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http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSN2348853520080724

Immigration raids Ohio restaurants, arrests 58

Wed Jul 23, 2008 10:16pm

CINCINNATI (Reuters) - U.S. immigration agents raided eight Mexican restaurants in northern Ohio on Wednesday and arrested 58 employees as part of a criminal operation against illegal immigrants, federal authorities said.

All those arrested were citizens of Mexico and working at Casa Fiesta, a chain of Mexican restaurants in Ashland, Fremont, Norwalk, Oberlin, Oregon, Sandusky, Vermillion and Youngstown, Ohio, Immigration and Customs Enforcement said in a statement.

It said the raid was the culmination of more than a yearlong investigation.

Of the 58 arrested, 54 were men. Three of the four women were released on their own recognizance on humanitarian grounds, ICE said. They are still required to appear before a federal immigration judge who will determine whether they have a legal right to remain in the United States.

The raid was the latest targeting businesses employing illegal workers.

In May, ICE arrested more than 300 workers at Agriprocessors Inc, a kosher meat plant in Postville, Iowa. In August 2007, hundreds of workers at a Koch Foods chicken plant near Cincinnati were detained in raids, while hundreds more were detained in December 2006 after a raid at Swift & Co meat plants in six states.

ICE said it had made 949 criminal arrests in worksite-related raids since October 2007, including the arrests of 105 owners, managers, supervisors or human resources employees who face charges ranging from harboring to knowingly hiring illegal aliens.

Immigration, specifically what do about 12 million illegal immigrants living in the United States, is a divisive national issue.


God Bless America and everyone else!
 
Posts: 5670 | Registered: 02-07-2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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http://www.alternet.org/immigration/93194/the_postville...mous_abuse_of_power/

The Postville ICE Raid: An Enormous Abuse of Power

By David Neiwert , Orcinus. Posted July 30, 2008.

It's worth remembering that incipient police states target the most vulnerable members of society.It seems there was good reason to be concerned about the unusual handling of the cases of illegal immigrants caught up in last month's massive raids at Postville, Iowa -- where, as we noted at the time, immigrants not only were treated like cattle, the prosecutors engaged in questionable tactics as they processed these cases: deploying the unusual tactic of threatening the immigrants with felony identity-theft charges and sending them to prison when they either plead guilty or were quickly found guilty. Last week there was a New York Times editorial directing us to an essay by Erik Camayd-Freixas, a Spanish-language court interpreter who was called in to help process detainees in the raid. It makes the devastating case that the Department of Homeland Security, in collusion with the Justice Department, is (in the words of one observer we heard from about this case) "basically gaming the Federal judiciary using existing law, rules and regulations to force the judiciary to act as a coerced agent of the executive to imprison undocumented workers, after which they are deported with a prison record." As Camayd-Freixas makes clear, these workers were charged improperly with a crime of which they were innocent as the means of forcing them to plead guilty to a lesser charge, for which they then accepted five-month prison sentence. As the NYT editorial says:

Under the old way of doing things, the workers, nearly all Guatemalans, would have been simply and swiftly deported. But in a twist of ****ensian cruelty, more than 260 were charged as serious criminals for using false Social Security numbers or residency papers, and most were sentenced to five months in prison.
What is worse, Dr. Camayd-Freixas wrote, is that the system was clearly rigged for the wholesale imposition of mass guilt. He said the court-appointed lawyers had little time in the raids' hectic aftermath to meet with the workers, many of whom ended up waiving their rights and seemed not to understand the complicated charges against them.
You really need to read the entire piece by Camayd-Freixas. This passage in particular stood out:

It is no secret that the Postville ICE raid was a pilot operation, to be replicated elsewhere, with kinks ironed out after lessons learned. Next time, "fast-tracking" will be even more relentless. Never before has illegal immigration been criminalized in this fashion. It is no longer enough to deport them: we first have to put them in chains.

