Nearly 600 detained in Mississippi plant raid By HOLBROOK MOHR,
Associated Press Writer
2 hours, 1 minute ago
LAUREL, Miss. - The largest single-workplace immigration raid in U.S.
history has caused panic among Hispanic families in this small
southern Mississippi town, where federal agents rounded up nearly 600
plant workers suspected of being in the country illegally.
One worker caught in Monday's sweep at the Howard Industries
transformer plant said fellow workers applauded as immigrants were
taken into custody. Federal officials said a tip from a union member
prompted them to start investigating several years ago.
Fabiola Pena, 21, cradled her 2-year-old daughter as she described a
chaotic scene at the plant as the raid began, followed by clapping.
"I was crying the whole time. I didn't know what to do," Pena said.
"We didn't know what was happening because everyone started running.
Some people thought it was a bomb but then we figured out it was
immigration."
About 100 of the 595 detained workers were released for humanitarian
reasons, many of them mothers who were fitted with electronic
monitoring bracelets and allowed to go home to their children,
officials said.
About 475 other workers were transferred to a U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement facility in Jena, La. Nine who were under 18 were
transferred to the custody of the Office of Refugee Resettlement.
John Foxworth, an attorney representing some of the immigrants, said
eight appeared in federal court in Hattiesburg on Tuesday because they
face criminal charges for allegedly using false Social Security and
residency identification.
He said the raid was traumatic for families.
"There was no communication, an immediate loss of any kind of news and
a lack of understanding of what's happening to their loved ones," he
said. "A complete and utter feeling of helplessness."
The superintendent of the county school district said about half of
approximately 160 Hispanic students were absent Tuesday.
Roberto Velez, pastor at Iglesia Cristiana Peniel, where an estimated
30 to 40 percent of the 200 parishioners were caught up in the raid,
said parents were afraid immigration officials would take them.
"They didn't send their kids to school today," he said. "How scared is
that?"
Those detained were from Brazil, El Salvador, Germany, Guatemala,
Honduras, Mexico, Panama, and Peru, said Barbara Gonzalez, an ICE
spokeswoman.
Elizabeth Alegria, 26, a Mexican immigrant, was working at the plant
Monday when ICE agents stormed in. When they found out she has two
sons, ages 4 and 9, she was fitted with a bracelet and told to appear
in federal court next month. Her husband, Andres, was not so lucky.
"I'm very traumatized because I don't know if they are going to let my
husband go and when I will see him," Elizabeth Alegria said through a
translator Tuesday as she returned to the Howard Industries parking
lot to retrieve her sport utility vehicle.
"We have kids without dads and pregnant mothers who got their husbands
taken away," said Velez's son, Robert, youth pastor at the church. "It
was like a horror story. They got handled like they were criminals."
Howard Industries is in Mississippi's Pine Belt region, known for
commercial timber growth and chicken processing plants. The tech
company produces dozens of products ranging from electrical
transformers to medical supplies, according to its Web site.
Gonzalez said agents had executed search warrants at both the plant
and the company headquarters in nearby Ellisville. She said no company
executives had been detained, but this is an "ongoing investigation
and yesterday's action was just the first part."
A woman at the Ellisville headquarters told The Associated Press on
Tuesday that no one was available to answer questions.
In a statement to the Laurel Leader-Call newspaper, Howard Industries
said the company "runs every check allowed to ascertain the
immigration status of all applicants for its jobs."
"It is company policy that it hires only U.S. citizens and legal
immigrants," the statement said.
Gov. Haley Barbour recently signed a law requiring Mississippi
employers to use a U.S. Homeland Security system to check new workers'
immigration status.
The law took effect July 1 for businesses with state contracts and
takes effect Jan. 1 for other businesses. Mississippi lawmakers once
used laptops made by Howard Industries, but it's not clear whether the
company has current state contracts.
Under the law, a company found guilty of employing illegal immigrants
could lose public contracts for three years and the right to do
business in Mississippi for one year.
The law also makes it a felony for an illegal immigrant to accept a
job in Mississippi. A message was left with the district attorney's
office after hours seeking comment on whether he would use the law to
bring state charges against Howard Industries or the workers.
The Mississippi raid is one of several nationwide in recent years.
On May 12, federal immigration officials swept into Agriprocessors,
the nation's largest kosher meatpacking plant, in Iowa. Nearly 400
workers were detained and dozens of fraudulent permanent resident
alien cards were seized from the plant's human resources department,
according to court records. In December 2006, 1,297 were arrested at
Swift meatpacking plants in Nebraska and five other states.
___
Associated Press Writers Shelia Byrd in Hattiesburg, Emily Wagster
Pettus in Jackson and Eileen Sullivan in Washington, D.C., contributed
to this report.
Over dozen immigrants rescued from desert
Copyright © 2008 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Questions or Comments
Privacy Policy -Terms of Service - Copyright/IP Policy