Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Learn about unlawful treatment of undocumented immigrants

Learn about unlawful treatment of undocumented immigrants

Wednesday, April 30, 2008
BY NEREIDA GUILLEN

Raids in Washtenaw County have brought about the current issue of human rights violation. Some uninformed community members ask themselves, "Is it a violation when undocumented immigrants are detained and sent back to their native country?'' Maybe not, but this is far from the reality of what is actually occurring. It is what is happening as they are being detained that should alert conscientious citizens. I'd like to address the specific question of how this becomes a violation of human rights.

Picture this. You are having dinner with your family after a long, tiring day at work, when the doorbell rings. As soon as you open your door, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent rushes into your home without any explanation and asks for your documentation. Because of language barriers, and due to the frightening circumstances, you hesitate and fail to respond as rapidly as you would wish. As you try to respond to the agent's request, they brutally beat you in front of your wife/husband, and three kids, ages 3, 5 and 7. You hear your kids yell and cry in the background as you are being beaten.

Afterward, the ICE agent decides to take you to prison due to suspicion of undocumentation and leaves you in a cell with people who are sex offenders, robbers, murderers, etc. Your crime at this point is working hard to provide a better living for your children. Now that you are in jail, your kids and spouse are left without a mom or dad, and the question of who will feed them and provide shelter for them thunders in your head. Those questions run through your head as you stare at the wall of a prison cell where you are forbidden any type of rights. Your family is now left alone and, traumatized by the incident, wonder if they will ever see you again. Now, ask yourself, "Can this be a violation of human rights?''

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Immigration officials show changes at detention center

Immigration officials show changes at detention center
04/22/2008

By ANABELLE GARAY / Associated Press

Pastel-colored walls adorned with cartoon characters, porcelain instead of metal toilets in cells and other upgrades have softened the inside of a former prison where dozens of immigrant children and their families are detained.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials who conducted a media tour Tuesday at the T. Don Hutto Family Residential Center in Taylor say the facility has become more family friendly thanks to more than 100 modifications. The changes were required under a settlement reached in a lawsuit alleging children were held in prison-like conditions.

Children now receive night lights, sneakers and colorful T-shirts with Superman and other characters on them when they arrive at Hutto. A teleconference room for immigration hearings has a large mural of the Rugrats and the large brick walls leading into the sleeping area — former prison pods — are painted in muted tones and feature Tinkerbell.

The facility's health care staff has expanded to 35 and contracts outside when more specialized services are needed. The cafeteria now offers a main menu and a hot bar to provide more variety of foods. Children — currently from 2 months old to teenagers — now go on field trips. Past visits outside of Hutto have included a museum in Austin, the zoo and the Dairy Queen.

ICE officials say the changes would have been implemented even without the lawsuit, and added that they continue to discuss more improvements to the facility where families live in small cells furnished with bunkbeds, a toilet and sink.

"Everything that was included in that settlement was either done prior to the settlement, in progress during the settlement or contemplated prior to the settlement," said Gary Mead, ICE's acting director for detention and removal.

Advocates disagree and contend that public awareness, a report last year detailing conditions at Hutto and the lawsuit spurred ICE to action.

"It is true that some of the changes were made before the settlement ... but they certainly were not in effect at the time we made our report," said Michelle Brane, director of the detention and asylum program at the Women's Commission for Refugee Women and Children. "They were very clear that they thought it was an appropriate place to hold families."

When the facility first opened nearly two years ago, advocates say uniformed, handcuff-toting correctional officers called "counselors" threatened children with separation from their families. Children received only one hour of classroom instruction a day, lost weight and had limited access to health care, attorneys alleged.

ICE officials have denied that guards used threats or that healthcare was limited. The agency did say that the school day has been significantly expanded since Hutto opened.

A federal judge approved the lawsuit settlement in August. It called for changes including installation of privacy curtains around toilets, a full-time pediatrician and elimination of a counting system that required families to be in their cells for hours a day.

Those changes have been made, and a federal magistrate also continues to periodically review conditions at Hutto. During a previous visit, the magistrate asked for improvments to an area set aside for detainees to meet with their attorneys. The section now has a large play area in the middle. It's surrounded by meeting booths that have privacy curtains and noise control. Advocates had previously complained that asylum seekers detained at Hutto had little privacy and couldn't shield their children from hearing them describe details of past abuse, torture or other violence to their attorneys.

Immigration officials have described the 500-bed Hutto as a residential environment that keeps families together while they seek asylum, await deportation or seek other outcomes to their immigration cases.

Officials say Hutto — operated by Corrections Corporation of America under a contract with Williamson County — is meant to end the "catch and release" practice that in the past permitted families in the U.S. illegally to remain free while awaiting a court hearing. Many never showed up in court; some borrowed other people's children and posed as families to avoid detention, ICE officials have said.

ICE is considering opening more facilities to detain families around the country, making Hutto a sort of prototype, Mead said. Currently, the Berks Family Residential Center in Leesport, Pa., a former nursing home about 50 miles northwest of Philadelphia, is the only other facility in the country that holds related adults and children.

"I think we will continue to have family residential centers," Mead said. "In terms of the treatment that people receive here, this is clearly a model."

Sunday, April 20, 2008

In Mississippi, Work Is Now a Felony for Undocumented Immigrants

In Mississippi, Work Is Now a Felony for Undocumented Immigrants
By David Bacon

Sunday 20 April 2008

Jackson, MS - On March 17, Mississippi Governor Hayley Barbour signed into law the farthest-reaching employer sanctions law of any on the books in the U.S. Employer sanctions is a shorthand name for laws that prohibit employers from hiring immigrants who don't have legal immigration status in the U.S. That provision was part of the Immigration Reform and Control Act, passed by Congress in 1986, which for the first time in U.S. history required employers to verify the immigration status of employees.

The Mississippi bill, SB 2988, requires employers to use an electronic system to verify immigration status, called E-Verify. That system has only recently been developed by the Department of Homeland Security, and by the department's own admission, is not a complete record. Its accuracy is unknown, but by comparison, the Social Security database of U.S. workers, compiled since the 1930s, contains millions of errors.

The Mississippi bill goes much further, however. Employers are absolved from any liability for hiring undocumented workers so long as they use the E-Verify system. But it will become a felony for an undocumented worker to hold a job. Anyone caught "shall be subject to imprisonment in the custody of the Department of Corrections for not less than one (1) year nor more than five (5) years, a fine of not less than one thousand dollars ($1000) nor more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) or both." Anyone charged with the crime of working without papers will not be eligible for bail. The law is set to become effective for large employers on July 1.

In the Jackson Clarion-Ledger, University of Mississippi journalism professor Joe Atkins called the law "a new xenophobia ... that threatens once again to lock down the state's borders and resurrect the 'closed society' that once made it the shame of the nation." According to the Mississippi Immigrant Rights Alliance, the bill got the support of many Democratic state legislators because party leaders "wanted the house to bring out at least one bill dealing with immigration to relieve the political pressure being put on members (i.e. white Democrats), by right-wing forces in their districts. Many Black Caucus members were persuaded to go along. Unfortunately the bill they brought out was the worst of the six the Mississippi Senate passed."

Passage of the bill was a setback to the political strategy that has shown the most promise of changing the old conservative power structure in the state, the "closed society" described by Professor Atkins. That strategy, building over the last several years, has relied on creating an electoral base of African Americans, immigrants and unions. The new employer sanctions law, according to supporters of that strategy, is intended to drive immigrants out of the state by making it impossible for them to find work.

In Mississippi African American political leaders, and immigrant and labor organizers have cooperated in organizing one of the country's most active immigrant rights coalitions - the Mississippi Immigrant Rights Alliance. They see hope for political transformation in the demographic changes sweeping the south. Beginning before World War 2, Mississippi, like most southern states, began to lose its Black population. Out-migration reached its peak in the 60s, when 66,614 African Americans left between 1965 and 1970, while civil rights activists were murdered, hosed and went to jail. But in the following decades, Midwest industrial jobs began to vanish overseas, the cost of living in northern cities skyrocketed, and the flow began to reverse.

