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View Full Version : Sad Article from Seattle Times - I really hate this stuff.


angela256z
07-03-2007, 07:50 PM
(The city that this article is about is located near our ariport. The vast majority of people that live in this area are Latino os some decent. My husband and I live just five miles East of this city. It is so scary to see this happen so close to home. It makes me so angry.)

Raids target immigrants ordered to leave U.S.
By Lornet Turnbull

The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency has 61 fugitive-operations teams across the country, including one in Seattle, that make targeted raids at private homes, seeking immigrants who are fugitives. In the process they may arrest illegal immigrants who happen to be in the home at the time.

The targets: More than 600,000 immigrants are on a nationwide list of fugitives, including about 9,000 believed to be in Washington, Oregon and Alaska.

Seattle's team: Since it was formed in 2004, it has arrested nearly 1,800 fugitives, nearly a quarter of them people who've been accused or convicted of a crime after arriving in the U.S. In an operation last week, the team arrested seven fugitives, five with convictions for offenses ranging from driving without a valid license to burglary and assault.

All 61 teams: Combined, the teams have arrested nearly 13,000 people, about 1,800 of them accused or convicted of crimes.

Source: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
As federal immigration authorities step up raids at work sites and homes, a Times reporter and photographer accompanied a Seattle-based team whose mission is to find and arrest immigrants who've been given final orders to leave the country.

IT WAS DAYBREAK — not quite 5:30 a.m. — and a sprawling apartment complex in Burien, popular among immigrants, was stirring to life.

From open doorways, men in work boots, some with caps pulled low on their heads, made their way to parked cars — a few glancing nervously at a small knot of immigration officers nearby.

At an hour when a few residents were leaving for work but most were still asleep, a team of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers had come in search of a single target: a mother of four who, after violating a no-contact order nearly a decade ago, was ordered removed from the country.

Ana Reyes-Velasquez, a hotel maid, would later say she had lived in fear of this day.

It came last week on the morning of her 41st birthday — a day she'd planned to spend watching her 13-year-old daughter graduate from Seahurst Elementary School in Burien.

But the ICE officers gathered outside her apartment that morning had other plans.

While bigger work-site raids grab large numbers of illegal immigrants and splashy headlines, raids at private homes go largely unnoticed.

They happen almost daily, part of an aggressive nationwide effort to find and deport more than 600,000 immigrants for whom a judge has issued a final order of removal.

Reyes-Velasquez was the Seattle team's second target that day.

Outside her second-story apartment, officers knocked, identifying themselves as "police" and rousing her 20-year-old son, Carlos Quiroz, who'd been sleeping on a mattress on the other side of the door.

Because he thought they were local police and not immigration officers, he said, he opened the door, and for his mother, "the life that I have came to a stop."



In the living room, officers gathered the six adults and four children from throughout the apartment to sort out their immigration status.

Reyes-Velasquez' 13-year-old daughter was distraught: "You're taking our mother away!" she cried.

Neil Clark, Seattle-based field director for detention and removal operations, explained to the child, who was born in the United States, that she could go to Mexico with her mother if Reyes-Velasquez is deported.

But the child was inconsolable: "I don't want to go to Mexico. I want my mom here."

The girl and her 4-year-old sister stayed with two adults in the home who are U.S. citizens.

Reyes-Velasquez was arrested. From an open window, her daughters watched as she was led in handcuffs to a waiting SUV.

Her son, boyfriend and brother-in-law, all illegal immigrants who were in the home at the time, were also taken into custody — "collaterals," as the officers sometimes call them.

They were taken first to the Department of Homeland Security district office in Tukwila, where they were fingerprinted and photographed — their criminal and immigration backgrounds checked.

In the process, Reyes-Velasquez mentioned to an officer that it was her birthday. The officer did a double-take, checked her paperwork and returned a look of sympathetic resignation.

By day's end, the fugitive team had located two of its three targets on that day's list, and arrested and detained a total of seven illegal immigrants — all from Mexico.

The team's final target of that day — a 38-year-old man who had been in the country since 1989 — was on a flight back to the Mexican border by last Friday.

Reyes-Velasquez and the others remained in detention.

"All this time I worried," she said. "Last week someone told me Immigration was at another apartment building, and I thought they'd come for me."

Now she fears what lies ahead. Deportation worries her the most.

"In Mexico I'll have nothing," she said. "My parents are too old. They are sick. I send money to support them."

