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US: Nearly 400 immigrant workers arrested in slaughterhouse
raid
By Bill Van Auken
14 May 2008
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In one of the largest ever government dragnets against immigrant
workers, federal agents swooped down upon a meatpacking plant
in northeastern Iowa Monday, rounding up nearly 400 workers.
Heavily armed squads of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement
(ICE) agents, backed by state and local police, stormed Agriprocessors
Inc. in Postville, Iowa, the largest kosher slaughterhouse in
the world, while two government helicopters hovered overhead.
In all, 16 local, state and federal agencies were involved
in the raids, which had been prepared for months.
Most of those arrested were from either Mexico or Guatemala,
while some others were immigrants from Israel and Ukraine. The
bulk of them were charged with Social Security fraud for using
false numbersa supposedly criminal offense that results
in their forfeiting the contributions deducted from their paychecksor
with the civil offense of lacking proper immigration status.
After being interrogated and handcuffed at the plant, the workers
were taken away in Homeland Security buses with covered windows.
Over 300 male employees were taken to a makeshift detention camp
at the National Cattle Congress fairgrounds in nearby Waterloo,
Iowa, where armed guards were posted at the gates. Meanwhile,
76 women were crowded into the Hardin County Jail.
Violeta Aleman, a worker at the plant and a US citizen since
2003, told the Cedar Rapids Gazette that the armed agents
herded the workers into the cafeteria and ordered them to form
two lines, one for US citizens and one for legal residents,
while the undocumented immigrants were told to remain seated.
To be released, workers had to present proof of their legal
status, forcing Aleman to call her husband to come to the slaughterhouse
with her passport.
The Gazette reported: On her way out of the plant,
she said, she walked past a group of detainees, many of whom she
knew. Some asked her to make a phone call for them, others asked
her to take their belongings and cell phones home with her. They
were looking at me, she said, her voice breaking, There
was nothing I could do.
Because of the large number of detained immigrants involved,
judges and court personnel are being brought in to conduct summary
legal proceedings in the fairgrounds. The local press reported
that the first of these hearings took place Tuesday, with ten
workers, shackled at the waist and ankles, herded single file
into a ballroom to face a judge.
The raid was the biggest ever conducted in Iowa and may be
the largest single-facility arrest ever carried out by US immigration
authorities. It was launched in the midst of a nationwide crackdown
on immigrant workers that has created a reign of terror in many
towns and cities across the country.
On Tuesday the plant reopened, despite having had fully one
third of its work force hauled away in shackles. It was unclear,
however, whether the large numbers of ICE agents assembled in
Iowa would strike again. The search warrants released by federal
officials provided for the arrest of 697 individuals.
Federal authorities announced that 56 of those detained Monday
were subsequently granted supervised release, most of them to
make arrangements for the care of their children, who in many
cases are US citizens. One of the most brutal effects of these
raids is to divide families, some of which have resided in the
US for many years.
ICE was clearly attempting to avoid the criticism that has
been generated by similar workplace raids after children have
been left abandoned in local schools or their homes when their
parents were jailed.
Rumors flew through immigrant communities in the surrounding
area that the immigration enforcers were preparing to raid other
plants or even pull people from their homes. ICE issued statements
denying that it intends to conduct any random arrests,
but made no comment on whether further workplace raids were planned.
Nonetheless, hundreds of immigrants turned up at local churches,
including St. Bridgets Catholic Church, just five blocks
from the Postville slaughterhouse, seeking aid and advice. Many
filled out legal forms granting power of attorney to assure that
their children would be cared for in the event that they too are
detained.
The people right now are hearing and seeing the helicopters,
Sister Mary McCauley, a Roman Catholic nun at St. Bridgets,
told the Associated Press. They are just panic-stricken
and very frightened and some of them are coming to the church
as a safe haven. Family members of the arrested slaughterhouse
workers had come to the church in tears, she added.
At Queen of Peace Catholic Church in Waterloo, some 500 immigrants
gathered on Monday night to seek advice from lawyers on what to
do if arrested.
Local stores were empty as immigrants stayed away. There were
reports that many families were staying in their homes and keeping
their children out of school for fear of being picked up.
Iowas Democratic Governor Chet Culver issued a statement
supporting the raid. I believe it is important that we crack
down on illegal immigration, he said. Illegal means
illegal.
While Culver minimized the role played by the state in the
operation, Iowa state troopers were used to secure the plant,
while their squad cars were usedone in front and one in
back of each Homeland Security busto escort the immigrant
workers to detention facilities.
Suspicion that the state may have played a larger role in helping
prepare the raid was raised by a report from the local school
district that it had received a state subpoena issued last month
seeking the records of Postville middle and high school students,
and in particular the names of children who had worked part-time
at two local apartment buildings owned by the Agriprocessors CEO,
Sholom Rubashkin.