From 1995 to 2000, the state capital, Jackson, gained 3600 Black residents. In the 2000 census, African Americans made up over 36% of Mississippi's 2.8 million residents - no doubt more today. And while immigrants were statistically insignificant two decades ago, today they're over 4.5% of the total, according to news reports. "Immigrants are always undercounted, but I think they're now about 130,000, and they'll be 10% of the population ten years from now," predicts MIRA Director Bill Chandler.

"We have the chance here to avoid the rivalry that plagues Los Angeles, and build real power," says Chandler. Erik Fleming, a MIRA staff member and former state legislator who recently filed for the Democratic nomination for the Senate seat held by Thad Cochrane, believes "we can stop Mississippi from making the same mistakes others have made."

The same calculus can apply across the South, which is now the entry point for a third of all new immigrants to the U.S. Four decades ago, President Richard Nixon brought its white power structure, threatened by civil rights, into the Republican Party. President Ronald Reagan celebrated that achievement at the Confederate monument at Georgia's Stone Mountain. MIRA-type alliances could transform the region, and change the politics of the country as a whole. SB 2988 is not only intended to stir anti-immigrant sentiment, but to reverse that demographic change and the political transformation it might make possible.

MIRA is the fruit of strategic thinking among a diverse group that reaches from African American workers' centers on catfish farms and immigrant union organizers in chicken plants to guest workers and contract laborers on the Gulf Coast, and ultimately, into the halls of the state legislature in Jackson. Activists look back to changes that started when Mississippi passed a law permitting casino development in 1991, bringing the first immigrant construction workers from Florida. Employers in gaming then began to use contractors to supply their growing labor needs. Guest workers, eventually numbering in the thousands, were brought under the H2-B program to fill many of the jobs development created.

Through the 90s more immigrants arrived looking for work. Some guest workers overstayed their visas, while husbands brought wives, cousins and friends from home. Mexicans and Central Americans joined South and Southeast Asians, and began traveling north through the state, getting jobs in rural poultry plants. There they met African Americans, many of whom had fought hard campaigns to organize unions for chicken and catfish workers over the preceding decade.

It was not easy for newcomers to fit in. Their union representatives didn't speak their languages. When workers got pulled over by state troopers they found themselves, not only cited for lacking drivers' licenses, but also often handed over to the Border Patrol. Sometimes their children weren't even allowed to enroll in school.

In the fall of 2000, labor, church and civil rights activists formed an impromptu coalition, and went to the legislature. At their heart was the core of activists who'd organized Mississippi's state workers, and a growing caucus of Black legislators sympathetic to labor. Jim Evans, a former organizer for the National Football League Players Association, helped lead the group on the House side, while Senator Alice Harden, who'd led a state teachers' strike in 1986, organized the vote in the Senate. "We decided that the place to start was trying to get a bill passed allowing everyone to get drivers' licenses, regardless of who they were or where they came from," Evans remembers.

Harden's efforts bore fruit when the drivers' license bill passed the Senate unanimously in 2001. "But they saw us coming in the House, and killed it," Chandler says. Nevertheless, the close fight convinced them that a coalition supporting immigrant rights had a wide potential base of support, and could help change the state's political landscape. In a meeting that November, the Mississippi Immigrant Rights Alliance was born.

To build a grassroots base, MIRA volunteers went into chicken plants to help recruit newly-arrived immigrants into unions. In the casinos, MIRA volunteers worked with UNITE HERE organizers. In Jackson, the coalition got 6 bills passed the following year, stopping schools from requiring Social Security numbers from immigrant parents, and winning in-state tuition for any student who'd spent four years in a Mississippi high school.

Then Katrina hit the Gulf. MIRA fought evictions and the cases of workers cheated by employers, and eventually recovered over a million dollars. MIRA organizer Vicky Cintra and other activists participated in several celebrated cases defending guest workers, especially in the Signal International shipyard in Pascagoula. "There's still a lot of anti-immigrant sentiment here," Cintra says, "but when people give the police their MIRA ID card they get treated with more respect, because they know their rights and have some support." Laborers Union organizer Frank Curiel says, "In Kentucky, outside of Louisville, Latinos are afraid to go out into the street. In Mississippi it's different."

Not always that different, however. In Laurel and many other Mississippi towns police still set up roadblocks to trap immigrants without licenses. "They take us away in handcuffs and we have to pay over $1000 to get out of jail and get our cars back," according to chicken plant worker Elisa Reyes. And the way the state's Council of Conservative Citizens demonizes immigrants is reminiscent of the language of its predecessor - the White Citizens Councils: "The CofCC Not only fights for European rights, but also for Confederate Heritage, fights against illegal immigration, Fights against gun control, fights against abortion, fights against gay rights etc. SO JOIN UP!!!" its website urges.

In 2007 the Republican machine introduced twenty-one anti-immigrant bills into the state legislature, including ones to impose state penalties for hiring undocumented workers and English-only requirements on state license and benefit applicants, to prohibit undocumented students at state universities, and to require local police to check immigration status. MIRA defeated all of them. "The Black Caucus stood behind us every time," Evans says proudly. There are no immigrant or Latino legislators. Without the Caucus all 21 bills would have passed in 2007, and 19 similar bills in 2006.

The 2008 legislative session was different, however. Chandler describes three factions in the party - the Black Caucus at one end, white conservatives hanging on at the other, and "liberals who will do whatever they have to do to get elected" in the middle. After some Democratic candidates campaigned in 2007 on an anti-immigrant platform, MIRA wrote a letter in protest to Howard Dean, national chair of the Democratic Party. Those tactics, it said, were undermining the only strategy capable of changing the state's politics. "The attacks on Latinos, initiated by Republican Phil Bryant a year and a half ago, and joined by other Republicans, are now being echoed by Democrats like John Arthur Eaves and Jamie Franks," the letter said. State party leaders who "would go along to be accepted, rather than show the courage necessary for positive change... are peddling racist lies against immigrants that violate the core of the party's progressive agenda."

Anti-immigrant campaigning by Democrats was unsuccessful. Conservative Republican Hayley Barbour was returned to the governor's mansion and Phil Bryant was elected lieutenant governor. And in the legislative session that followed, some Democrats began to buckle under pressure from vocal rightwing groups, including the Klan.

During the 2007 elections the Ku Klux Klan held a rally of 500 people in front of the Lee County court house in Tupelo, wearing white hoods and robes, and carrying signs saying, "Stop the Latino Invasion." Their presence was so intimidating that Ricky Cummings, a generally progressive Democrat running for re-election to the State House of Representatives, voted for some of the anti-immigrant bills in the legislature. When MIRA leaders challenged him, he told them that Klan-generated calls had "worn out his cell phone."

The Klan's website says "it's time to declare war on these illegal Mexicans ... The racial war is among us, will you fight with us for the future of our race and for our children? Or will you sit on your ass and do nothing? Our blissful ignorance is over. It is time to fight. Time for Mexico and Mexicans to get the hell out!"

The web site has links to the site of the Mississippi Federation for Immigration Reform and Enforcement (the state affiliate of the Federation for American Immigration Reform), directed by Mike Lott, who sat in the state legislature before being defeated in a run for the Democratic nomination for Secretary of State. .After MIRA's Erik Fleming urged Governor Barbour to veto the employer sanctions bill, saying it would be "devastating to our economy and community here in Mississippi," he was then targeted on the MFIRE website.

For those threatened by changing demographics, and the political upsurge they might produce, SB 2988 law is a finger in the dike. The fight to implement it is not over, however, and MIRA has assembled a legal team to challenge its constitutionality in court.


David Bacon is a California photojournalist who documents labor, migration and globalization. His book "Communities Without Borders" was just published by Cornell University/ILR Press.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Tally of those arrested in immigration raids at Pilgrim's Pride plants climbs to 311

Tally of those arrested in immigration raids at Pilgrim's Pride plants climbs to 311

12:00 AM CDT on Friday, April 18, 2008
By DIANNE SOLÍS and STELLA M. CHÁVEZ / The Dallas Morning News

The tally of those arrested at Pilgrim's Pride poultry plants on various immigration-related offenses climbed Thursday to 311.

Workers at Pilgrim's Pride, one of the world's largest poultry processors, have been the target of a criminal investigation into identity theft for at least a year, and Wednesday, workers employed at five plants, including Mount Pleasant operations, were arrested by federal immigration agents.