Who's targeted, and why

Seattle's fugitive-operations team, launched in April 2004, is one of 61 across the country. One was started in Portland last fall, and one will be in place in Yakima by September.

Their list includes some 9,000 fugitives scattered across Washington, Oregon and Alaska.

Some of these immigrants come to the attention of authorities when their illegal immigration status is discovered, either in a workplace raid or some other encounter. Others break the law.

They become fugitives after failing to show up at an immigration hearing, or going on the lam after a judge orders them removed.

In a weeklong operation that ended last Friday, the ICE team had arrested seven of its targets, along with 19 others who got caught along with them. Among the 26, six had criminal convictions.

"Everything's targeted" to those on the list, director Clark said, though if officers do get inside a home and find illegal immigrants not on their list, "we might get incidental arrests."

The fugitive teams use a range of resources to find fugitives — driver's-license databases, credit-card purchases, property records.

Before a raid, they may also do surveillance to gauge a fugitive's daily routine. For example, before they arrested Reyes-Velasquez last week, officers had spotted her one day taking her younger daughter to day care.

The raids begin before sunrise, increasing the likelihood that the team will get to a target before he or she leaves for work.

In last Tuesday's operation, the first of three targets was an illegal immigrant from Mexico with a 1993 assault conviction, whom the team discovered living in a small, white house on Beacon Hill.

The neighborhood was still cloaked in darkness as officers spread out around the home, where a pickup and dump truck were parked in the driveway.

A Chihuahua tied up in the back yard was barking as the officers knocked for about 10 minutes, without a response.

The team's supervisor said that happens about 10 percent of the time. "It's hit or miss," he said.

They can wait it out, but decided in this case to move on.

Because the team's operations are administrative in nature, not criminal, they may enter only with an immigrant's permission.

If they do get inside — and they usually do — officers search the home for other illegal immigrants. They collect and check all driver's licenses.

Clark said that before officials arrest a parent, they make sure minor children are under adult care, as they did in the case of Reyes-Velasquez.

When she first came to Washington 17 years ago, Reyes-Velasquez lived in Yakima and worked as a cherry picker, she said. Court records show that in 1997 she violated a no-contact order and in 2000 was convicted of fourth-degree assault in a domestic dispute, a gross misdemeanor.

It was the 1997 violation that brought her to the attention of immigration authorities. In 2003 an immigration judge told her to leave the country, but in doing so opened a window that allowed her to appeal. She did, but lost — both at the Board of Immigration Appeals and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which in October allowed the original deportation ruling to stand.

She never left. She kept hoping, she said, that changes to immigration law might create a legal path for her and her two oldest children. "I've waited for 17 years. It was my last hope."

Dignity but no apologies

In the last of the day's three raids, three more people were arrested. Angel Hernandez, 38, was the team's target. His brother and sister became collateral arrests.

Hernandez said he was employed in the fishing industry in Alaska when he was picked up in a 1994 work-site raid.

He was released on bond with an order to report at a future date before an immigration judge in Seattle, and said he moved here with the intention of doing so. But he never received further notice, he said, and in his absence a judge ordered him removed.

On Friday, he was deported.

Steve Miller, a Seattle immigration attorney, calls such immigrants unintentional fugitives and said it's conceivable that many on the government's list are in that category.

"Some of them are fugitives because the court didn't get them the notice of a hearing, or they perhaps didn't notify the court of their change of address," he said.

Clark said immigrants are instructed on how to get correct mailing addresses to the court to be notified about hearings, and ultimately are responsible for following through.

"In 13 years, he had plenty of opportunities to come forward," Clark said.

In that time, Hernandez' appearance had changed so drastically that when he first opened the door to his Burien apartment that morning last week, officers weren't sure if he was their man. His head had been shaved nearly clean.

He denied them access, to protect his siblings, he later said. But according to officers, the sister, Maria Hernandez, did let them in. And that's when they arrested her and the other brother, who remain in detention.

Maria Hernandez has held a variety of jobs since moving to the Seattle area a few years ago but said she was injured on the job and her brothers have been supporting her.

"I cook for them, I clean for them," the 43-year-old said. "We take care of each other.

"Now, I'm a little scared. I don't know what will happen next."

Clark said he and members of his fugitive team understand there's a human side to the jobs they do.

"It's why we try to treat people with respect and dignity," he said.

He acknowledged that the arrest of Reyes-Velasquez could have been better timed to avoid taking her on her birthday. But, he said, "That happens. The officers probably didn't realize that until she brought it up.

