Tag Archive | "Immigration Raids"

Immigrant raids often mark start of years of limbo

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Immigrant raids often mark start of years of limbo


By IVAN MORENO – AP

GREELEY, Colo. (AP) — Ernesto Garcia counted himself lucky after he was swept up in a 2006 immigration raid on a northern Colorado meatpacking plant: Unlike hundreds of co-workers here illegally, he was allowed to stay in the U.S.

Two years later, he’s jobless and barely getting by while he waits for his immigration case to be resolved.

The 34-year-old Guatemalan is among hundreds of people across the country stuck in limbo while their cases inch their way through immigration courts. A favorable ruling would get them a green card. But in the meantime — and the meantime can be years — they’re barred from working.

Julien Ross, director of the Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition, calls it a “sadistic” way to get immigrants to give up and go home.

“This is another example of why the raids don’t work,” Ross said. “It’s almost salt on the wound to have them wait for years for their cases to be resolved. And the government knows they can’t work.”

Immigration cases do not have the same “speedy trial” requirements as criminal cases. Denver’s four immigration judges each have up to 2,000 cases at a time, so delays are inevitable, said Christina Fiflis, an attorney who has represented some of the workers detained in the federal raid on the Swift & Co. plant in Greeley on Dec. 12, 2006.

Some can apply for work permits, but often there’s an “extraordinary delay” in getting them, she said.

Unable to work, many rely on friends, family and charity.

“In many cases, the families will exhaust all options to see if they can remain in the country, especially families who have been here for a long time,” said Rosa Maria Castaneda, a researcher with the Urban Institute, a Washington-based group that tracks the impact of workplace raids.

Carl Rusnok, a spokesman for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said the agency doesn’t know how many people arrested in raids are still in the United States waiting for immigration court hearings.

“Although this is their right, there are limits on what they can and cannot do in the meantime. There is no provision in law to give work authorization to those who have been found working illegally in the United States,” Rusnok said.

Elaine Komis, spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of Justice’s Executive Office for Immigration Review — the immigration court system — said it’s common for immigration cases to take years when people appeal a decision by the immigration judge.

Castaneda’s group doesn’t have an exact count of pending cases from recent work-site raids.

But she said they include some of the 261 people detained in the Swift raid in Greeley and another 261 in a same-day raid in Grand Island, Neb. They also include 361 workers swept up in a March 2007 raid on the Michael Bianco Inc. textile factory in New Bedford, Mass. As of December, 201 of those workers remained in New Bedford.

“It’s difficult because you can’t get work. But we’re putting our faith in God, that he will help us,” said Brenda Miranda, whose husband, Jose Mendoza, was detained in Greeley, 60 miles north of Denver. “It’s worth it because our children will have better opportunities,” she said in Spanish.

Miranda, 26, said her husband, who like her is from northern Mexico, has been working sporadically — and illegally — in construction. She said he’s left with about $120 a week after making child support payments.

Mendoza, 29, was arrested again late last year when Weld County District Attorney Ken Buck launched an investigation into more than 1,300 people he says filed tax returns with false or stolen identities. Mendoza’s next immigration hearing is in December.

Garcia also has worked illegally since the raid; his last job, in a carrot and onion field, ended in November. It paid him $300 a week, part of which he used to pay an immigration attorney.

The raid in which Garcia was picked up was part of an ICE operation that also targeted Swift plants in Grand Island; Cactus, Texas; Hyrum, Utah; Marshalltown, Iowa; and Worthington, Minn. ICE said a total of 1,297 workers were arrested that day. In the end, Garcia and others — including some whose next court date isn’t until December, or three years after the raid — may be deported.

A church and a community group have stepped in to help the immigrants in Greeley.

“I feel like they’re here, they’re hungry, and we have a moral imperative to help them,” said Ann Ratcliffe, 65, a Family of Christ Presbyterian Church member. She calls the families picked up in the raid “vecinos” — neighbors.

The church and its affiliates have pitched in more than $30,000 over the last two years to help about two dozen families while they wait for their cases to be resolved.

“Here they are and they’re stuck,” said the Rev. Richard Craft, pastor of the Greeley church that helps administer the funds through the community group Al Frente de la Lucha (At the Front of the Battle).

Garcia, who came to Colorado illegally 13 years ago, hopes that the amount of time he has spent here will lead to legal status.

“If it’s horrible for me here, in my country it would be worse,” said Garcia. “Better to fight here and see what happens.”

Ricardo Romero, a leader of Al Frente de la Lucha, said the families still in Greeley include about 13 from Guatemala, six from Mexico and two from El Salvador.

“Once the (church) money runs out, I don’t know what we’ll do,” Romero said. “But if we make it to the court dates, and somebody gets citizenship, then I guess it was all worth it.”