At first sight it may seem absurd to take productive workers and keep them in jail at taxpayers' expense. But the economics and politics of the matter are quite different from such rational assumptions. A quick look at the ICE Fiscal Year 2007 Annual Report (www.ice.gov) shows an agency that has grown to 16,500 employees and a $5 billion annual budget, since it was formed under Homeland Security in March 2003, "as a law enforcement agency for the post-9/11 era, to integrate enforcement authorities against criminal and terrorist activities, including the fights against human trafficking and smuggling, violent transnational gangs and sexual predators who prey on children". No doubt, ICE fulfills an extremely important and noble duty. The question is why tarnish its stellar reputation by targeting harmless illegal workers. The answer is economics and politics. After 9/11 we had to create a massive force with readiness "to prevent, prepare for and respond to a wide range of catastrophic incidents, including terrorist attacks, natural disasters, pandemics and other such significant events that require large-scale government and law enforcement response" . The problem is that disasters, criminality, and terrorism do not provide enough daily business to maintain the readiness and muscle tone of this expensive force. For example, "In FY07, ICE human trafficking investigations resulted in 164 arrests and 91 convictions". Terrorism related arrests were not any more substantial. The real numbers are in immigration: "In FY07, ICE removed 276,912 illegal aliens". ICE is under enormous pressure to turn out statistical figures that might justify a fair utilization of its capabilities, resources, and ballooning budget. For example, the Report boasts 102,777 cases "eliminated" from the fugitive alien population in FY07, "quadrupling" the previous year's number, only to admit a page later that 73,284 were "resolved" by simply "taking those cases off the books" after determining that they "no longer met the definition of an ICE fugitive".

De facto, the rationale is: we have the excess capability; we are already paying for it; ergo, use it we must. And using it we are: since FY06 "ICE has introduced an aggressive and effective campaign to enforce immigration law within the nation's interior, with a top-level focus on criminal aliens, fugitive aliens and those who pose a threat to the safety of the American public and the stability of American communities".

Camayd-Freixas, as it turns out, is also an exceptionally thorough and gifted analyst. As he goes on to explain, raids such as the one at Postville reflect a massive ICE bureaucracy built up through years of Bush-administration post-9/11 fearmongering and nativist yammering that resulted in massive overfunding of the department. Now it's at the point where it's a cocked pistol looking for action:
When the executive responded to post-9/11 criticism by integrating law enforcement operations and security intelligence, ICE was created as "the largest investigative arm of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)" with "broad law enforcement powers and authorities for enforcing more than 400 federal statutes". A foreseeable effect of such broadness and integration was the concentration of authority in the executive branch, to the detriment of the constitutional separation of powers. Nowhere is this more evident than in Postville, where the expansive agency's authority can be seen to impinge upon the judicial and legislative powers. "ICE's team of attorneys constitutes the largest legal program in DHS, with more than 750 attorneys to support the ICE mission in the administrative and federal courts. ICE attorneys have also participated in temporary assignments to the Department of Justice as Special Assistant U.S. Attorneys spearheading criminal prosecutions of individuals. These assignments bring much needed support to taxed U.S. Attorneys' offices". English translation: under the guise of interagency cooperation, ICE prosecutors have infiltrated the judicial branch. Now we know who the architects were that spearheaded such a well crafted "fast-tracking" scheme, bogus charge and all, which had us all, down to the very judges, fall in line behind the shackled penguin march. Furthermore, by virtue of its magnitude and methods, ICE's New War is unabashedly the aggressive deployment of its own brand of immigration reform, without congressional approval. "In FY07, as the debate over comprehensive immigration reform moved to the forefront of the national stage, ICE expanded upon the ongoing effort to re-invent immigration enforcement for the 21st century". In recent years, DHS has repeatedly been accused of overstepping its authority. The reply is always the same: if we limit what DHS/ICE can do, we have to accept a greater risk of terrorism. Thus, by painting the war on immigration as inseparable from the war on terror, the same expediency would supposedly apply to both. Yet, only for ICE are these agendas codependent: the war on immigration depends politically on the war on terror, which, as we saw earlier, depends economically on the war on immigration. This type of no-exit circular thinking is commonly known as a "doctrine." In this case, it is an undemocratic doctrine of expediency, at the core of a police agency, whose power hinges on its ability to capitalize on public fear. Opportunistically raised by DHS, the sad specter of 9/11 has come back to haunt illegal workers and their local communities across the USA.