Certain workers at the Mount Pleasant plant are believed to be key organizers in an identity theft ring, federal prosecutors and agents said.

False use of an authentic Social Security number is a felony – and growing in prevalence among illegal immigrants searching for ways to avoid detection.

But the tally, released Thursday by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, showed that slightly less than a third of the arrested workers had been charged with criminal violations. Federal officials said Wednesday that charges could be made more severe.

The remaining Pilgrim's Pride employees are being processed for removal from the U.S., on administrative violations of immigration law.

All 46 workers arrested in Mount Pleasant faced criminal charges. But Thursday afternoon, two workers were released and motions to dismiss the criminal indictments were dropped, said Arnold Spencer, a U.S. assistant attorney involved in the investigation. In one case, one worker was a legal permanent resident; Mr. Spencer would not comment on the immigration status or citizenship of the second worker.

Arrests in Mount Pleasant could climb. "We have a significant number of people who are now fugitives and were indicted," Mr. Spencer said.

Another two dozen workers were arrested last December, after an investigation that began a year ago and involved undercover agents

School district officials in Mount Pleasant said the arrests have rattled their schools.

Missy Walley, principal of Chapel Hill Elementary in the Chapel Hill Independent School District, said she had 16 upset students in her office Thursday morning. Two of them had parents who had been arrested.

"We had one whose daddy was taken last night and one whose mother was taken," she said. "They were pretty much hysterical."

Ms. Walley said she heard students crying in the bathroom on her morning rounds through the hallway.

Some students were worried that immigration agents would pick up students at the school. Parents called the district to make sure their children were OK.

A Chapel Hill district employee visited the home of at least one student who did not report to school and found nobody home. A neighbor indicated that federal agents had been to the home.

At Mount Pleasant Independent School District, counselors were also on hand to talk to students.

"All of our students and campuses are impacted because Pilgrim's is the number one employer," said Judith Saxton, public information officer for the Mount Pleasant district.

Ms. Walley said she was struck by the number of children who showed support for those visibly shaken.

"It was not just our Hispanic children who were upset," she said. "It was all the children. It affected the whole school."

BREAKING NEWS: Raids net 15 arrests in Newton, Jasper counties

BREAKING NEWS: Raids net 15 arrests in Newton, Jasper counties


By Staff reports
Neosho Daily News

Neosho, Mo. -

A total of 15 people, 10 in Newton County alone, were arrested in a drug sweep early Friday morning.

Several area, state and federal agencies took part in the sweep, conducted after an 18-month investigation into the Mexican ice trade in Newton and Jasper counties.

Arrested on federal drug charges were Ernesto Garza, 22, and Eleazar Ortega, 33, both of Neosho. The two are currently in federal custody in Springfield, according to Eric R. Siweck, resident agent in charge at the Springfield resident office of the United States Drug Enforcement Administration, and have been charged with one count of conspiracy to distribute narcotics.

Also arrested in the sweep on drug charges were April Love, 21, of Neosho; Genovero Coronado, 33, of Neosho; Nathaniel Reagh, 24, of Neosho; Belinda Olson of Duenweg; Billy Coleman, Duenweg; Andres Layton, Joplin; Roberto Rivera, Joplin; and Milthon Marchant, Joplin.

Several Neosho area residents were also arrested on charges they were in the United States illegally. Those arrested were Maria Rodriguez, 36; Roel Garza Jr., 20; Montzerrat Mota, 18; Marco Diaz, 31; and Maria Rodriguez, 44.

At approximately 6 a.m. Friday, agents conducted two drug sweeps — one in Jasper County, the other in Newton County — seizing one vehicle, a quarter ounce of meth, $15,000 in cash, and two pounds of marijuana. The vehicle, $13,000 in cash, and some meth were seized in Newton County, according to Newton County Sheriff Ken Copeland.

Agencies participating in the raids were the Newton County Sheriff’s Office, the Neosho Police Department, the Jasper County Sheriff’s Office, the Jasper County Drug Task Force, the Southwest Missouri Drug Task Force, the Missouri State Highway Patrol, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the federal Agency of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, the Joplin Police Department, the Eastern Shawnee Tribal Police, the U.S. Customs Service, the Duenweg Police Department; and the federal Agency of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Seven residences and businesses in Newton County were included in the sweep, including Vernado’s Tire Shop, located at 1019 S. Neosho Boulevard.

More on the story will be in Sunday’s print and on-line editions of the Neosho Daily News.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Immigrants netted in Chattanooga raid to stay in Nashville jails

April 17, 2008

Immigrants netted in Chattanooga raid to stay in Nashville jails

By JANELL ROSS
Staff Writer

Women netted in an immigration raid of the Pilgrim's Pride Chicken processing plant in Chattanooga will be housed in Davidson County jails while awaiting deportation proceedings.

Wednesday's raid was part of a nationwide operation in which agents detained more than 280 immigrants at Pilgrim's Pride plants in Chattanooga, Mount Pleasant, Texas; Live Oak, Fla., Batesville, Ark.; and Moorfield, W. Va., on suspected of identity theft and other crimes related to obtaining their jobs.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokeswoman Gail Montenegro estimated agents detained 100 workers at the Chattanooga plant. The men from that plant will be jailed in Lumpkin, Ala.

The Davidson County jail has a standing contract with ICE to house detainees.

The raids are the result of indictments returned by a federal grand jury in Tyler, Texas, April 1 and unsealed Wednesday. The indictments say the defendants obtained and used Social Security numbers belonging to others to gain Pilgrim's Pride Corp jobs. If convicted of criminal identity theft charges, defendants could receive up to five years in federal prison and a fine of up to $250,000, according to a statement released by ICE. Those determined to be in the country illegally but not engaged in identity theft may be deported or given the option to leave.

A statement released by Pilgrim's Pride stressed the company's efforts to avoid employing illegal workers, including using the E-verify system. E-verify is a federal database that allows employers to verify the validity of Social Security numbers and names supplied by new hires. It doesn't detect when a name and Social Security number are already in use.

Company not charged

A Tennessee law that went into effect Jan. 1 penalizes employers who are found to have knowingly hired illegal immigrants. The law also gives safe harbor to any company that uses the E-verify system.

Pilgrim's Pride faces no charges in the raids, said Ray Atkinson, a spokesman for the Pittsburg, Texas-based company.

"We knew in advance and cooperated fully," he said.

A company statement said Pilgrim's Pride shares "the government's goal of eliminating the hiring or employment of unauthorized workers. We have terminated all of the employees who were taken into custody and will terminate any employee who is found to have engaged in similar misconduct."

Detainees interviewed

All of the individuals arrested during the operation are being photographed, fingerprinted and processed by ICE and being interviewed about their health and family needs.

The raids at the poultry plant were the largest of several immigration enforcement actions across the country on Wednesday.

Agents arrived before dawn at a Houston doughnut plant and arrested almost 30 workers suspected of being in the country illegally. Robert Rutt, the agent in charge of the Houston ICE office, told The Houston Chronicle some of the people arrested lived at the Shipley Do-Nuts dough factory, a four-block plant that includes a dormitory for workers.

In Buffalo, N.Y., federal law enforcement officials announced the arrest of a local businessman and 10 associates accused of employing illegal Mexican immigrants in seven restaurants in four states. Authorities also arrested at least 45 illegal immigrants during the early morning raids in western New York, Bradford, Pa.; Mentor, Ohio; Wheeling and New Martinsville, W.Va.; and Georgia. Authorities said the workers were forced to staff Mexican restaurants for long hours with little pay to work off smuggling fees and rent.

In Atlanta, a federal grand jury indicted 10 people from suburban Atlanta employment agencies on charges they placed illegal immigrants in jobs at Chinese restaurants and warehouses in six states. The agencies allegedly developed a network to "recruit and exploit" undocumented workers, said Kenneth Smith, special agent in charge of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in Atlanta.

Between October 2006 and April, the agencies advertised their services and charged immigrants a fee for finding a job without requiring any proof that the workers were allowed to work in the U.S, prosecutor David Nahmias said.

