CNN
By Gustavo Valdes
January 5, 2016
It was early Saturday morning when federal agents knocked on Rene Morales' door.
He
didn't open it. Instead, he hid with his sister, her three children and
two other friends inside a bedroom, ignoring the banging until the
agents left about an hour
later.
By
midmorning, Morales said, the agents caught up with him while he left
to run an errand, persuading him to allow them to search the house to
look for a fugitive Morales
said didn't live with him.
Morales
let them in. Soon, it became clear his sister Rosa and two of her
children were the real target of the immigration agents.
"They were coming for my family," Morales said.
Now,
days later, he's still trying to figure out the details of their fate.
He said he believes they were part of a series of raids nationwide
targeting immigrants who
were part of the wave of children and families who crossed into the
United States illegally in summer 2014.
Their
detention was soon reported by Atlanta newspaper Mundo Hispanico, which
documented eight cases in the area of women with children taken into
custody by Immigration
and Customs Enforcement agents and brought to a staging area at a local
mall.
A
spokesman said the agency doesn't comment on specific cases, but
acknowledged the arrest occurred at the time of the operation.
'This should come as no surprise'
The
raids had been rumored for days after a report in The Washington Post
revealed that immigration authorities were planning a nationwide sweep
this month.
Department
of Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson said Monday that 121 people
were taken into custody, mainly in Georgia, North Carolina and Texas.
"This should come as no surprise," Johnson said in a written statement.
"As
I have said repeatedly, our borders are not open to illegal migration;
if you come here illegally, we will send you back consistent with our
laws and values," he said.
The
focus of the operation, he said, were adults and their children who
were apprehended after May 1, 2014 after crossing the southern border
illegally, were issued orders
of removal by an immigration court and have exhausted "appropriate
legal remedies."
The new push to detain and deport undocumented immigrants drew swift criticism from activists.
Democrats rip report on deportation plan
"Raids
that terrorize communities, trample civil rights and separate families
are something we would expect from a President Trump. The very tactic --
with teams of ICE
officers showing up at someone's home, unannounced, using deception to
gain entry, waking up sleeping children and carting away both parents
and kids -- is repugnant," said Frank Sharry, executive director of
America's Voice. "When this happened during the
Bush presidency, then-candidate Obama denounced it. The fact that it is
happening now under a President Obama is outrageous."
The
American Civil Liberties Union issued a statement condemning the raids,
describing them as "a scare tactic to deter other families fleeing
violence in Central America
from coming to the United States."
Cecillia
Wang, director of the ACLU's immigrants' rights project, said the U.S.
immigration system was rigged against the families from the start.
"Many
of these mothers and children had no lawyers because they could not
afford them," she said. "Without counsel, traumatized refugees don't
understand what is happening
in court and cannot get their legitimate asylum claims heard."
'Don't open the door,' foreign ministries warn
As
word of the impending raids spread, diplomats from Guatemala and El
Salvador posted warnings on their websites over the weekend.
"Immigration
agents must show you an order signed by a judge to enter your house,"
El Salvador's foreign ministry said in a statement posted on its Twitter
account. "If
they don't have one, you don't have to open the door."
Guatemala's foreign ministry warned people not to be fooled.
"Don't open the door to strangers who say they're looking for someone else," the ministry's statement said.
Awaiting deportation
According
to U.S. Border Patrol figures, more than 100,000 people who were part
of so-called family units -- parents with children -- entered the United
States illegally
through the country's southwestern border since 2014.
Many
of them seek asylum in the United States. Out of more than 41,000
asylum requests fielded by the U.S. Department of Justice Executive
Office for Immigration review
in 2014, 8,775 were granted.
Rene
Morales said his sister Rosa and her children were captured by
immigration agents in Houston after they crossed illegally in July 2014.
Over the weekend, U.S. immigration authorities detained Rosa Morales, shown here at a recent celebration.
Three
days later they were released and headed to Atlanta, where they hired a
lawyer to help with their asylum claim. The family escaped Guatemala,
he said, after a kidnapping
attempt. In March 2015, a judge signed an order of removal.
Their lawyer has been trying to fight it.
But as of Tuesday afternoon, it seemed like for many of his family members, time in the United States was running out.
One
of Rosa's daughters, who gave birth to a child in the United States
shortly after her arrival, wasn't taken into custody by the agents over
the weekend.
But Rosa Morales and her other children were at a detention center in Texas on Tuesday, waiting to be deported.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment