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Luz Maria Diaz knew
what happened to undocumented immigrants at the Wake County jail. But her
teenage daughters didn't. |
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Please
distribute this article and walk with us on Friday!
Anthony Chavez
abogados606@hotmail.com
In case you haven't noticed,
Maricopa County will be coming to a boil this Friday. Not only is it the day
of Arpaio's announced anti-immigrant sweep -- his first without 287(g) field
authority, but the Rev. Al Sharpton will be back in town for a civil rights
forum in downtown Phoenix. And the world still awaits an announcement from
the Department of Homeland Security as to whether or not Arpaio will keep
his 287(g) agreement in his jails.
Now civil rights activist
Salvador Reza has announced a march for Friday, beginning at the Wells Fargo
building downtown, and stopping at the federal courthouse and the Fourth
Avenue Jail, before heading back. Wonder if he could get Al Sharpton to join
him? In any case, here's Reza's statement, sent out this morning. The march
is sponsored by Reza's Puente movement, and is set to last from 11:00 a.m.
to 1:00 p.m. "End it, don't amend it," urges Reza of 287(g).
Sheriff Joe Arpaio has decided
that he will enforce immigration law with or without 287(g) agreements with
Homeland Security. He has also assured his followers publicly that he will
"personally" drive any undocumented worker he finds during his sweep to the
border if ICE refuses to take them. His 287 (g) Agreements with ICE expire
on October 15th thus he has called for a massive anti-immigrant raid
disguised as "Crime Suppression Sweep" for the following day, Friday October
16, 2009.
Ya Basta! We call for the
repudiation of Sheriff Joe Arpaio and invite you to join us on Friday
October 16th in front of Arpaio's Headquarters at the Wells Fargo Bank
located at 1st Ave and Washington. We will walk two blocks to the Federal
Court House to send a message to the Federal Government, Homeland Security
and the President that we will not be deterred. Afterwards we will walk to
the Fourth Ave jail and finish back at Wells Fargo. We have protested daily
against Arpaio's racial profiling sweeps under the 287 (g) for over one
year. We will continue doing so until this social nightmare comes to a halt.
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Tougher Rules on Policing
Undocumented Immigrants
Local agencies helping with deportations
must keep their focus on major crimes.
RALEIGH N.C. (By
Anna Gorman, LAT)
October 15, 2009
― Luz Maria Diaz knew what
happened to undocumented immigrants at
the Wake County jail. But her teenage
daughters didn't.
So when the girls were arrested after
fighting on their high school campus in
September, they freely admitted they
were born in Mexico. Detention officers
at the jail checked their immigration
status and promptly handed them over to
federal authorities.
Now Diana, 16, and her sister, Yolanda,
18, are battling to stay in the country.
"I never thought this could happen . . .
for a simple fight," their mother said.
"I was in shock."
The Wake County Sheriff's Department is
one of eight local law enforcement
agencies in North Carolina and 66 across
the nation authorized by the federal
government to identify undocumented
immigrants and process them for possible
deportation under a program known as
287(g). Virginia is the only other state
with more participating agencies. There
are four such agreements in California,
including one with the Los Angeles
County Sheriff's Department.
Immigrant advocates and some lawmakers
have been highly critical of the program
because of reports of racial profiling
and civil rights violations. The
Congressional Hispanic Caucus has called
for an end to the program.
Responding to concerns, the Obama
administration announced in July that
participating agencies would be subject
to federal supervision and required to
focus their efforts primarily on serious
and violent criminals. Police agencies
must sign new agreements by today. Los
Angeles County sheriff's officials are
still in negotiations but expect to
continue immigration screening in the
jails.
If police agencies fail to follow the
new rules, they risk losing their
enforcement authority, said Alonzo Pena,
deputy assistant secretary at U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
One high-profile participant, Joe
Arpaio, sheriff of Maricopa County in
Arizona, who is being investigated by
the Department of Justice, said last
week that federal authorities are
stripping him of his authority to make
immigration arrests on the streets.
Wake County Sheriff Donnie Harrison, who
joined the federal program in June 2008
and signed a new agreement Tuesday, said
his deputies would continue arresting
people in minor crimes, including
traffic violations, if they fail to
provide valid identification, and would
continue checking the immigration status
of foreign-born people taken to his
jail. As of Oct. 1, the sheriff's staff
had interviewed about 3,760 foreign-born
inmates and processed about 2,650 for
possible removal.