A line was crossed at Postville. The day after in Des Moines, there was a citizens' protest featured in the evening news. With quiet anguish, a mature all-American woman, a mother, said something striking, as only the plain truth can be. "This is not humane," she said. "There has to be a better way."

It's perhaps worth remembering that incipient police states always target the most vulnerable members of society when they start out. And in today's America, there are no people more vulnerable than those millions of workers here, for a human universe of reasons, illegally. That's not to say we are in an incipient police state, but the warnings are unmistakable -- especially in tandem with the Bush administration's massive acquisition of previously unimagined executive-branch powers -- and should not be dismissed blithely. We can sit back and watch with grim satisfaction as these people are rounded up like cattle and forcefed into a Kafkaesque travesty of justice, and say to ourselves: Glad it's happening to them and not me. But sooner or later, those same forces find new targets. And sooner or later, we're all on that list.


God Bless America and everyone else!
 
Posts: 5670 | Registered: 02-07-2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Mr. President, stop your raids on our communities

By Luis Gutierrez and Joe Baca
August 6, 2008


As members of Congress, we have traveled to remote corners of the world and had our eyes opened to some of the worst human suffering imaginable—abject poverty, meager wages, poor working conditions, paltry access to legal counsel and a jarring lack of fairness in the courts.

We never imagined that we would witness the same injustices in a small American town just a five-hour drive from Chicago.

During a visit to Postville, Iowa, last weekend, site of the May 12 Immigration and Customs Enforcement raid of the Agriprocessors meatpacking plant, we saw firsthand how a broken Immigration system devastates a small town.



Mothers bound to electronic bracelets were allowed neither to work nor to return to their home countries, leaving them without recourse to pay rent or feed their children. Wives and children—many of them U.S. citizens—were left to wonder where their husbands and fathers had been taken, or where they would go next. To this day, more than half of the wives do not know where their husbands are.

Meanwhile, a 16-year-old boy spoke of working 17-hour shifts, six days a week, without overtime on the kill floor of a meatpacking plant. Women from the slaughterhouse spoke of male supervisors demanding *** in return for decent hours, decent pay and decent treatment on the job. These workers were victimized, only to be herded like animals when ICE swept the plant and left their employers without punishment.

There is no mistaking that these men and women are suffering at the hands of the U.S. government and our president. Our broken Immigration system has paved a way to the objectification of human beings at the expense of our labor laws, U.S. workers' safety and basic family values.

Instead of taking a stand against the outright victimization of workers—many of them minors, and all of them legally entitled to labor protections—the Bush administration decided that meatpackers posed a greater threat to our security than suspected terrorists or physically abusive employers.

Almost two years to the day before the administration sent 900 ICE agents to storm Agriprocessors, President George W. Bush appeared before the American people and declared: "We're a nation of laws, and we must enforce our laws. We're also a nation of immigrants, and we must uphold that tradition, which has strengthened our country in so many ways. These are not contradictory goals. America can be a lawful society and a welcoming society at the same time."

Postville has plainly shown that we are neither of those things. We are not "lawful" when we interrupt investigations spearheaded by our own Department of Labor. We are not lawful when we implement fear tactics and deportation-only policies simply to score cheap political points with conservative pundits. We are not lawful when we railroad men and women through the judicial process, without adequate representation or a full understanding of their rights.

We are certainly not "welcoming" when hardworking mothers and fathers are prohibited from raising their U.S. citizen children in the country of their birth, or when those who work the longest hours at the most undesirable jobs are treated like terrorists, simply for waking up and going to work.

There is no other reasonable response than to demand that Bush remember his words of welcome and his commitment to law, by placing a moratorium on Immigration raids until we have passed effective, comprehensive reform. The nation that we love, respect and serve is better than this. Bush stood before the American people and proclaimed:

"An Immigration reform bill needs to be comprehensive, because all elements of this problem must be addressed together, or none of them will be solved at all."

