/20/26 8:02am
Protestors target ICE agents in Philly
Organizers with No ICE Philly say they’ll form a human blockade to stop ICE vehicles from departing the agency’s Center City headquarters beginning at 8 a.m. Tuesday.
They pledge to stay there, singing and chanting, until they are forcibly removed or arrested or both, in what they say is an effort to stop ICE from “leaving the facility to terrorize our neighbors.”
The ICE office is located at 8th and Cherry Streets, just southwest of the former Roundhouse police building.
// Timestamp 01/20/26 8:00am
This isn’t the first anti-ICE protest in Philly

In October, a No ICE Philly protest outside the agency headquarters erupted into physical confrontations with police, with several people knocked to the ground and four taken into custody.
A series of push-and-shove skirmishes broke out after about 35 protesters gathered for a Halloween Eve demonstration where they attempted to stop Immigration and Customs Enforcement vehicles from leaving the facility.
When an organizer shouted, “ICE Block!” about a dozen people poured onto Cherry Street to try to block the road. A series of scrums grew increasingly intense, with police shoving protesters back and in some cases to the ground.
The Department of Homeland Security, ICE, and Philadelphia police presence was substantial, with more than 30 officers outside the immigration agency’s big metal garage doors. Philadelphia police said four demonstrators were arrested and later released after being given citations for obstruction of highway, a violation that typically results in a fine.
That protest followed a September demonstration in which members of No ICE Philly acted as symbolic “building inspectors” who “condemned” the ICE facility. On the building they hung signs, bordered with yellow-and-black warning tape, that said, “ICE Raids Violate Philly Values.”
And earlier this month, hundreds took to the streets in Philadelphia to protest after an ICE agent shot and killed Renee Nicole Good, a U.S. citizen and mother of three.

No ICE Philly has been a leader in protests outside the Criminal Justice Center in Center City, where it and other groups have demanded that Sheriff Rochelle Bilal ban immigration agents from the building.
The ICE courthouse activity has been hugely controversial, with demonstrators calling on city officials to act to protect immigrants.
Activists charge that the sheriff has allowed ICE to turn the property into a “hunting ground,” with at least 114 immigrants trailed from the courthouse by agents and arrested on the sidewalk.
On Wednesday the judicial district that oversees the Philadelphia court system said that authority for managing ICE’s presence rested with the sheriff, and that decisions around that were her “sole responsibility.”
That followed a news conference where the sheriff joined local elected and community leaders who suggested that court officials or legislators needed to address the turmoil, calling for meetings with court leaders to discuss how to set guardrails on ICE.
Many people who go to the courthouse are not criminal defendants ― they are witnesses, victims, family members, and others in diversionary programs. But they have been targeted and arrested by ICE, immigration attorneys and government officials say, causing witnesses and victims to stay away from court and damaging the administration of justice in Philadelphia.
Protesters want ICE agents banned from Philly courthouse
// Timestamp 01/20/26 7:50am

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