Iowa Immigration Raid
Largest In U.S. HistorySoon There Will Be No Choice By Self Deportation
Assume the position Pedro. You know the routine by now.
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa - Federal officials said Tuesday that they had
detained 390 illegal immigrants after a raid on a meatpacking plant in
Postville, Iowa, in what they described as the largest single-site raid
of its kind nationwide.
The detainees include 314 men and 76 women, according to figures
released Tuesday by federal authorities. Fifty-six detainees - mostly
women with young children - have been released under the supervision of
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
A similar factory raid in New Bedford, Mass., last year netted 361
arrests, most of whom faced deportation and were separated from their
families.
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"We're here to discuss not only the largest operation of its kind
ever in Iowa, but in fact the largest single-site enforcement operation
of its kind in the country," U.S. Attorney Matt M. Dummermuth said.
The detainees included 290 who claimed to be Guatemalans, 93
Mexicans, three Israelis and four Ukrainians. Among the detained were
12 juveniles, six of whom have been released.
Customs and law enforcement agents worked through the night
processing the detainees, said Claude Arnold, the ICE special agent in
charge of the operation. Detainees were "administratively arrested" but
have not yet been criminally charged, he said.
Detainees who are charged with aggravated identity theft, unlawful
use of a Social Security number or other offenses will be given lawyers
and sent to appearances in one of three makeshift courtrooms at the
detainee center in Waterloo, Iowa, Arnold said.
Arnold would not disclose how many people were involved in Monday's effort, citing security concerns.
Two injuries were reported at the detention center in Waterloo,
Arnold said. One involved a man who fled from agents and injured his
leg. The man was treated at a hospital and released. A second injury
involved a customs agent who suffered minor cuts after slipping and
falling down a stairwell.

Sorry amigos. This time even El Presidente Booosh can't save you.
"The plans went very well" so far, Arnold said. "This is a huge undertaking."
Dummermuth declined to comment about possible charges against
managers at Agriprocessors, Inc., the nation's largest kosher
meatpacking plant, citing the ongoing investigation. A federal
affidavit released Monday detailed several eyewitness accounts of
employee abuse, including one floor manager who allegedly struck a
worker with a meat hook.
Nationwide, ICE agents arrested 863 people on criminal charges in
2007 and made more than 4,000 administrative arrests - a tenfold
increase from five years before, according to the agency's Web site.
At St. Bridget's Catholic Church in Postville, Iowa, near the plant,
tension prevailed as about 400 people waited and watched for the next
sign that their lives would again be affected by the raid. Many believe
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents are still in town.
One detainee agreed to speak to The Des Moines Register, but
declined to be identified because of fear of recrimination by ICE. She
will face charges of being in the country illegally and having false
identification, and will likely be deported.
Inside the meatpacking plant on Monday morning, workers heard the
agents before they saw them. The woman said a call came over the
loudspeaker, announcing that ICE was in the plant. Many in the plant
tried to hide. Some ran.
"No one had a clue" a raid was coming, she said in Spanish, despite
rumors during the weekend that were discussed at an immigration-rights
advocates' meeting in Waterloo. "Everyone scampered, everyone tried to
get away."
Sure, we'll keep "famalies" together. Together in Mexico
ICE agents with pistols called for those hiding to come out. "Once
they knew they couldn't get away, they came down from their hiding
places," she said.
The agents grouped those with identification from those without it,
then put the second group in single-file lines. They were frisked, told
to remove any sweaters or heavy garments and shackled - handcuffs were
placed on their wrists and attached to their waists, and their feet
were cuffed as well.
"There was no mistreatment," she said. "They told us to sit. We sat."
She was instructed to fill out paperwork that detailed her date of
birth and country of origin. She is from Guatemala but said she told
investigators that she was from Mexico.
When she's deported, she said she would rather be taken to Mexico, where it will be easier to reenter America.