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Rights and Liberties

Children Paying a Heavy Price for ICE's Showy Immigration Raids

By Kay Steiger, In These Times. Posted June 24, 2008.


The children of those arrested in flashy-but-ineffectual ICE raids -- many of whom are U.S. citizens -- suffer dire consequences.
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At 10 a.m. on May 12, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents descended on a meat processing plant in Postville, Iowa, about 200 miles northwest of Des Moines. ICE agents arrested 389 workers who it determined were undocumented -- 304 of whom were indicted on various charges, mostly related to their immigrant status. The list of arrested did not include the owners or managers at the meat processing plant.

After Congress failed to pass comprehensive immigration reform in 2006, ICE adopted what is referred to as an "enforcement-only" approach to immigration. The incident in Postville is one example.

ICE arrests have increased 45-fold since 2001, according to the National Council of La Raza, a Washington D.C.-based nonprofit. In 2007, nearly 5,000 workplace immigration arrests occurred nationwide.

The children of those arrested -- many of whom are U.S. citizens -- suffer consequences. The raid in Iowa "created panic in the school," said Janet Murgu'a, president of the National Council of La Raza, during a May 20 hearing before the House subcommittee on workforce protections. She said it forced St. Bridget's Catholic Church in Postville to mobilize and feed 450 migrants the first night of the raid, and to shelter 150 children who spent the night on mats and in pews.

The number of children with undocumented parents is unknown, but a March 2005 report by the Pew Hispanic Center found that 4.9 million children are in families with at least one undocumented parent. Of those, 3.1 million -- or 63 percent -- are U.S. citizens.

Last November, ICE adopted humanitarian guidelines after Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.) and others pushed for their implementation. The discretionary guidelines require agents to investigate whether humanitarian concerns exist among those arrested -- including "those with serious medical conditions ... pregnant women, nursing mothers, parents who are the sole caretakers of minor children or disabled or seriously ill relatives, and parents who are needed to support their spouses in caring for sick or special needs children or relatives."

Agents are also asked to coordinate with other institutions, such as foster care systems and the Department of Heath and Human Services.

"What we'd like to see is those regulations enforced on a consistent basis -- strictly enforced and not applied in a discretionary way," Murgu'a testified.

Kathryn Gibney is principal of an overwhelmingly (96 percent) Latino elementary school in San Pedro, Calif., a community that experienced a raid in March 2007. She told lawmakers that members of her community have witnessed white ICE vans stationed near school grounds in Oakland and Berkeley to ensnare parents.

Gibney said the effect on her school has been "ongoing relentless terror."

"The impact of these raids has been devastating," she said. "Absentee rates have soared. Test scores have dropped. Students who do make it to school remain distracted, as they worry about whether their families will be at home when they return."

The San Pedro raid last year occurred in the predawn hours before a state-mandated exam. About 40 students were absent that day -- seven times greater than the school's normal absence rate.

According to Gibney, in San Rafael, Calif., on May 8, ICE agents stopped a second-grade girl who was on her way to school with her father. The agents couldn't communicate with the father in his native language, so the girl served as translator. The agents eventually arrested her father.

ICE insists it acts humanely when rounding up illegal aliens. Acting Deputy Assistant Director of ICE James Sperro told Congress that agents involved in the Postville incident questioned detainees "no less than three times about humanitarian issues, such as child custody concerns." He said agents eventually released 62 of those arrested, but added that those released are still likely to be charged.

As Gibney told the committee: "There must be a way to execute a federal mandate in a more humane manner."

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See more stories tagged with: immigration, detentions, ice, enforcement

Kay Steiger is an Associate Editor at Campus Progress.

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So much for "American" family values
Posted by: Mexitli on Jun 24, 2008 11:21 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
this country has reached the point where no one is ashamed of this.

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McMorty
Posted by: mcmorty on Jun 25, 2008 9:23 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Aren't these parents endangering their children by bringing them to the United States. I think that the department of human services or child welfare agency should be called and investigations be done to determine if these adults are fit to be parents. I cannot imagine subjecting my child to being left alone due to my reckless actions.

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» RE: McMorty Posted by: Mexitli
Enforcement on Steroids Without Reform
Posted by: AndiMedi on Jun 25, 2008 11:20 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This and a front page USA Today story June 25 (about U.S. citizens suing after being arrested/detained by ICE) show the overreach of our current government on immigration. It is almost as if Sec. Chertoff is saying, okay cowboys, have at it. Around the web, the level of vitriol against anyone with moderate or progressive views on immigration is astounding. I hope folks who represent the mainstream will get more involved. By that I mean people who reject the idea that we are going to deport or otherwise drive out 12 million undocumented immigrants; who feel we should have a legal immigration system that works; and feel we will enhance our security and the economic prospects of all people if we reduce the size of the undocumented population by getting them in the system, weeding out criminals, and making sure everyone has the same rights and are playing by the same set of rules.

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For the truly progressive
Posted by: L.A.Lynn on Jun 25, 2008 4:09 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree that everyone should play by the same set of rules. And obviously the immigration laws need to be overhauled. I think I am liberal, and progressive. I have an open mind on this issue.

But what I don't understand is why the immigrants that come here without documentation, don't have to play by any rules at all.

Why is it that many people don't understand that overpopulating an area, which is not prepared for the deluge is damaging to the environment, the economy, and everyone's well being -- including the immigrants themselves. I mean where do you live, that you don't understand this? If you live within 500 miles of the southern border you must have experienced the problems, unless you have no children in public schools, don't have to rent an apartment, don't use emergency rooms, seldom drive on freeways, and definitely are not competing for a job in a medium to minimum wage arena. Why care about people who have to struggle with these problems, when it feels so good to figuratively open your arms, and then mind your own business as the poor compete with the poor. Why don't you get in touch with the social services in Postville, and volunteer to take a couple kids in to your home. Form a group to help the children of the undocumented. That would be progressive.

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beg to differ
Posted by: luzmejor on Jun 25, 2008 5:21 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was a legal immigrant and faced discrimination. Even some people who knew me and considered me a friend complained that I was "taking an American's job."

It didn't change their minds that there has always been an acute shortage of well-trained nurses in the USA.

We've got to face the facts here. A great many people born here believe that they should have pecking rights over anyone who comes here from another state or nation. They are acutely disappointed that they cannot at least verbally abuse tourists with an accent. However, many otherwise fine upstanding citizens manage to cheat or insult visitors, so they feel more satisfied by that exchange.

Fortunately these types of malcontents are rare, but we all know they are there by their overt complaints.

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» RE: beg to differ Posted by: L.A.Lynn
Legal vs Illegal
Posted by: lavonneann on Jun 26, 2008 5:24 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have a son-in-law who is legal immigrant. Took he and my daughter many years and thousands of dollars to get him to this country doing things the right way ie the way the laws of this land perscribe.
I simply can not understand why those who choose to take the easier quicker way and jump a fence should be rewarded for doing so.

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There is No Legal Way for them to Come Here
Posted by: paintchips on Jun 27, 2008 2:06 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
People don't choose to be illegal. They're faced with a choice, watch their kids starve to death or risk their life crossing a desert in hopes of cleaning our toilets or serving us fast food so they can feed their kids.

They would gladly skip the desert strewn with rapists and thieves preying on them where many of them die every year if they had a legal way of coming here.

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the children .. the children..
Posted by: cyr3n on Jun 27, 2008 7:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If all the potheads were rounded up and thrown in jail.. would anyone give a crap about their children?

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