"Our role is to enforce the court's orders and that's what we're doing. And we don't apologize for it."

Chula
07-03-2007, 08:03 PM
Sad but I feel we will be seeing more of this. Thanks for the post and you be careful if you can ok!

meesh
07-03-2007, 08:05 PM
What a nightmare...It's happening here too, in Portland. I really feel for these families, especially the children:( I feel so angry when I hear stories like that. I don't know what I would do if ICE came knocking at our door. If they asked me for my documents, I'd be tempted to spit in their face and slam the door. Normally, I'm a nice person:shy: It might be more reasonable to show them my US passport, I guess....

egonzalez1975
07-03-2007, 08:07 PM
Hey, I have an idea for these "immigration officers". Why don't they go and round up all of these crackheads on welfare, thugs and gang members, true terrorists, and thieving politicians and deport them somewhere. Heaven forbid that someone actually has the nerve to say who is really causing the problem in the United States. They are sucking the blood of America's society way harder than illegal immigrants who violated an order of protection 10 YEARS AGO!!!!!!!!!!!!

Hell, my ex is 64,500 in arrears on child support. Maybe they can go and locate his behind. He's somewhere in Portland, Oregon right now. But, they just can't seem to find him!!!!

IT NEVER CEASES TO AMAZE ME!!!!!

angela256z
07-03-2007, 08:09 PM
I don't think I could be nice to them either if they came knocking on my door. That is one reason my husband is not on my lease. I know that helps with the petition, but I am not going to chance it. We are moving soon to North Seattle, but it is a shame that the little daughter had to see that and there is a four year old too. I know of some families that have lost their kids and can't find them anymore because ICE took their parents and they were in day care or something and Child protective services took the children and could not get a hold of the parents after they were deported.

cherrycandy001
07-03-2007, 08:37 PM
Wow Stories like this really ache my heart...
the hell those families must be going trough
-Candy

sam1010
07-03-2007, 09:02 PM
ICE came knocking on my door 5:00 in the morning five years ago. My brother in law answered the door. They arrested him on the spot. Luckily he had his green card on him. Then they banged on my bedroom door and arrested my husband. I was five months pregnant at the time with my daughter. My son was three. He was asleep thank God, so he didn't see them take his daddy away. But the ICE officer was a real ***hole!! He didn't want to let my husband hug his son. I will be glad when this is all over. Good luck to you all. I agree with egonzales, they should focus on all the crackheads and deadbeat dads in the US rather than illegal aliens. They would have their plate full then.:bleh:

angela256z
07-03-2007, 09:19 PM
What they did not mention in this article is that the two US citizens that have the two children have no legal rights to the children. CPS may come and take these children out of their custody because they are not family of the two girls (bloodline family at least). I tried to find where I read this part of the story, but I can't I think it was in the spanish newspaper.

mamacita
07-03-2007, 09:24 PM
I totally agree, they are concentrating their efforts on the wrong set of people, to gather up all of the crackheads, illegal criminals that is a much different story than people merely trying to make a decent honest living, for what to be separated from their children and have them watch their parents be physically removed in handcuffs to a waiting bus to not see them if ever again. Most of these little kids are USA born and have rights.

The USA is not what it used to be, it is embarassing to say the least that we have lost family values and also that we are letting true criminals, thieves, murder's and drug heads have more rights than people merely here without papers try to feed themselves because of the plight in their countries!

This is a disgrace to say the least!
:shy:cry:dunno:whoa:curse:

Mamacita

cindy101
07-06-2007, 04:31 PM
They had a few large raids where I live this past Fall, same thing. I just can't imagine, to have such an awful job. How would it feel to know that you are responsible for destroying lives and families. They couldn't offer me enough money to something like that for a living.

LaGringaMasBella
07-08-2007, 09:24 AM
Oh Gawwwd y'all. That just makes me wanna cry and some of you guys have had la migra knocking on your door. I would *&^%$# freak!

I can't ... no, I don't want to imagine what I would do.

It's horrible that families live in fear every day. If that's not a cruel reminder that tomorrow is not promised then I don't know what is. I'm cuddling up real close to my hubby tonight.

aprilstorm
07-08-2007, 03:50 PM
I say lets all go and apply to be an immigration officer. That way we can warn people that are not criminals!!!:thumbup:

These people have no heart...they care about nothing.

I total agree with Ellie...go get the real problem people!!!!!