Whether immigration authorities move
forward with deportation is up to them,
Harrison said.
"That's an ICE problem," he said. "We're
going to continue to do our job."
Wanting a better life
Diaz led her daughters across the border
more than 10 years ago to seek a better
life for them. If her daughters are
ordered deported to Mexico, Diaz, 35,
said, the whole family -- including her
U.S.-born son -- will go too. She can't
imagine sending her daughters alone to
Mexico, a country they don't really
know.
Yolanda Diaz, who was arrested on a
charge of simple assault, said the
arrest has dashed her plans of going to
college in the United States. Her
sister, Diana, arrested on a disorderly
conduct charge, said she just wants to
graduate from her high school.
"It's not fair," she said. "Other people
have done much worse things than this."
Their attorney, Marty Rosenbluth with
the Southern Coalition for Social
Justice, said the government's 287(g)
program wasn't designed to pick up
undocumented immigrants like the Diaz
sisters. "I appreciate that they are
saying they are prioritizing dangerous
criminal aliens," he said. "That is not
what we are seeing."
Another one of his clients, Luis Cruz
Millan, 30, an undocumented immigrant
from Mexico, was ordered to report to an
immigration officer after being arrested
last month for allegedly listening to
music too loudly in a car outside the
Raleigh house where he was living.
He and his fiancee, Belinda Masterman, a
U.S. citizen, had gotten into an
argument, so Cruz went to the car to
calm down. A neighbor called police, who
arrested Cruz. Masterman said she begged
them not to take Cruz to jail. Cruz said
he believes that undocumented immigrants
who commit serious crimes should be
deported. But, he said, "I never
imagined I would be deported for
listening to music."
One night last month, immigration
attorney Jim Melo stood in front of a
class of about 20 immigrants in Durham
and explained how 287(g) worked and
advised them what to do if stopped by
police. "Outside of showing your
identification, it's not necessary to
answer their questions," he said.
He also warned them that different areas
in North Carolina apply the law
differently.
"In Wake County, if they arrest you for
whatever reason -- speeding, driving
without a license -- boom. There's
immigration," he said.
When he was finished speaking, the
audience peppered him with questions:
When do you ask to see an immigration
judge? Is it a crime to drive without a
license? If you are arrested for driving
without a license, are you in danger of
deportation?
Demographic shifts
Drawn by jobs in agriculture, the
textile industry and more recently
construction, Latino immigrants began
settling in large numbers throughout
North Carolina in the 1990s,
dramatically changing the demographics
of the state.
Between 2005 and 2007, the state's
Latino population was estimated at
596,000, up from 77,000 in 1990,
according to U.S. Census data. In some
areas, including Alamance County, the
large influx of immigrants created
tension with longtime residents.
Many new Latino residents moved into the
towns of Burlington and Graham, finding
jobs, starting families and opening
businesses. But along with those
immigrants looking for work, Sheriff
Terry Johnson said, other new arrivals
began committing crimes. And because the
federal government wasn't enforcing
immigration law, Johnson said, he had
to.
Since the county joined the 287(g)
program in 2007 and many
undocumented-immigrant drug traffickers
and gang members have been arrested and
deported, Johnson said, violent crime
has dropped. "Immigrants know if you
come to Alamance County for the purpose
of committing crime, we are going to get
you," he said.
One day last month, occupants of the
Alamance County Jail -- which also holds
ICE detainees from other counties
awaiting deportation -- included a man
who had been deported three times and
another undocumented immigrant who said
he had served time for killing a person
in a car accident.
Johnson acknowledged that not all
undocumented immigrants taken to the
jail are suspected of violent crimes.
Many are arrested on minor charges, such
as driving without a license. If the
traffic or criminal case is dismissed,
undocumented immigrants are turned over
to ICE for possible deportation.
The sheriff's decision to sign up for
the federal program earned him respect
from longtime residents but created a
sense of fear among immigrants.
Galvanized by several high-profile
arrests and deportations, several
activists formed a group called Fairness
Alamance to challenge the sheriff and
county officials over 287(g). They
accused the sheriff of racial profiling
and using the law to get undocumented
immigrants accused of committing minor
crimes out of the country.
"The law became a weapon in the hands of
law enforcement," said Blanca Zendejas
Nienhaus, a teacher and member of the
group. Now, Zendejas Nienhaus said she
and others are pushing for the county to
abide by the federal government's new
rules and target only violent criminals.
"Time and goodwill will tell if they are
going to make any change," she said.
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