But headline-grabbing tactics like the Postville raid had nothing to do with comprehensive reform. Bush has forgotten his promise.

No one benefits when taxpayers pay $590,000 a month to jail Postville's detainees. As a society, we fail when our factories are less safe, when the perpetrators go uncharged or when our laws remove infants from nursing mothers and create broken homes for U.S. citizen children.

We can all agree that we need Immigration reform that is tough on enforcement. However, any system which fails to respect the enormous contributions immigrants make to our workforce, that fails to reflect our proud history of welcoming those who seek a better life and that fails to protect all U.S. workers and our homeland, fails the American people.

The Postville raid failed our nation on all three of those levels. Any future raid would be equally and profoundly inexcusable and cause yet another avoidable blight on our history.

Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-Ill.) is chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus' Immigration Task Force and Rep. Joe Baca (D-Calif.) is chair of the caucus.


God Bless America and everyone else!
 
Posts: 5670 | Registered: 02-07-2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Thanks for that post Proudie. CIR will be happening soon. As for Bush, he's pretty much given up. He's outta office in a few months. Not so much a Lame Duck, more like a Dead Duck President Wink
 
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Originally posted by Brit4064:
Thanks for that post Proudie. CIR will be happening soon. As for Bush, he's pretty much given up. He's outta office in a few months. Not so much a Lame Duck, more like a Dead Duck President Wink


Hopefully, you are right, Brittie. As far as Bush and CIR go, though, I don't place all the blame on him. I blame Congress. The bill didn't even make it to the President's desk.

I hope everyone remembers that we need big changes in Congress as well in November. Wink


God Bless America and everyone else!
 
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Hopefully, you are right, Brittie. As far as Bush and CIR go, though, I don't place all the blame on him. I blame Congress. The bill didn't even make it to the President's desk.

I hope everyone remembers that we need big changes in Congress as well in November.

God Bless America and everyone else!


Proud, the Rep blocked CIR on the Senate.
Bush fellow Rep didn't listen to him thou he wanted to sign it.

like Brit said... what kind of leadership does Bush have? No one listen? unless he veto a bill?
lol
 
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Originally posted by speed_025:
quote:
Hopefully, you are right, Brittie. As far as Bush and CIR go, though, I don't place all the blame on him. I blame Congress. The bill didn't even make it to the President's desk.

I hope everyone remembers that we need big changes in Congress as well in November.

God Bless America and everyone else!


Proud, the Rep blocked CIR on the Senate.
Bush fellow Rep didn't listen to him thou he wanted to sign it.

like Brit said... what kind of leadership does Bush have? No one listen? unless he veto a bill?
lol


Hey Speedie Smile,

I do agree that Bush has lost most of his credibility; perhaps that is one of the reasons his fellow Republicans didn't sign on to pass CIR? I don't know . . . just know I'm ready for a change! Can't happen soon enough as far as I'm concerned!


God Bless America and everyone else!
 
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Originally posted by Brit4064:
Thanks for that post Proudie. CIR will be happening soon. As for Bush, he's pretty much given up. He's outta office in a few months. Not so much a Lame Duck, more like a Dead Duck President Wink


DEAD DUCK!!! DESTROYER OF USA!!! One of the Top Worst Presidents Ever!!
 
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Quack, quack!

 
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What are ICE raids accomplishing?

Residents of Postville,Iowa, recently described to a congressional delegation the scars that the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raid on Agriprocessors' meat plant had left on their community. In the wake of the May incident, they say, the town is economically and socially unstable.

http://blogs.usatoday.com/oped/2008/08/what-are-ice-ra.html
 
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Originally posted by Brit4064:
What are ICE raids accomplishing?

Residents of Postville,Iowa, recently described to a congressional delegation the scars that the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raid on Agriprocessors' meat plant had left on their community. In the wake of the May incident, they say, the town is economically and socially unstable.

http://blogs.usatoday.com/oped/2008/08/what-are-ice-ra.html



One main accomplishment is that it has provided several jobs to the homeless people of usa. Legal to work in the usa. But look at the backlash against this idea.... in this article. SHame Shame Shame!!!