Postvilles Mayor Robert Penrod was less supportive of
the ICE action, warning that if Agriprocessorsthe largest
employer in Iowas Allamakee Countyshut down, the city
would turn into a ghost town.
Theres people who hate the Hispanics, and theres
people who dont like the Jews and would like to run them
out of town, he said, but he added that the majority of
the towns residents understood the plants importance
for the local economy.
Hundreds of people turned out Monday night at the gates of
the Cattle Congress, where the bulk of the immigrant workers are
detained. We are with you, and We are all equal,
they chanted. Some waved signs reading Honk for human rights.
Barely half a dozen anti-immigrant protesters squared off with
the large crowd, shouting, Send them back. The crowd
answered, We have a right to be here too.
One of those joining the protest was Beth Berger, 23, of Waterloo.
She told the Cedar Rapids Gazette that her boyfriend, Carlos,
had stayed away from work for fear of being arrested. The two
are expecting a baby in four months.
I probably cant do much, but I am here to support
them, she told the newspaper. They act like theyre
animals. Theyre not animals. Theyre just like everybody
else.
The United Food and Commercial Workers, which had been attempting
to unionize workers at the plant, revealed Monday that it had
advised US immigration authorities that there was an ongoing labor
dispute at the plant and a pending investigation into workplace
abuses that would be disrupted by any immigration raid.
The meatpacking plant was reportedly paying some of its employees
sub-minimum wages and employing under-age workers off the books.
With these labor disputes in progress, we urge you to
suspend any potentially existing enforcement efforts and refuse
to be involved in this labor dispute in accordance with the internal
guidance, Questioning Persons During Labor Disputes,
UFCW Vice President Mark Lauritsen wrote ICE on May 2. US and
Iowa Labor Department officials confirmed that there were ongoing
investigations into exploitive practices at the slaughterhouse.
Clearly, the unions warning did nothing to dissuade ICE
from conducting the raid, and may have even accelerated it. Rubashkin,
Agriprocessors CEO, is a major contributor to the Republican
Party. Citing Federal Election Commission records, the DesMoines
Register reported that Rubashkin has made $23,750 in federal
campaign contributions to Republican candidates and committees
since 2000.
While ICE has dramatically increased its workplace raids since
the agency was folded into the new Department of Homeland Security
in 2003, few employers have been charged with any offense for
hiring undocumented workers.
In December 2006, nearly 1,300 workers were rounded up at six
Swift & Co. meatpacking plants, for example, but no Swift
executive was ever prosecuted.
In fiscal 2007, while 4,900 undocumented workers were arrested,
just 92 company owners or corporate officials were charged. The
number of workers detained has increased 45-fold since 2001. The
number of employers prosecuted has fallen dramatically, however,
from 182 in 1999 to less than half that number last year.
The net impact of the immigration crackdown is to terrorize
a substantial section of the US workforce, creating more favorable
conditions for their unfettered exploitation and thereby furthering
the profit interests of the US ruling elite.
The detentions in Iowa follow a wave of raids across the country.
On May 2, ICE agents descended on 11 El Balazo restaurants
in Californias Bay Area, arresting 63 undocumented workers.
The raids came just a day after thousands of immigrant advocates
had marched in the city demanding an end to such punitive measures.
The previous week, ICE agents had turned up at elementary schools
in Oakland, California, a provocative action that sparked heated
protests.
In other raids over the past month, ICE detained:
* Over 100 workers at Pilgrims Pride poultry plants
in Texas, Arkansas, Florida, Tennessee and West Virginia.
* 24 construction workers employed at a project in the Little
Rock, Arkansas airport.
* 28 landscaping workers in El Paso, Texas.
* 55 Mexican restaurant workers and the restaurants
owners in New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia.
Meanwhile, 114 employees of a Los Angeles high-tech company
filed a lawsuit against ICE on April 25 charging that they were
illegally detained and harassed by immigration agents during a
raid last February.
ICE raided the plant of Micro Solutions Enterprises, which
produces remanufactured imaging supplies, arresting 138 employees,
virtually all of whom were subsequently released and are presently
fighting deportation orders.
Those suing ICE and the Department of Homeland Security are
US citizens and legal residents, who charge that their constitutional
rights were violated by being subjected to a group detention
during the factory raid.
During the raid, Micro Solutions was sealed off and effectively
locked down by armed ICE agents, said Peter Schey, the attorney
representing the workers. These armed government agents
issued orders directing everyone in the building where to go,
where to stand, and where to line up. Those detained were not
permitted to use their cell phones. This mass detention of US
citizens and lawful residents took place without a warrant or
probable cause to believe every worker had violated the law and
was therefore subject to temporary detention.
In carrying out its punitive policy against undocumented immigrants,
the US government is introducing into the American workplace the
type of measures that are generally associated with a police-military
dictatorship.
See also:
Tens of thousands march against immigration
raids in the US
[3 May 2008]
US immigration agents
arrest 1,282 in raids at six meatpacking plants
[14 December 2006]
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