Poultry plants are raided in the latest federal crackdown on illegal-immigrant labor

Poultry plants are raided in the latest federal crackdown on illegal-immigrant labor

Hundreds of workers in five states are arrested .
From the Associated Press
April 17, 2008
MOUNT PLEASANT, TEXAS -- Federal agents arrested hundreds of people Wednesday in raids at Pilgrim's Pride chicken plants in five states, the latest crackdown on illegal-immigrant labor at the nation's poultry producers.

In separate sweeps, authorities also arrested dozens of workers at a doughnut factory in Houston and the operators of a chain of Mexican restaurants in upstate New York.

The arrests at Pittsburg, Texas-based Pilgrim's Pride Corp., the nation's largest chicken producer, were on charges of identity theft, document fraud and immigration violations. The company worked with Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents ahead of the raids, said Ray Atkinson, a company spokesman.

"We knew in advance and cooperated fully," Atkinson said.

Julie L. Myers, assistant secretary for ICE, confirmed that the company is cooperating, though she said the raids grew out of an investigation that produced arrests last year at the company's plant here.

No criminal or civil charges have been filed against Pilgrim's Pride, which has about 55,000 employees and operates dozens of facilities mostly across the South and in Mexico and Puerto Rico, supplying the KFC restaurant chain and other customers.

ICE said that nearly 300 workers were arrested, but Pilgrim's Pride officials said that about 400 hourly, nonmanagement employees were arrested.

"We have terminated all of the employees who were taken into custody and will terminate any employee who is found to have engaged in similar misconduct. We are investigating these allegations further," Atkinson said in a statement.

Forty-five people, all illegal immigrants, were arrested here on charges of false use of Social Security numbers, ICE said. More than 100 people were arrested on immigration violations in Chattanooga, Tenn., and they could face criminal charges related to identity theft, the agency said. Another 100 were arrested on immigration charges in Moorefield, W.Va.

More than 25 people face immigration violation charges in Live Oak, Fla. They will also face identity theft or document fraud charges, ICE said. And more than 20 were arrested in Batesville, Ark., on federal warrants for alleged document fraud or identity theft.

Pilgrim's Pride has had previous trouble with employees in Arkansas. In January 2007, police arrested a manager at the company's De Queen plant who allegedly rented identification documents for $800 to get a job there.

The company has said its policy is to fire employees who can't clear up discrepancies in their documentation.

What's Next For ICE Raid Suspects

What's Next For ICE Raid Suspects

April 17, 2008 - 4:52AM

We wanted to know more about what went into yesterday's raids and what happens to the workers now that they have been arrested and detained.

At the beginning of this month, a federal grand jury handed down multiple-defendant indictments alleging identity theft by the workers arrested here.

Those indictments were sealed until the raids Wednesday.

We dug deeper to find out what will happen to the suspects now.

According to ICE, each defendant could get up to five years in federal prison if convicted.

They also face a fine up to 250-thousand dollars.

The Department of Justice says a large number of those detained will be federally prosecuted.

For those arrested on immigration violations ONLY... ICE will make the decision about whether to detain the individual or allow a conditional release.

Those prosecuted on criminal charges will be turned over to the U-S Marshals Service.

Male detainees will be housed at a detention center in Lumpkin, Georgia -- about 2 hours south of Atlanta.

The females will go to the Davidson County Jail near Nashville.

ICE is coordinating with social service agencies and non-governmental organizations in all five states to ensure accurate information is available for family members of those arrested.

ICE also has established a toll-free number that family members can call to get information about their relative's detention status and the removal process.

The toll-free hotline number is 1-866-341-3858.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

20 arrested in federal roundup

April 16, 2008, 11:29PM
RAID ON SHIPLEY HEADQUARTERS
20 arrested in federal roundup
Employees face deportation; chain working with ICE

Houston's iconic Shipley Do-Nuts is known to generations of loyal customers for its sweet glazed pastries.

But Wednesday, the family-owned chain found itself in the spotlight of an emotional national issue when federal agents raided the company's Houston headquarters and arrested 20 suspected illegal immigrants employed at the facility.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents — in a caravan of 50 vehicles, detention vans and an ambulance — swarmed Shipley's office and warehouse complex on North Main Street at 5 a.m. A government helicopter circled overhead as the Shipley workers were led away in handcuffs to face civil charges of being in the country illegally.

The Houston bust took place at the same time ICE agents conducted raids of chicken processing plants in East Texas, Arkansas, Florida, West Virginia and Tennessee.

In all, 290 workers were arrested during raids at Texas-based Pilgrims Pride plants on suspicion of identify theft, document fraud and immigration violations, the agency said.

ICE officials released few details of the Shipley investigation, saying only that it would continue.

Employers who knowingly hire unauthorized workers can face criminal charges and fines. The workers arrested Wednesday face deportation.

"It's a worksite enforcement operation," said Robert Rutt, agent in charge of Houston's ICE office. "Our main focus is identifying the employers who hire illegal aliens."

Shipley officials, who could be seen meeting with ICE agents at the plant, declined to comment.

"Shipley Do-Nuts is a family-owned and operated business with a 72-year history in the Houston area," read a statement released Wednesday by the company, which has 190 stores in several states. "It makes every effort to comply with very complicated immigration laws, and is currently cooperating with authorities in an ongoing investigation. Shipley is deeply concerned for the well-being of its employees that are being detained and their families."

Neighbors surprised

The Shipley raid centered on its 140,000-square-foot warehouse, processing plants and office complex. It is part of a four-block compound the company has at 5200 North Main, where doughnut mix and other fillings are made for many of the 86 Houston-area locations.

The site includes at least five trailers and 14 small homes. The neatly maintained properties sit behind cyclone and barbed-wire fencing used by some Shipley employees.

Many in the neighborhood were surprised by the raid, and some expressed outrage.

"That's just people trying to work, they come into the country to try and feed their family," said Derek Shumake, who lives across the street. "They work hard, and they do jobs most people won't."

The raid sparked questions about hiring practices at Shipley and trained a spotlight on working conditions at its compound.

Fifteen workers filed a discrimination lawsuit against the company in 2006, seeking damages for allegedly enduring daily slurs, such as "wetback" and "mojado" while working at the company's warehouse. Most of the allegations were filed against a former plant manager, Jimmy Rivera, and two supervisors.

Some workers, however, suggested that the Shipley family could have done more to protect them. Filberto Alvarado Robles, who worked for the company starting in 1997, said in an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission complaint that "the company knew what was going on, or should know" because workers had complained about Rivera to another supervisor.

The company settled the lawsuit with the workers in February. The settlement terms are confidential.

Another worker, Joel Sixtos Salvador, of Michoacan, Mexico, testified in his deposition that Rivera threatened him with deportation if he complained.

"He would call me a wetback. He would tell us that killing me was like killing a dog. He told me that I was Mexican, I like to eat a lot of tacos, that I also like chile. He would, well, humiliate me," Sixtos said.

"He told me he had some police friends and that he could tell them to arrest me and deport me," he testified.

In his deposition for the civil lawsuit, Rivera, a Shipley employee for 30 years, denied ever knowingly hiring an undocumented worker. He denied telling workers to go to a flea market to get fake documents, including Social Security cards.

He said he did not find the term "mojado" offensive.

"I don't look at it as nothing ugly, you know," Rivera said, but would not confirm or deny calling workers "wetbacks."

Shipley said housing free

The depositions in the civil lawsuit include allegations that workers who complained about their treatment at the warehouse were evicted from company housing.

The housing was free to workers and their families, company president Lawrence Shipley III told investigators in the civil suit. But the workers testified that Rivera, the plant manager, charged them a fee — in some cases as much as $550 — to move into the home.

There was no indication in Shipley's deposition that he knew anyone was charging the workers to move into the homes. In the deposition, Shipley denied evicting workers for making complaints about work conditions.

The workers also alleged that Rivera would charge them money to enter a raffle to work overtime on weekends, and $50 to see the company doctor. One worker said he had to pay $100 to Rivera to avoid being fired after refusing to give him a massage.

Katrina S. Patrick, the attorney who represented the 15 workers in the civil lawsuit, said Wednesday: "We certainly intend to remain fully cooperative with the ensuing criminal investigation at the Shipley plant, to the extent that we have information relevant to the investigation."

Border Watch applauds raid

Wednesday's Shipley raid, meanwhile, racheted up fears among immigrant advocates that widespread crackdowns at local job sites are imminent.