Keep in mind that Pottsville is mainly an illegal alien/undocumented community.



New hires bring new problems to Postville

By NIGEL DUARA • nduara@dmreg.com • July 27, 2008

Postville, Ia. - Ten weeks after the largest workplace immigration raid in U.S. history, this is the new Postville:

Drunken brawls. A food pantry that is almost bare. Women afraid to walk alone at night.

Postville is now home to hundreds of men and women from tough towns and tough lives, brought to this northeast Iowa community by recruiters who entered homeless shelters in dusty Texas border towns offering $15 and a one-way bus ticket.

The impact is evident: New laborers are changing Postville. The Agriprocessors Inc. meatpacking plant, the site of the immigration raid, once employed men and women with families. Now, its workers are mostly young, single people with no stake in the community and nothing to lose.


The rise in crime has strained Postville's tiny police department. One night in June, the calls were so numerous that police asked the local bar to close early.

The change in Postville started when nearly one-third of the town was detained on May 12 after a federal raid at Agriprocessors. U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement came looking for 697 plant workers; 389 were rounded up for being in the country illegally, and 304 were charged with identity theft or false use of a Social Security number. Others hid in the plant, then fled town.

Their work force depleted, Agriprocessors recruiters sought contract laborers - people willing to leave their homes and move to Postville for meatpacking jobs - to fill the void.

Unlike many previous plant workers, the laborers appear to be U.S. citizens or legal immigrants who have been vetted by contract labor firms. Before they left Texas, most were unemployed, and a few didn't have a place to sleep.

The laborers brought with them the promise of helping the plant get back on its feet.

2bricksThey also brought the dangers associated with an influx of uprooted people from the margins of society to the fragile ecosystem of this small, agrarian town.

Now homeless people that need help are unwanted margins of society?... but illegals from another country are ok Roll Eyes

Company needs workers; recruiters send busloads

A recruiter asked the standard questions one day at a homeless shelter in Amarillo, Texas: Are you physically and mentally capable of doing the work? Can you pass a drug test? Do you have any experience in a meatpacking plant?

Soon after the federal raid in Postville, labor recruiters had potential employees headed to the Iowa town by bus from Texas.

Recruiter Clint Haider did the groundwork for Agriprocessors in Amarillo, handing out fliers and talking to candidates for contract labor.

One of the places he visited was the homeless shelter.

The extent of the questions he could ask was limited by law, Haider said.

"There's only so many things you can ask to try to prescreen people," he said. "We are targeting people that are looking for work, looking for a new experience, looking for a change, obviously looking for a job. If you fit in that category, we can't be biased to people because they say they're homeless.

"(Agriprocessors) got cleaned out over there. The thing is, they need workers, with possibly some packing-house experience, that are willing to move," Haider said. "(The laborers are) the type of people that would be able to move pretty quickly, people looking for advancement, employment, probably a new start."

Agriprocessors representatives declined to speak about the specific arrangements between the company and the labor firms it uses, but contract labor typically works like this: A company will hire laborers for its peak meat season through contractors like Labor Ready in Waterloo and the Bravo Labor Agency in McAllen, Texas, near the U.S.-Mexico border.

There are two arrangements. In one, the meatpacking plant hires the workers full time and makes them employees of the company. In a second arrangement, the laborers work at the plant but stay employed by the contract firm.

Haider said he looked for good workers - he doesn't get paid if the people he sent to Agriprocessors leave or get fired within 90 days.

"I don't get paid for putting people on a bus," Haider said. "I wouldn't profit a nickel from someone who doesn't make it over there. It's totally a commission deal for me."

Of the 50 people pulled from Amarillo, five lost their jobs at Agriprocessors within two weeks.

But the men and women brought to Postville have changed the climate in the town. It was a change many residents feared would happen after the raid, a change that occurred 20 years ago when the plant opened and young, single men came to town looking for work. The crime went up, the drinking was harder, the parties went longer.