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Immigrants’ Arrests Anger S.F. Supervisors

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Immigrants’ Arrests Anger S.F. Supervisors


Christopher Heredia, Chronicle Staff Writer

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Two San Francisco supervisors expressed outrage Saturday at federal officers’ handling of six immigration arrests this past week at a Visitacion Valley residence.

Four women and two men were booked into custody, and a 15-year-old girl was questioned at the residence Thursday night, according a spokeswoman for the federal office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement and two members of the Board of Supervisors.

Virginia Kice, a spokeswoman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said authorities went to the home seeking three adults who were considered to be fugitives after being ordered deported by a federal judge.

When officers arrived, they found three other adults who are undocumented and living in the country illegally and arrested them as well, Kice said. The girl has an application to stay in the country legally and so she was not apprehended, Kice said.

Supervisor Sophie Maxwell, whose district includes Visitacion Valley, said City Hall aides told her the 15-year-old girl was left by herself after federal officers took all the adults from the residence, a claim Kice strongly denied.

“We’re still investigating,” Maxwell said, “but as far as I know, the child was left. That’s my concern.”

Maxwell said she was also concerned that agents entered the residence without a warrant. “We need to look at the protocol and whether they followed it,” Maxwell said. “This child did not put herself in this situation, and that needs to be looked at.”

Kice said the girl was never left without adult supervision and that officers acted in accordance with federal law. She said a warrant was not required in this case.

“We would never knowingly leave a minor unattended,” Kice said, adding that the girl was supervised until another relative could pick her up.

San Francisco police spokesman Sgt. Neville Gittens said federal officers and San Francisco police were at the residence until the girl’s aunt arrived.

Kice also disputed claims by the lawyer for those arrested that immigration officers acted in an abusive manner. One of the arrested men suffered minor injuries in a scuffle with federal officers.

Kice said the man tried to assault officers with a kitchen utensil. “It was not a knife,” Kice said. “But he did attempt to assault officers. In subduing him, he was slightly hurt. He didn’t want to go to the hospital, but officers took him anyway to make sure his injuries weren’t serious.”

Kice said the man was released back into custody with a clean bill of health and pain medication.

Whether federal officers or San Francisco police officers violated the city’s sanctuary ordinance may be the subject of an inquiry by the Board of Supervisors, Supervisor Tom Ammiano said.

San Francisco’s sanctuary laws say that no city resources should be used to assist federal immigration law enforcement unless required by federal law. Police officers responded to the scene after a neighbor reported a commotion at the residence. They stood back once they determined federal immigration authorities were making arrests, Gittens said.

“It’s very disturbing,” Ammiano said of the incident. “Aside from the mean-spiritedness of these arrests, there appears to be a coordinated attack on the city’s sanctuary status,” Ammiano said. “The people arrested should be allowed due process, and it doesn’t sound like that was the case.”

Francisco Ugarte, a lawyer with the San Francisco Immigrant Legal and Education Network, who is representing the arrested adults, said he is looking into whether federal officers violated the U.S. Constitution by entering the residence without a warrant and whether San Francisco’s sanctuary ordinance may have been violated.

Ugarte said none of his clients went at officers with a kitchen utensil.

E-mail Christopher Heredia at cheredia@sfchronicle.com.

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Bishops Want Immigration Raids to End

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Bishops Want Immigration Raids to End


Via The New York times

Roman Catholic bishops urged the Bush administration to halt workplace immigration raids, saying the “humanitarian cost” was “unacceptable in a civilized society.” Speaking on behalf of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, John C. Wester, the bishop of Salt Lake City said that the escalating number of worksite raids over the past year had spread fear in immigrant communities and had made it difficult for detained immigrants to obtain legal representation. Bishop Wester also called on the Department of Homeland Security to refrain from conducting raids in churches, health centers and schools.

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Immigration Raid At SoCal Bakery Nets 51 Arrests

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Immigration Raid At SoCal Bakery Nets 51 Arrests


Federal agents have raided a Palm Springs bakery, arresting 51 undocumented workers and the supervisor who allegedly hired them.

Margarita Avilez Hernandez was arrested Wednesday at Palm Springs Baking Company by Federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

She and a former supervisor, Alicia Ramirez, are charged with employing unauthorized aliens. Ramirez is still being sought.

Federal agents conducted the raid after local authorities told them workers at the wholesale bakery each paid about $3,000 for their jobs. ICE agents found most of the workers’ names and Social Security numbers did not match.

Twenty-seven of the workers have been detained. ICE officials say the others will be released on humanitarian grounds while they await an immigration hearing.

A message requesting comment from the bakery was not returned Wednesday afternoon.

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