Maria Jimenez, a longtime Houston immigrant rights activist, led a noon protest of the raid outside the Mickey Leland Federal Building. Jimenez said the raid follows recent ICE arrests at local apartment complexes and the detention of undocumented day laborers.

"In the (immigrant) community there is a great deal of caution by all members about being as open as people used to be," she said.

"I know of immigrant families who are putting emergency plans together just in case they are picked up," Jimenez said. "It has all sorts of implications for immigrant families."

Curtis Collier, head of the locally based U.S. Border Watch, described the Shipley raid as a small prick in the overall picture of workplace violations by illegal immigrants.

"ICE could do this same raid multiple times a day, multiple times a week, and make very little impact on workplace violations by illegal immigrants," Collier said. "We do welcome the raids and hope they continue, and hope employers who choose to violate federal immigration law will be a target of illegal immigrant raids."

james.pinkerton@chron.com
susan.carroll@chron.com

Hundreds arrested in immigration raids at poultry plants

Hundreds arrested in immigration raids at poultry plants

MOUNT PLEASANT, Texas (AP) — Federal agents say their case for a series of workplace raids in five states was strengthened by identity theft victims who recounted stories of plummeting credit scores and medical benefits denied.

Federal authorities carried out the sweeps Wednesday, arresting hundreds of workers at Pilgrim's Pride chicken plants on charges of identity theft, document fraud and immigration violations.

Authorities also arrested dozens of workers at a doughnut factory in Houston, and the operators of a chain of Mexican restaurants in upstate New York.

Authorities said agents investigating a scheme to provide documents for illegal immigrant workers had tracked down several of the identity theft victims.

"Identity theft is a horrible problem that can ruin a person's good name," said Julie Myers, homeland security assistant secretary for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

ICE said nearly 300 people were arrested, but officials at Pilgrim's Pride Corp., the nation's largest chicken producer, said about 400 hourly, non-management employees were taken into custody.

A federal grand jury in Tyler handed up the indictments on April 1, but they remained sealed until the raids, which began before dawn.

Pittsburg, Texas-based Pilgrim's Pride worked with ICE agents ahead of the operation, company spokesman Ray Atkinson said. It also reported suspicion of identity theft at an Arkansas plant.

"We have terminated all of the employees who were taken into custody and will terminate any employee who is found to have engaged in similar misconduct," Atkinson said in a statement. "We are investigating these allegations further."

The sweeps stemmed from a larger investigation into identity theft and document fraud at Pilgrim's Pride, Myers said. That probe led to the arrests of two dozen people from the company's Mount Pleasant plant and nearby homes in December.

No criminal or civil charges have been filed against Pilgrim's Pride, which has about 55,000 employees and operates dozens of facilities mostly across the South and in Mexico and Puerto Rico, supplying the KFC restaurant chain and other customers.

Forty-five people, all illegal immigrants, were arrested in Mount Pleasant on charges of false use of Social Security numbers, ICE said. More than 100 people were arrested on immigration violations in Chattanooga, Tenn., and they could face criminal charges related to identity theft, the agency said. Another 100 were arrested on immigration charges in Moorefield, W.Va.

More than 25 people face immigration violation charges in Live Oak, Fla. They will also face identity theft or document fraud charges, ICE said. More than 20 were arrested in Batesville, Ark., on federal warrants for alleged document fraud or identity theft.

DJs on a Spanish-language radio station told listeners to be careful Wednesday after reporting news of the raid. After the arrests, many of the dozens of businesses in town that cater to Latino immigrants had few customers or none at all.

"It's sad and scary," said Sheita Delacruz, who works at her mother's dress and gift shop.

The poultry raids were the largest of the immigration enforcement actions across the country Wednesday.

It was at least the fourth round of raids at U.S. poultry plants in the past three years. Agents arrested about 160 illegal immigrants in Fairfield, Ohio, last May. Separate raids three months apart in 2005 netted about 120 arrests each in Arkadelphia, Ark., and Stillmore, Ga.

Associated Press writers Schuyler Dixon in Irving, Texas; Jon Gambrell in Little Rock, Ark.; and Carolyn Thompson in Buffalo, N.Y.; contributed to this report.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

59 Immigrant Hotel Workers Arrested in Raid

59 Immigrant Hotel Workers Arrested in Raid

By Pamela Constable
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, April 9, 2008; B05

Federal immigration officials said they arrested 59 foreign-born workers in a raid yesterday at the Lansdowne Resort in Loudoun County. The officials said the detainees, all from Latin America, were suspected of having used fraudulent or stolen documents to obtain jobs at the hotel and golf resort.

Mark McGraw, a senior regional official with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said in a statement that the raid was part of a "nationwide aggressive pursuit of unauthorized workers and employers who violate the law." Companies that use "cheap, illegal alien labor as a business model should be on notice that ICE is dramatically enhancing its enforcement efforts," he said.

Immigration officials could not be reached to confirm details of the raid, but a spokesman for the Loudoun County Sheriff's Office said last night that its officers had assisted in an ICE operation at Lansdowne. The spokesman, Kraig Troxell, also said there had been reports of buses taking groups of people away from the site.

The raid occurred less than three weeks after ICE officials raided a construction company office in Prince William County, arresting 34 Latin American nationals on suspicion of being in the United States illegally. The two operations appear to have been the largest workplace raids conducted by immigration authorities in the Washington region in the past two years.

Employees at Lansdowne, reached by phone last night, said they had no comment and would not confirm whether the raid had taken place. The resort on Woodridge Parkway offers convention facilities, golf tournaments and tours of nearby wineries.

In a written statement, ICE officials said the agency's officers questioned more than 100 workers at the resort yesterday after a lengthy investigation of employment documents and practices there.

The statement said 59 men and women from El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, Honduras, Bolivia, Peru and Argentina were taken into custody for immigration violations and would probably be processed for deportation. It said two other women had been released for humanitarian reasons and that family members could call 866-341-3858 for information about those detained.

Immigrant advocacy groups and lawyers in the Washington area said they had not been contacted by any detainees or their relatives, but several groups said they were concerned that the raids would increase a climate of fear among legal and illegal immigrants.

ICE officials did not say whether action would be taken against the managers or owners of the resort, which is operated by Benchmark Hospitality International.

Staff writer Bill Brubaker contributed to this report.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Nearly 50 illegal immigrants working as security guards arrested

Nearly 50 illegal immigrants working as security guards arrested
© 2008 The Associated Press
--

DALLAS — A task force led by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested nearly 50 illegal immigrants in weekend raids of mostly Latino night clubs in Dallas, officials said Sunday.

Authorities raided 26 businesses, including night clubs, restaurants and pool halls. They were targeting employees working as security guards for two security companies, which officials declined to identify.

Law enforcement teams of local, state and federal officials simultaneously hit the 26 businesses around 11 p.m. Saturday and arrested 49 people. They recovered four pistols.

Those arrested will faces charges of being in the United States illegally. Federal law also prohibits illegal immigrants from possessing weapons.

Four people arrested were from El Salvador and the rest were from Mexico, officials said. One of the Salvadorans arrested was a legal immigrant, and it is unclear whether he will face any charges.

"Hopefully, this operation will help us send a message that we will not tolerate the falsification of documents for undocumented aliens under the guise of providing security," Dallas County District Attorney Craig Watkins said.

___
Information from The Dallas Morning News: http://www.dallasnews.com

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sexual Abuse Fueled by Abusive Immigration Language

Sexual Abuse Fueled by Abusive Immigration Language
By Amanda Marcotte, RH Reality Check
Posted on April 7, 2008, Printed on April 7, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/81275/

In all the furor over rising immigration rates in the U.S. -- often disguised as concern over "illegal" immigration -- one story in particular demonstrates that contrary to scare stories about the effect of immigration on this country, the reality is that this country is often a scary and oppressive place for immigrants. And immigrant women, having drawn the double whammy card, are especially vulnerable. A22-year-old immigrant from Colombia exposed her immigration agent using the threat of deportation to rape her, using her cell phone to tape the assault. Unfortunately, as is all too common with these sorts of stories, most reports describe the event as sex, even while making it clear that the sex is question was coerced, and should be more accurately described as rape.