Kimber Bruns, who oversees the Tyler Street Resource Center in Amarillo, Texas, said 18 of the 20 people who went to Postville from her homeless day shelter have kept their jobs at Agriprocessors.

"It's a good thing (Agriprocessors is) doing. They're bringing money into the economy," Bruns said. "Are (the workers) drinking? Probably. (But) I hate to see one or two disgruntled people make such an issue of something that a company's doing for the good to be overshadowed.

"We're thrilled with it."
They should be. Good job!

Agriprocessors supervisor Randy Vogt, who laborers said was their point of contact in Postville, agreed to an interview for this article, then declined to comment when questioned. He referred all questions to a spokesman.

Agriprocessors vice president Chaim Abrahams said the company didn't seek the homeless to work in its plant, but didn't exclude anyone, including workers who might have mental-health issues or physical ailments.

"The recruiting companies then conducted their normal recruiting efforts for work of this type. Agri in no way sought out any particular type of worker, nor did it act to exclude certain categories of potential employees, such as those who are down on their luck and presently living in homeless shelters," Abrahams wrote in an e-mail.

helpsmilie"Mere residence in a homeless shelter does not disqualify a person from consideration for employment. With respect to potential employees who are not qualified to work because of mental health issues, each new employee is given a safety orientation and reviewed for their ability to perform their tasks without undue risk of injury to themselves or others."

As to the potential effects of a new population on Postville, Abrahams said the company hopes "all workers will be productive members of the community."

Demand skyrockets at local food pantry

The food pantry in Postville was overrun one recent weekday afternoon.

Mothers, children in tow, lined up outside under black and threatening skies. Most of those in line had relatives who were picked up during the raid and have been sentenced to spend five months in jail before being deported.

Joining them, according to food pantry organizers and others, were several dozen contract laborers, men brought to Postville to make up for the arrest of nearly a third of the plant's work force.

The men took milk and Cornflakes, rice and beans. Most, including Ines Armijo of Eddyville, Texas, said they were brought here by Bravo Labor Agency.

Armijo said he came to the pantry to stock his refrigerator. He's being paid by Agriprocessors, he said, but "every little bit counts."

By handing out peanut butter and venison to contract laborers hired by the company, the Rev. Steve Brackett of St. Paul Lutheran Church said the pantry is effectively subsidizing the meatpacking plant that left its contract laborers without enough money to survive until their first paychecks.

"As a food pantry, we have to serve everyone," Brackett said. "However, we cannot take the hundreds of people at a time. I think Agriprocessors is going to have to do something."

Brackett pointed to a ground freezer that was packed with venison and hamburger meat in May. Now, it's less than one-quarter full.

2crazyFor a facility that was designed to serve 30 to 40 families and individuals once a week, the influx of contract laborers has stretched the pantry's resources to the breaking point.


While it was no problem to provide for 40 families that were undocumented/illegals... why is it such a problem to provide for legals trying to get on their feet ?

In May, the pantry expanded its hours and opened three days a week. The demand forced the pantry back to one day a week in June, when it served more than 600 "donations units," which amount to about a week's worth of groceries.

"We're going to have to give less food to the people who come in," Brackett said. "Rationing."


Increase in fights leaves some residents worried

The impact of the new workers is already being felt at the Postville and Monona police departments, where officers at each say that there has been an increase in calls - and violence - in town.

Postville Police Chief Michael Halse checked the crime reports from the last week of June. Each suspect in an incident of assault, disorderly conduct or public intoxication is "a new person," Halse said, although many already have Postville addresses.

Postville averaged 12.5 disorderly-conduct and public-intoxication charges per year since 1992 with a high of 44 such cases in 1998, Halse said at a Postville City Council meeting this month. At the meeting, he said this year's incidents could break that record.

The crime reports tell the story.

The criminal complaint against Cristobal R. Silva, a newcomer, is straightforward: Silva, 30, was causing a ruckus at a local bar in late June. Bartenders asked him to leave and called police. Hours later, police found Silva and his roommate, Herihardo Reyes, at their apartment, drunk, bruised and bloodied.

