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View Full Version : Illegal Alien Raids in 6 States May Be Largest Ever



Midnight Mike
2006-12-14, 01:43 AM
Raids in 6 States May Be Largest Ever

Dec 13, 12:34 PM (ET)

WASHINGTON (AP) - More than 1,200 people were arrested in meatpacking plants in six states during raids that federal officials said amounted to the largest-ever workplace crackdown on illegal immigration.

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said Wednesday the investigation uncovered a "disturbing front" in the war against illegal immigration, in which illegal immigrants are using the identities of U.S. citizens to obtain jobs.

"Violations of our immigration laws and privacy rights often go hand in hand," he said. "Enforcement actions like this one protect the privacy rights of innocent Americans while striking a blow against illegal immigration."

The raids at Swift & Co. plants across the country resulted in 1,282 arrests, including 1,217 on immigration charges and 65 on criminal charges such as identity theft. Chertoff said the investigation is continuing into several groups that may have sold identity documents to illegal immigrants.

The arrested workers were from Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Peru, Laos, Sudan, Ethiopia and other countries.

During a raid Tuesday at the Swift plant in Greeley, Colo., a frustrated Tony Garcia watched as Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents swarmed inside to arrest illegal immigrants. "We need help, we need answers," he said, questioning who would take care of the children whose parents were arrested.

The raids followed a 10-month investigation into illegal immigrants suspected of buying or stealing other people's identities to secure U.S. jobs. The scheme may have had hundreds victims, officials said.
Immigration officials last month informed Swift that it would remove unauthorized workers on Dec. 4, but Swift asked a federal judge to prevent agents from conducting the raid, arguing it would cause "substantial and irreparable injury" to its business.

The company estimated a raid would remove up to 40 percent of its 13,000 workers. Greeley-based Swift describes itself as the world's second-largest meat processor with sales of about $9 billion.

After a closed hearing, a judge on Thursday rejected Swift's request, clearing the way for Tuesday's raids at the plants in Greeley; Grand Island; Cactus, Texas; Hyrum, Utah; Marshalltown, Iowa; and Worthington, Minn.

The six plants represent all of Swift's domestic beef processing capacity and 77 percent of its pork processing capacity.

Advocates of stricter immigration control praised the raids and pointed out that they targeted people suspected of committing other crimes in addition to being in the U.S. illegally.

"I'm glad that ICE is enforcing our immigration laws in light of the illegal immigration crisis we face across the country," Sen. Wayne Allard, R-Colo., said in a statement.

Others called the raids heavy-handed and criticized the effect on families.

"They are taking mothers and fathers, and we're really concerned about the children," said the Rev. Clarence Sandoval of St. Thomas Aquinas Roman Catholic Church in Logan, Utah. "I'm getting calls from mothers saying they don't know where their husband was taken."

United Food and Commercial International Workers union spokeswoman Jill Cashen told the Post workers taken from the Worthington, Minn., plant were bused to South Dakota.
She said Tuesday that attorneys for the union would ask federal judges in all six states for injunctions to halt the raids.
Mexico's Foreign Relations Department also pledged to ensure that any Mexicans caught up in the raids have "their human rights fully respected, and are given all the necessary assistance, orientation and consular protection."

No charges were filed against Swift.
In a written statement, President and CEO Sam Rovit said the company has never knowingly hired illegal workers and does not condone the practice.

Swift uses a government pilot program to confirm whether Social Security numbers are valid. Company officials have raised questions about the program's ability to detect when two people are using the same number.
Immigration agents have also staged immigration raids at poultry plants in the South. In July 2005, nearly 120 people were arrested at an Arkadelphia, Ark., facility. Three months ago, agents raided a poultry plant in Stillmore, Ga., arresting a similar number who worked there or lived in surrounding counties and busing them to immigration courts in Atlanta, 189 miles away.
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moose135
2006-12-14, 10:30 AM
Immigration officials last month informed Swift that it would remove unauthorized workers on Dec. 4, but Swift asked a federal judge to prevent agents from conducting the raid, arguing it would cause "substantial and irreparable injury" to its business.

Right there is the problem - everyone blames the workers, who are looking to make a better life for themselves and their families (you know, that "American Dream" everyone talks about). If companies continue to hire illegals, it will never end. The only way to solve this is to make the companies pay so much they don't want to go on living. How about a $10K fine per day per worker, plus the corporate officers (President, CEO, CFO, etc.) facing criminal charges? I bet that would make them monitor their hiring practices a little closer.

Midnight Mike
2006-12-14, 12:42 PM
Immigration officials last month informed Swift that it would remove unauthorized workers on Dec. 4, but Swift asked a federal judge to prevent agents from conducting the raid, arguing it would cause "substantial and irreparable injury" to its business.

Right there is the problem - everyone blames the workers, who are looking to make a better life for themselves and their families (you know, that "American Dream" everyone talks about). If companies continue to hire illegals, it will never end. The only way to solve this is to make the companies pay so much they don't want to go on living. How about a $10K fine per day per worker, plus the corporate officers (President, CEO, CFO, etc.) facing criminal charges? I bet that would make them monitor their hiring practices a little closer.

The problem is on many fronts.

People are sneaking across the border
We are not stopping them from sneaking across the border
People are using illegal ID cards to work illegally in the United States
Employers are not doing enough to ensure that the people are legal to work in the United States (Lack of English speaking ability is the first sign)
Government does not have a good enough screening process to verify workers ability to work in the country
ACLU makes everybody's job with all of the roadblocks that they place in front of all groups.

So, there are no innocents:

People crossing the border are illegal, when they find work, that is illegal as well.

Employers are hiring illegals, because they are cheaper than hiring people that are legal to work in the country.

Unions are trying to sign illegals to the Union rank & file members to beef up the Unions, due to decreasing membership.

Illegal Aliens are taking jobs aways from the people that are legal to work in this country & are also lowering the salaries. These were illegal workers in the meat-packing industry, 25 years ago, the hourly wage was about $25 per hour, today, the average salary is about $22 per hour.....

These are no longer just people picking lettuce & cleaning hotel rooms, Illegal Aliens are now also being employed in the Construction Industry, Plumbers, electricians, etc .

PhilDernerJr
2006-12-14, 03:06 PM
The problem is that for us to compete in the world economy, we need cheap labor. How are we going to be a strong industrial nation when:

a. countries like China can produce the same goods 1/100th what we can

and

b. the average American is too lazy or unwilling to do jobs like mowing lawns and cleaning toilets.

If we stop them from coming in, then we'll have no one to fill many needed jobs. If we make them legla, then we are forced to pay them much more.

Once we solve those two problems, the NEED for illegal workers, then that makes legislators more willing to create fines for hiring them.