The story has hooks most likely because it's about how a common crime -- sexual blackmail against immigrants and other women marginalized in society -- became more difficult to hide and ignore because of new technologies. But despite the dubious reasons why this story hit the mainstream news, the activist community can still seize this opportunity to make two very important points: 1) Immigration is a feminist issue and 2) The distinctions between "legal" and "illegal" immigrants is red herring to distract from the fact that it's immigrants, full stop, who face oppression under a tidal wave of anti-immigration sentiment.

This woman's story demonstrates the way that the cut-and-dry distinctions between illegal and legal immigrants touted by the Lou Dobbses of the world tend to turn shades of gray when examined closely. Or actually, shades of paperwork. The rape victim entered the U.S. legally on a tourist visa and overstayed, but managed to enter the system to get her green card by marrying a citizen, which all but the worst mouth-breathers accept as a legitimate way to get a green card. Her story shows why it's front-loaded and racist to describe a human being as "illegal," especially when her illegal actions were misdemeanors such that they didn't even raise the ire of the law when she got her paperwork in order. I've managed to drive a car before after letting my inspection lapse, and then got the ticket straightened out by renewing my inspection sticker, an equivalent crime. No one describes my very being as illegal, though. Though rape, on the other hand, is not a minor crime and is earth-shattering enough that it's acceptable to describe the people who commit that crimes as "rapists," I suspect that rapists get called by that moniker less often than immigrants without their paperwork in order get called "illegals."

Words like "illegals" dehumanize immigrants, whether or not they have their paperwork in order, and that dehumanization makes immigrant women juicy targets for assorted sexist oppressors, from anti-choicers to wife beaters to rapists, as this woman's story shows. One Honduran immigrant faced charges after trying to self-abort with an ulcer medication, an attempt that failed to induce abortion, but was linked to her giving birth to a premature infant who passed away. The same article notes that a 22-year-old Mexican immigrant living in South Carolina was put in jail for inducing her own abortion with the medication at home. That immigrant women often resort to self-abortion should surprise no one. Not only is safe, legal abortion financially daunting for a number of women, the atmosphere of dehumanization of immigrants makes many women understandably eager to reduce their encounters with authority figures of any type, including doctors.



Green card manipulation isn't just a trick practiced by immigration officials wanting to control and dominate women, either. According to the Family Violence Prevention Fund (PDF), many domestic abusers use threats about immigration status to keep women in relationships with them. Whether married to citizens or non-citizens, the quasi-legal status assigned to immigrants means that many victims of domestic violence fear seeking help; consequently, the rates of domestic violence are significantly higher for immigrant women than women at large.

Congress stepped in to create the International Marriage Brokers Regulation Act, which gives immigrant women the right to leave abusive marriages without being deported. It also requires that men who go through "marriage broker" services to disclose their domestic violence histories to potential brides.


If you ever want to despair of the human condition, Google the term "IMBRA" -- the vast majority of the results returned are authored by men outraged at these entirely reasonable measures that keep men from beating their immigrant wives and using green cards as leverage to perpetuate the violence. Strangely, few of these websites argue that men should be given the direct right to beat women, but it's hard to imagine what other worldview they could be operating under, when they think that it should be perfectly legal for a man to threaten his wife with deportation if she leaves him after a round of beating. If you are under the incorrect impression that sexism is dead and feminism isn't needed anymore, I recommend listening to the howls of men who think the government owes them the right to treat immigrant women like a population available for their punching bag and sexual assault needs. That goes double for you if you've ever sneered at the term "intersections of oppression," because I can't think of a better example myself.

Amanda Marcotte co-writes the popular blog Pandagon.

--

Sunday, April 6, 2008

ICE raids warehouses in LA area

ICE raids warehouses in LA area

On April 1, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents arrested 44 workers at the warehouses of three distribution companies—Samsung, Frontier and Imperial CSS—in an industrial park in Torrance, Calif., just south of Los Angeles. ICE spokesperson Virginia Kice said all but two of the 44 people arrested are Mexican. Kice said 17 of those arrested were released for humanitarian reasons. (Diario Hoy, LA/Chicago, April 2, 3; La Opinión, Los Angeles, April 3; Free Speech Radio News, April 2) The Mexican consulate in Los Angeles reported that its personnel were able to speak with 34 of the arrested Mexicans and offer them orientation about their legal situation. (El Financiero, Mexico, April 3) William Jarquin, the consul of El Salvador in Los Angeles, said he was informed that two of those arrested were Salvadoran, and that one of the two had been released. (Diario Hoy, April 2)

At least 11 of the Mexican workers who were arrested on April 1 were deported that same night, said Angélica Salas, executive director of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA). She added that it "seemed strange" that they were "deported so quickly, because that doesn't happen unless they have final orders of deportation, and none of these people even had the chance to talk to a lawyer."

Salvadoran immigrant Nemesio Hernández said he was arrested on April 1 despite having valid Temporary Protected Status (TPS). Hernández explained his situation to the ICE agents but they threw him violently to the floor, handcuffed him and jailed him for seven hours, said his sister, Isabel Hernández. He was then released without so much as an apology. (La Opinión, April 3)

Miguel Angel Reyes, a Mexican immigrant who had worked for four years at Imperial CFS, described how managers there collaborated with ICE to carry out the April 1 raid: "The managers said we were going to have a meeting. They had us sit down in the lunchroom and then Immigration began to ask for California identification. They put us on the floor one by one. After about two hours they started to take everyone in the van." Reyes said many of the workers did not try to escape because "the managers said everything was fine, that it was a routine check, that nothing was going to happen. When I turned around, all the immigration agents were right there in front of me." (Diario Hoy, April 3)

Salas said that according to workers at the raided companies, ICE agents only checked the documents of the workers who appeared to be of Latin American origin. (La Opinión, April 3) CHIRLA organized a press conference and demonstration on the afternoon of April 1 outside the federal detention center in downtown Los Angeles where some of the arrested workers were apparently taken. The protest was attended by dozens of people, including family members of the workers arrested that morning and workers who had been arrested in a Feb. 7 raid at Micro Solutions Enterprises in Van Nuys. (CHIRLA e-mail alert, April 2; Diario Hoy, April 2; Free Speech Radio News, April 2) One woman who attended the protest, María Cruz, said her husband had been arrested on April 1 at the Amay's Bakery and Noodle Co. factory in central Los Angeles. He had been a legal resident in the US for 25 years, but in 2001 authorities dug up a 20-year old felony case they said made him deportable. Cruz said her husband suffers from epilepsy; the family is worried that his condition will be exacerbated by the stress of detention. (Diario Hoy, April 2; Free Speech Radio News, April 2)

ICE spokesperson Lori Haley claimed the operation in Torrance was simply a routine inspection of customs bonded warehouses. "We do this type of routine audit to make sure everything is safe and sound," said Haley. "In the course of the inspection, we found people who were in the country illegally and we arrested them." (Diario Hoy, April 2)

The raids in the area south of Los Angeles continued on April 2 with operations at the warehouses of Nippon Express Inc. on Francisco Street in Torrance and The Trading Center in Long Beach, and at a factory in Wilmington where some 25 ICE agents detained at least 10 workers, most of them women. (Diario Hoy, April 3; La Opinión, April 3; El
Financiero, April 3; TelemundoLA.com, April 3)

Kice confirmed that the warehouse "inspections" would continue. "ICE and CBP [Customs and Border Protection] are carrying out routine inspections at import-export companies in various communities of Los Angeles... to identify any security vulnerability," said Kice. (Diario Hoy, April 3) By April 3, as word spread about the raids, many Los Angeles-area immigrants reportedly stayed home from work. (El Financiero, April 3)

Following the February raid at Micro Solutions, groups including the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Southern California, the National Lawyers Guild and the National Immigration Law Center sought a restraining order in federal court against federal immigration officials who they said repeatedly blocked attorneys from accompanying workers during meetings and interrogations. On March 12, the two sides finalized a settlement guaranteeing that the workers arrested at Micro Solutions can be accompanied by an attorney to all meetings and interrogations. ACLU staff attorney Ahilan Arulanantham said the groups hoped that the case would set a legal precedent. "The government would have a hard time explaining why the rights of these people are different from those of others" detained in similar raids, he said. (Los Angeles Times, March 14)

Day laborers arrested in Northern California
On March 28, local police officers in Fremont, Calif., (in the Bay Area, southeast of San Francisco) carried out a sting operation against day laborers who were waiting for jobs outside a local Home Depot outlet. The Fremont Police Department cited about 15 workers for trespassing and took 13 of them who had no ID to the Santa Rita Jail to be identified, according to Detective Bill Veteran. There, the laborers were apparently handed over to ICE.

