Border and Enforcement News
According
to The Washington Post, A collective
of labor and immigrant advocates held the first of several planned hearings last
week to call public attention the accusation that US Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) has routinely violated constitutional protections against
unreasonable search and seizure during workplace raids.
A 10-person panel accused ICE officials of using arrest warrants for a
small number of undocumented immigrants who work at a given company as a pretext
to detain the entire workforce, including many
"Tens
of millions of workers in America go to work every day without an awareness that
at their workplaces, without any warning, they could be swept up in a massive
raid conducted by heavily armed government agents," said Joe Hansen,
president of the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union and
chairman of the national Commission on ICE Misconduct.
"Workers are not aware that they could be detained at gunpoint.
That they could be handcuffed…That they could be denied any contact
with family members or legal counsel."
ICE
spokeswoman Pat Reilly, who attended the hearing, later commented on the
agency’s procedures, assuring that the behavior by ICE is fair and humane and
has been routinely upheld by courts. "I
would imagine that some people may be detained beyond what they feel is
reasonable. But it’s
subjective," Reilly said. "What
we’re trying to do is get to the bottom of who has the right to be here and
who might be posing as a
*****
Bush
administration officials unveiled a new phase of immigration enforcement, when
they announced last week that they would now begin implementing new technology
to create a virtual fence along sections of the border with
The
New York Times reports
that the administration is pushing ahead to extend this virtual fencing at the
2,000-mile Mexican border despite criticism from many sides.
Opponents of undocumented immigration argue that the virtual fence
technology is flawed and ineffective, while many officials and residents in
Regarding
the complaints of the effectiveness of the virtual fencing, Homeland Security
Secretary Michael Chertoff said that "we’re convinced at this point all
of the defects have either been cured or they’re so immaterial we’re
prepared to begin." The $2
billion project, contracted by Boeing, will be completed within the next two
years.
*****
The
trial for a U.S. Border Patrol agent charged with second-degree murder will
begin later this month, according to The
Associated Press. Agent
Nicholas Corbett is on trial for the Jan. 12, 2007 shooting and death of
Francisco Javier Dominguez Rivera.
Corbett,
an agent since 2003, encountered Dominguez, 22, of
Corbett’s
attorneys leveled accusations of a tainted investigation, contending that
Mexican consular officials received premature access to interview witnesses to
the shooting before all had been interviewed by case investigators.
The
Border Action Network, a southern Arizona human rights organization, plans a
weeklong memorial outside the federal courthouse "to demand policy changes
to prevent further death and injustice along the border," according to
their press release. "In terms
of the bigger picture, we see this as another example of the fact that the
current anti-immigrant climate and focus on stepped-up enforcement inevitably
results in these types of abuses," said Alessandra Soler Meetze, executive
director of the ACLU of Arizona.
Because a gun was used, the state has alleged that due to the dangerous nature of the offense, a conviction would require mandatory prison time. A second-degree murder conviction would draw a sentence of 10 to 22 years.