Thirteen
Arizona
hotel owners have been
accused by federal authorities of harboring undocumented aliens brought by
smugglers into the
United States
. Authorities will seek to
seize their businesses as part of a nationwide investigation into a network
“stash houses,” which are usually hotels and motels, but also include
apartments and houses, reports the Washington
Times. After a nine-month undercover investigation, the owners of six hotels
in
Mesa
,
Arizona
, have been charged with
harboring undocumented immigrants and aiding human smuggling. Twelve of those
named in the indictments have been arrested and are described as “ethnic
Indians,” eight of whom are U.S. citizens while the other five are listed as
British citizens in the United States on green cards.
Stash
houses, also known as “safe houses” or “drop houses,” are locations
where undocumented immigrants seek temporary shelter after coming into the
U.S.
and before they are taken,
for a fee, to other locations throughout the country. The property owners or
managers are paid by the smugglers for harboring the aliens. During the
investigation, the motel owners rented rooms on numerous occasions to undercover
ICE agents posing as smugglers, sometimes charging the agents higher rates than
what they would normally charge their customers. The owners also instructed the
agents on how to conceal their smuggling activities, advising them to register
under false names, rent several rooms, and park their vehicles in inconspicuous
places.
U.S.
Attorney Paul K. Charlton’s
Arizona
office will be prosecuting
the cases and has stated that they will seek seizure of the properties. The
thirteenth owner, Roshankumar Bharatbhai Bhakta, 20, has been declared a
fugitive and is still at large. All of the arrested has been charged with one
count of conspiring to harbor undocumented immigrants, and if convicted, would
face a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
*****
Six
U.S. Navy crew members were among 10 people caught in an FBI sting operation
targeting fake marriages to undocumented aliens for profit. The six are assigned
to the USS Eisenhower in
Norfolk
,
Virginia
. Kenneth Adam Howard, 26 of
Baltimore
, approached them about
entering the sham marriages for $3,000 to $4,000. Marriage of immigrants to
U.S.
citizens can aid in their
claim for citizenship or employment. The
seamen came to New York believing that they would be meeting undocumented
immigrants from Egypt, Russia, South America and Europe, but were instead
confronted by undercover FBI agents or informants and cooperating witnesses. The
defendants could face a maximum sentence of five years in prison and a $250,000
fine if convicted. Bail is set at $200,000.
*****
The
Arizona Daily Star reports that Gov.
Janet Napolitano has ceased pursuing plans to seek federal emergency fund to
help pay for more law enforcement on Arizona’s southern border. The
governor’s decision is said to be based, at least in part, on the billions of
dollars being spent as relief for the victims of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita by
the federal government. Gov. Napolitano has said that she plans instead to ask
the government to do more to help
Arizona
, and other border
communities, on an on-going basis to deal with the problems of illegal border
crossing. Some aid is forthcoming since Congress passed the State Criminal
Assistance Alien Program earlier in November. This program would reimburse
states for the costs of detaining undocumented immigrants convicted of state
crimes and would provide $405 million nationwide, up from $355 million.
According to some of the governor’s reports, the state was due $71 million
last year, but received less than $7 million. Gov. Napolitano had considered
seeking a federal emergency declaration after having used her own powers to
declare a state emergency in Cochise,
Santa Cruz
, Pima and
Yuma
counties.
*****
A
Cuban woman received political asylum after having stowed away in a wooden crate
flown by a cargo plane from the
Bahamas
to
Miami
, according to the
Associated Press. Sandra de los
Santos
, 25, stowed away until a
crew unloading the filing-cabinet sized DHL crate at
Miami
International
Airport
found her. The presiding
immigration judge cited fear of persecution, especially given the unusual means
of transportation, she might face if returned to
Cuba
as one of the reasons for
which he granted her asylum status. The so-called wet-foot, dry-foot rule, which
usually allows those Cubans who reach U.S. soil to stay and sends back those who
are caught while at sea, was also cited. De los
Santos
left
Cuba
in May 2004 for
Nassau
, and packed herself into
the DHL crate three months later.
*****
Virginia
Representative Virgil H. Goode Jr. and California Representative Duncan Hunter
want Congress to build a 2,000 mile fence along the Mexican border.
Senators Goode and Hunter proposed a plan for a fence from the
Pacific
Coast
to the
Gulf of Mexico
, which will cost an
estimated $5 billion to $7 billion. According
to the Associated Press, there are currently many long segments across the
U.S.
border that have no
physical barrier to entering the country. This bill would increase border patrol
officers by 10,000 and immigration investigators by 1,250.
Critics of the bill believe that it is unfeasible, and that immigrants
who wish to cross into the
United States
will find other ways,
through tunnels or boats for example.
*****
Near
Campo, CA, a border patrol agent opened fire on a man who swung at him with a
machete. The agent reportedly was
patrolling alone in the mountains near a campground that is frequently used by
undocumented immigrants. The agent
saw a man who appeared to be attempting to cross the border.
When confronted, the man attacked the agent with a machete.
The agent fired at least two rounds and the man was hit twice in the
upper body. The suspect was taken
to the hospital and is now in intensive care.
Border Patrol agents cite this as an example of the recent rise in
attacks against border patrol officers.