The raid was carried out in response to complaints from Home Depot, Veteran said, because some of the laborers allegedly harass customers and drink in public. "As a matter of courtesy, we alert ICE when we conduct" these kinds of operations, said Veteran. The Immigrant Legal Resource Center in San Francisco said it will look into whether the operation violated the Constitution and will consider legal options. (NBC11.com, April 3)

According to information received by Larisa Casillas, director of the Bay Area Immigrant Rights Coalition (BAIRC), the workers were told at the time of their arrest that they would be placed in deportation proceedings. Casillas said her organization has received other reports indicating that people detained for traffic violations in Fremont are also being placed in deportation. Bay Area advocates are seeking to meet with Fremont police to discuss the issue. (E-mail message from Casillas received April 2)

From Immigration News Briefs, April 6

See our last post on the politics of immigration.

Friday, April 4, 2008

Lawsuit Challenges Immigration Raids in New Jersey

The New York Times



April 4, 2008

Lawsuit Challenges Immigration Raids in New Jersey

Immigration agents systematically entered homes and made arrests without proper warrants during raids to round up immigration fugitives in New Jersey, according to a federal lawsuit filed Thursday.

The lawsuit, brought by lawyers at the Center for Social Justice at Seton Hall Law School in Newark, will provide a constitutional test of law enforcement methods often used by immigration agents since May 2006 when they began operations across the country to track down and deport immigrants who had been ordered to leave by the courts.

The suit, against officials of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, on behalf of 10 plaintiffs, including two United States citizens, contends that teams of ICE agents used “deceit or, in some cases, raw force” to gain “unlawful entry.”

The lawsuit claims that agents, sometimes misrepresenting themselves as local police officers hunting for criminals, entered homes where no fugitives being sought were present and detained residents without showing any legal cause. Immigration agents have broad authority to question foreigners about their immigration status, but they may not enter a home without either a warrant or consent.

A spokesman for the immigration agency, Michael Gilhooly, said he could not comment on pending litigation. The suit was filed in Federal District Court in New Jersey.

Speaking generally, Mr. Gilhooly said all fugitives who were targets of ICE searches had been ordered deported by immigration judges.

“They became fugitives when they chose to ignore the judge’s order,” Mr. Gilhooly said, adding that operations to arrest fugitives “are planned after meticulous investigation and surveillance.”

In the last two years, immigration authorities have faced intense political pressure to track down fugitive illegal immigrants. In most cases, the immigrants overstayed visas or were caught when they tried to sneak into the country over a land border, then failed to appear at hearings, leading judges to order them to be deported.

Last year, ICE agents arrested 30,408 immigration fugitives, according to official figures, about double the number for 2006.

One plaintiff in the lawsuit, Maria Argueta, has been a legal immigrant since 2001. During a predawn operation in January at her home in North Bergen, N.J., the lawsuit claims, ICE agents persuaded Ms. Argueta to open her door by telling her they were police officers searching for a wanted criminal. Ms. Argueta was detained and held for 36 hours.

Another plaintiff, Arturo Flores, a United States citizen, said ICE agents showed no warrant when they forced their way into his house in Clifton, N.J., in November 2006 and conducted a search. A third plaintiff, Veronica Covias, a legal immigrant in Paterson, N.J., said agents pushed open her door in March 2007 even though she demanded that they show her a warrant.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Department of Homeland Security, Immigration Officers Sued for Constitutional Violations in Pre-Dawn Home Raids Practice


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Department of Homeland Security, Immigration Officers Sued for Constitutional Violations in Pre-Dawn Home Raids Practice


-- Seton Hall Law School's Center for Social Justice and Lowenstein Sandler PC, filed suit today in federal court, alleging that federal law enforcement officials violated the ten victims' constitutional privacy and due process rights under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments by entering their homes without consent or a judicial warrant during pre-dawn "raids." The plaintiffs include two U.S. citizens, a permanent resident, and a lawful protection-status grantee.

The complaint is based on eight home raids across the state of New Jersey between August 2006 and January 2008. The raids all follow a similar pattern, in which immigration agents forced their way into each plaintiff's home in the early hours of the morning without a judicial warrant or the occupants' consent. Most of the plaintiffs were awakened by loud pounding on their doors and answered the door, fearing an emergency. ICE agents subsequently either lied about their identity or purpose to gain entry, or simply shoved their way into the home. During each raid the agents swept through the house and, displaying guns, rounded up all the residents for questioning. In some cases they ordered children out of their beds, shouted obscenities, shoved guns into residents' chests, and forbade detained individuals from calling their lawyers. In at least half the raids, the officers purported to be searching for a person who did not even live at the address raided.

The complaint asserts that these practices are not isolated violations, but are examples of a clear modus operandi typical of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement ("ICE") program called "Operation Return to Sender." Under this program, the complaint alleges, ICE agents have been ordered to meet dramatically increased immigrant arrest quotas using grossly outdated address information and without having been trained on lawful procedures.

"This is the first lawsuit in the country to focus on the consistency of these abusive home raid practices across an entire state, and over a significant period of time," said Bassina Farbenblum, an attorney at the Seton Hall Center for Social Justice. "Our complaint shows that what happened to our plaintiffs in the middle of the night was not exceptional. It was part of a routine, widespread practice, condoned at the highest levels of government, that tramples the rights of citizens and non-citizens alike."

ICE claims that Operation Return to Sender was designed to arrest criminals and individuals with old deportation orders, people whom ICE calls "fugitives." But the statistics belie this explanation. Of the 2,079 people arrested in New Jersey last year under this program, 87% had no criminal record, and as few as 1 in 3 were "fugitives" with outstanding deportation orders. These statistics demonstrate that the program has been used as a pretext for dragnet searches in which ICE makes thousands of what it euphemistically calls "collateral arrests" of people like the plaintiffs in today's suit.

The complaint alleges that responsibility for the pre-dawn raids and the associated constitutional violations reaches senior federal officials, including the head of ICE, Assistant Secretary for Homeland Security Julie Myers, who knew about the practice and allowed it to continue. The complaint also seeks to hold responsible local police officers who participated in one of the raids alongside ICE agents.

"None of the home raids in today's case involved valid warrants allowing the agents to enter, and none of the residents gave consent," noted plaintiffs' attorney Scott Thompson, of Lowenstein Sandler. "The Constitution is very clear about the circumstances under which law enforcement may enter a private home, and the entries in this case did not even come close."

According to the complaint, the constitutional violations did not cease once agents had entered the homes. For example, plaintiff Maria Argueta, a legal resident, was arrested in her home at 4:30 in the morning and detained for 24 hours without food or water; the agents lied to get into her home then refused to even to look at her immigration papers proving her status. Agents shoved a gun into the chest of another plaintiff and screamed obscenities at her. Numerous ICE agents and local Penns Grove police officers stormed yet another plaintiff's house at three in the morning with guns drawn, without a search warrant, claiming they were looking for her brother, whom the government had actually deported at least two years earlier.

"Repeatedly in this country's history, and especially during our most challenging times, immigrant populations have been the targets of suspicion, hostility and overly aggressive law enforcement tactics," said plaintiff's lawyer and Seton Hall Law Professor Baher Azmy. "If we don't want to regret this moment, as we've come to regret previous ones, we should stop to consider the costs of these lawless and abusive practices -- to our commitment to fair and humane procedures and to the human beings in our midst who suffer real harm."

Previously, the Center for Social Justice and the newspaper Brazilian Voice filed a Freedom of Information Act suit in federal court, challenging the government's withholding of documents about the raids. That lawsuit, filed January 28, 2008, can be found at http://law.shu.edu/csj/iceraids.html.

A copy of the complaint and fact summaries can be found at http://law.shu.edu/csj/iceraids.html .

