Los Angeles Times
By Molly Hennessy-Fiske
January 4, 2016
More than a hundred immigrants, mostly Central American families, were
detained in a handful of states through the weekend in a federal effort
to deport those who recently
entered the country and stayed illegally, according to officials and
advocates.
As
part of the operation, 121 people were taken into custody -- primarily
in Georgia, North Carolina and Texas -- and are being processed for
deportation, Homeland Security
Secretary Jeh Johnson said in a statement Monday.
Advocates
said immigrants were also detained in Maryland, New York and the
Midwest, but immigration officials said those may be unrelated or not
immigration-enforcement
actions. Areas targeted for the sweeps appear to be among those with
the highest number of immigrants who have been ordered deported,
advocates said.
“This
should come as no surprise,” Johnson said of the roundup. “I have said
publicly for months that individuals who constitute enforcement
priorities, including families
and unaccompanied children, will be removed.”
In
the past, federal officials have targeted adults in workplace raids.
But this time, authorities focused on families with children at home,
Johnson said. Specifically,
officials went after those caught crossing the southern border
illegally after May 2014 who had been issued final orders of removal, or
deportation, by an immigration court and have no outstanding appeals.
Johnson
said that extra precautions were taken, “given the sensitive nature of
taking into custody and removing families with children,” including
deploying female agents
and medical personnel.
Those
detained were taken to federal immigrant family detention centers,
including a large center about 70 miles south of San Antonio.
It was not clear when the sweep would end.
“At my direction, additional enforcement operations such as these will continue to occur as appropriate,” Johnson said.
Although
federal officials have showed up at some businesses – including strip
malls on Long Island, New York - advocates said mostly they have sought
immigrants at home.
Orders
of removal give Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and agents
authority to detain immigrants but not to enter their homes without
permission. ICE officers
and agents often arrive without warrants because immigration judges
issue final orders of removal, not warrants in most cases.
Immigrants have the right to deny ICE officials entry, and if they say no, the federal officials are expected to honor that.
The
raids have stirred fear among immigrants nationwide, who have been
contacting advocates for advice on what to do if ICE agents come
knocking.
This
weekend, Guatemalan and Salvadoran government officials began posting
warnings online for immigrants in the U.S. targeted in the sweeps
advising them not to open
their doors, to seek legal help and avoid signing documents.
"Do
not open the door to strangers who say they are looking for someone
else," the Guatemalan Foreign Ministry recommended in a statement posted
online in Spanish, "Immigration
agents have to show an order signed by a judge to enter your house. If
they don't have it, you are not required to open the door. You have
rights that have to be respected."
Bryan
Johnson, a New York-based immigration lawyer, was among those fielding
calls - about 140 Monday - from clients worried they might be rounded
up.
“To
be on the safe side, just don’t answer the door,” he tells them. “The
problem is if you open the door, then it’s he said, she said. But if you
never open the door,
there’s proof – they have to break it down.”
Many immigrants are unaware that they can turn officials away, he and other advocates said.
“ICE
is going into people’s homes really early and so families feel
intimidated and they open the door. They should not open the door unless
ICE shares a warrant with
a specific name for the person they are looking for,” said Cristina
Jimenez, managing director of the New York-based group United We Dream,
which created a hotline related to the raids.
They have received calls about those detained on Long Island and in Austin and Houston, Texas.
“Folks
should be asking for the immigration agents to show them this paper, to
pass it under the door,” Jimenez said of warrants. “We’ve also advised
people to remain
silent because you have the right,” Jimenez said. He suggested
immigrants keep phone numbers for attorneys, relatives and friends
handy.
Once
immigrants open the door, federal officials are free to question and
detain not only those they came for, but others who happen to be home,
Jimenez said.
“They
go after everybody. And some of these people are mixed-status families:
some are citizens, legal residents, some have status pending,” she
said.
Among
those ICE attempted to detain this weekend was a Central American
mother who was ordered deported but has an appeal pending, according to
Mohammad Abdollahi, a spokesman
for the San Antonio-based legal advocacy group that she has been
working with.
The
woman had been staying with her sister in New Jersey, and was out when
ICE agents showed up Saturday, Abdollahi said. Her sister refused to
open the door and the agents
left, he said.
Another
immigrant woman in San Antonio opened the door to ICE agents who were
looking for someone else this weekend, and ended up getting
fingerprinted even though she
is in the country legally, Abdollahi said.
“Any
time there is an authority figure, people do what they tell them to
do,” he said, “They’re going after anyone they can find.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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