A witness told police that Silva and Reyes "began yelling at each other in Spanish and the defendant pushed Reyes and they began fighting," according to the complaint.

On his way to the patrol car in handcuffs, Silva slipped on some steps and banged his head. He had to be hospitalized and was charged with disorderly conduct.

Another criminal complaint, this one dated June 15, began like many recent incidents in Postville.

Men were drunk, fighting outside a bar. Three of them ganged up on one. When the police came, the men fled on foot.

While interviewing witnesses in the bar, the officer saw one of the men run by. He chased him in his cruiser. The man hid behind a Dumpster. The officer found him and put him in handcuffs.

At the time of the arrest, the suspect, 31-year-old Audon Hernandez, had a blood-alcohol content of 0.22.

Patty Brown, who lives next door to the police station, said she's worried by the new arrivals.

"I just feel uncomfortable during the day," Brown said. "There's a lot of trouble going on."

Brown said she won't walk around at night, especially given her proximity to Postville's lone bar.

That concern was echoed by Carolyn Real, whose husband, Paul, is a lay minister for the Hispanic ministry in Postville. She warned other women to walk in groups and take care not to be caught on the streets alone at night.

"I told them to be careful," Real said. "People need to be careful."

Postville Police Officer Nick Hazel, 28, said he has noticed the new faces and the new problems.

"It's a whole new crowd," he said.



'Back to square one,' pastor says of issues

From business owners to police officers to clergy members, the raid that wiped out most of Agriprocessors' work force meant one thing:

Here we go again.

Merle Turner of the Postville Diversity Council said the first wave of immigrants, mainly young, single men, came in the late 1980s when Agriprocessors was just getting off the ground. They came from the former Soviet Union, mainly Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and the Ukraine. They were followed by Mexican immigrants in the mid-1990s, Turner said, and Guatemalans earlier this decade.

The Mexican and Guatemalan immigrants settled in Postville and eventually sent for their families, Turner said.

Those families, which made up much of the immigrant population in Postville, have disappeared since the raid, Brackett said. In their place are a group of people more likely to "drink, stay out late, have house parties till late at night."

If they were immigrants, then why did they disappear after the raid???? I think the writer meant to say they were undocumented illegals from Mexico, and Guatamela and that is why they disappeared because they were not in fact immigrants as stated, but illegal to be here and illegal to work.

"I thought we had it under control," Brackett said. "Now, we're back to square one, back to the way things were."
I guess he means LEGAL single men workers as compared to undocumented? Pastor? He should be happy that some homeless are getting a second chance or maybe even a first chance at life

Postville Mayor Robert Penrod said police will continue to patrol as usual, and the city won't add officers unless issues arise.

But, he said, the city would prefer families to the influx of young, single men.

"If we can get families back in there, it helps the city, it helps Agri and it helps the schools," Penrod said. "That's our goal ... to get family-oriented people here."
 
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OK!!! OK!!!! 4now For President!!! clap LOL. Wink. Never know? Anything is Possible! Wink
 
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I am surprised at the look down your nose attitude towards our own destitute who are willing to take jobs Americans don't want. Amazing isn't it?


Give it a few months and things will settle down. If its mostly single young guys that came that means there will be a second influx. Of single young women. Legal, of course.



Vote Republican and this country will still be worth sneaking into.
 
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quote:
Originally posted by davdah:
I am surprised at the look down your nose attitude towards our own destitute who are willing to take jobs Americans don't want. Amazing isn't it?


Give it a few months and things will settle down. If its mostly single young guys that came that means there will be a second influx. Of single young women. Legal, of course.


Those delicious, delectable, Scrumptious, Delightful, Smart, S E X Y, Witty, Devoted, Loyal, Morals, "Ok Not So Many morals That I Cant Be Shared With The Other 2"! Big Grin Women will Return! Legal Of Coarse! clap Calm Before The Storm! Big Grin. I Got Dibbs On The First three!!!! Big Grin
 
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