Seton Hall University School of Law, New Jersey's only private law school and a leading law school in the New York metropolitan area, is dedicated to preparing students for the practice of law through excellence in scholarship and teaching with a strong focus on clinical education. The Center for Social Justice, a core of Seton Hall Law School's Catholic mission, provides clinical education and volunteer opportunities to students and engages in various forms of advocacy, scholarship and direct legal services in an effort to secure equality, civil rights and legal protection for individuals and communities in need. Seton Hall Law School is located in Newark. For more information visit http://law.shu.edu/ .

Lowenstein Sandler PC is a nationally recognized corporate law firm with offices in New York, New Jersey and Boston, with more than 275 attorneys providing a full range of legal services. The firm's commitment to its clients is demonstrated through its client-centered, service-oriented culture. Lowenstein Sandler attorneys are regularly recognized for excellence by clients and peers in national publications, including Best Lawyers in America, Chambers USA Guide to America's Leading Lawyers for Business and The Legal 500. http://www.lowenstein.com

SOURCE Lowenstein Sandler PC

Bassina Farbenblum, Esq., +1-973-642-8700, farbenba@shu.edu, or Janet LeMonnier, +1-973-642-8724, Cell, +1-973-985-3165, lemonnja@shu.edu, both of Seton Hall Law School; or Robin Wagge for Lowenstein Sandler, +1-212-843-8006, Cell, +1-917-816-4790, rwagge



© 2008 Sun Herald. All Rights Reserved.
http://www.sunherald.com

Lawsuit claims immigration raids are unconstitutional

Lawsuit claims immigration raids are unconstitutional

by Brian Donohue/The Star-Ledger
Thursday April 03, 2008, 11:30 AM

Warrantless immigration raids that have led to the deportation of hundreds of illegal immigrants living in New Jersey in recent years violate the U.S. Constitution, a human rights group associated with Seton Hall University charges in a lawsuit filed today.

The lawsuit, filed by Seton Hall Law School's Center for Social Justice and the Roseland law firm Lowenstein Sandler, challenges a growing and widespread tactic by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in which immigrants are arrested at their homes in pre-dawn raids.

Based on eight home raids that occurred across New Jersey between August 2006 and January 2008, the suit alleges ICE agents lied about their identity, illegally forced their way into homes and often claimed to be looking for someone who did not even live at the address.

In some cases, the plaintiffs charge, they arrested and detained people living legally in the U.S.

"This is the first lawsuit in the country to focus on the consistency of these abusive home raid practices across an entire state, and over a significant period of time,'' Bassina Farbenblum, an attorney at the Seton Hall Center for Social Justice, said in a prepared release.

"Our complaint shows that what happened to our plaintiffs in the middle of the night was not exceptional," she added. "It was part of a routine, widespread practice, condoned at the highest levels of government, that tramples the rights of citizens and non-citizens alike."

None of the raids involved valid warrants and none of the eight gave consent for agents to enter their homes, the lawsuit says.

In one case, Maria Argueta, a legal U.S. resident living in North Bergen, says she was arrested by agents who did not ask to check her paperwork, detained 24 hours without food or water. In another, ICE agents and police from Penn's Grove stormed a house with guns drawn, looking for a man ICE had deported two years earlier.

In New Jersey, the raids are conducted by four fugitive operations teams, part of a nationwide program launched in 2003 to round up illegal immigrants who had ignored old deportation orders.

The program once set a goal of making criminals comprise 75 percent of its arrests. But government auditors found that, in order to boost arrest statistics and meet the 1,000-arrests-per-year quota set by their bosses, agents turned their attention away from criminals and other tough targets, such as illegal immigrants who use fake or stolen identities, government auditors found last year.

In a story published in December, The Star-Ledger reported the four New Jersey teams arrested 2,079 people in the year that ended Sept. 30 - twice as many as the year before, when two teams were on the streets. The paper found that 88 percent of those arrested had no criminal histories and were picked up instead for civil immigration violations.

The right kind of immigration raid

latimes.com

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/opinion/la-ed-ice3apr03,1,6459683.story
From the Los Angeles Times

The right kind of immigration raid

Law enforcement and immigrant advocates are working together to make for kinder crackdowns.

April 3, 2008

Before U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement took 144 men and women into custody at Micro Solutions Enterprises in Van Nuys a few weeks ago, the agency sent advance notice to civil rights groups. It put social service agencies on standby in case children whose parents were detained needed help. Once the suspected illegal immigrants were identified, ICE agents asked if they had chronic health conditions, child-care issues or other urgent personal situations. Those who did were released and given an order to appear in court at a later date. Lastly, ICE handed out a list of attorneys who would take cases pro bono.

It should have been the perfect immigration raid -- considerate, humanitarian, efficient, the agency's standard since the debacle in New Bedford, Mass., last year when children, including a breast-feeding baby, suffered when their parents were taken away for days. But the Van Nuys action still resulted in a lawsuit -- which led to progress. Lawyers waiting to assist the immigrants filed an injunction against ICE after they were stopped from accompanying the immigrants to interviews, a clear violation of the constitutional right to representation. ICE settled the suit several days ago, and since then attorney access has been smoother.

This is the reform of immigration enforcement far from the halls of Congress. It is being cobbled together bit by bit, with compromises, cooperation and confrontation by naturally opposing forces -- those charged with enforcing the law and deporting illegal immigrants and those who advocate on their behalf.

Tuesday afternoon, outraged immigration activists picketed ICE's downtown intake station, protesting the detention of about 30 suspected illegal immigrants taken in what they believed were "raids" on warehouses. Even a well-conducted raid is a hypocrisy, they said, illustrating contradictions between immigration enforcement policies and immigration law: A humane raid would not separate mothers from their young children for a long time, but the law allows the harsher separation of deportation.

It turns out, however, that the people picked up Tuesday were taken in routine port customs security inspections of freight warehouses. Those businesses have to comply with a lengthy list of security requirements, one of which is to not hire illegal immigrants, who are particular security risks because their status makes them vulnerable to coercion. All reasonable. So Wednesday morning, immigration advocates and ICE officials were on the phone together, examining and clarifying Tuesday's events -- and preparing for the next time.




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Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Raids snare 38 illegal aliens

http://www.taftmidwaydriller.com/articles/2008/04/01/news/news04.txt

Raids snare 38 illegal aliens

By Doug Keeler
Published: Tuesday, April 1, 2008 2:01 PM CDT
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Midway Driller Editor

It started out as a simple code enforcement assignment for Kern County Sheriff's deputies and code enforcement officers Thursday afternoon.

It ended up as a major raid by deputies and federal immigration agents that led the apprehension and deportation of 38 undocumented aliens, all from Mexico, living at four locations in Ford City.


Deputies and code enforcement officers went to 216 Monroe St. to investigate code enforcement issues and found 18 men, all in this county illegally, living in a large room at the house.

“It was an (illegal alien) motel,” Sheriff's Sgt. Martin Downs said.

Downs contacted Immigrations and Customs Enforcement officers who responded rapidly with a large bus.



The eighteen aliens detained on Monroe Street were loaded onto the bus, and deputies and ICE agents decided to check several more locations where aliens have been known to gather.

They went next to a house at 502 Tyler Street and found nine undocumented men.

They already had several detained from the house when three more walked up to the house and were taken into custody.



Next, a raid on a residence at 219 Van Buren turned up nine undocumented aliens and a fourth stop at a house on Buchanan Street added four more to the round-up.

The raids were halted only because they ran out of room on the bus.

All of the men detained were going to be taken to the United States-Mexican boarder and released into Mexico within about 12 hours.



Most are expected to get back into this country within a day or so, deputies and ICE agents said.

The structure the aliens were staying in on Monroe Street was an add-on to an existing home.

Downs said it contained cubicles for 18 people with a toilet and shower.



The men were paying $125 per month each for a spot in the structure, Downs said.

It was declared unsafe for occupancy by code enforcement officers.

“Deputies were surprised when they found so many people staying there.



“We went in and there was this group of people,” Downs said. “We just kept finding more and more and more of them.”

Instead of deputies holding the 18 men detained or just releasing them onto the street, Downs came up with a plan.

He contacted ICE officials in Bakersfield and they agreed to come pick the men up and stage raids at the other locations.