Albuquerque Journal

Immigrants lock doors, rally around children of detained

- BY JEFF AMY AND ROGELIO V. SOLIS

MORTON, Miss. — Mississipp­i residents rallied around children left with no parents, and migrants locked themselves in their homes for fear of being arrested Thursday, a day after the United States’ largest immigratio­n raid in a decade.

Six hundred eighty people were arrested in Wednesday’s raids, but more than 300 were released by Thursday morning with notices to appear before immigratio­n judges, said U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t spokesman Bryan Cox.

About 270 were released after being taken to a military hangar, and 30 were released at the plants, Cox said. He did not give a reason except to say that those released at the plants were let go due to “humanitari­an factors.”

Those released included 18 juveniles, with the youngest 14, said Jere Miles, special agent in charge of ICE’s Homeland Security Investigat­ions unit in New Orleans. Workers were assessed before they were released, including for whether they had young children at home.

A small group seeking informatio­n about immigrants caught up in the raids gathered Thursday morning outside one of the targeted companies: the Koch Foods Inc. plant in Morton, a small town of roughly 3,000 people about 40 miles east of the capital of Jackson.

“The children are scared,” said Ronaldo Tomas, who identified himself as a worker at another Koch Foods plant in town that wasn’t raided. Tomas said he has a cousin with two children who was detained in one of the raids.

Gabriela Rosales, a sixyear resident of Morton who knows some of those detained, said she understand­s that “there’s a process and a law” for those living in the country illegally. “But the thing that they (ICE) did is devastatin­g,” she said. “It was very devastatin­g to see all those kids crying, having seen their parents for the last time.”

On Wednesday, about 600 U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents fanned out across plants operated by five companies, surroundin­g the perimeters to prevent workers from fleeing. Those arrested were taken to the military hangar to be processed for immigratio­n violations.

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS /ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Friends, co-workers and family watch as U.S. immigratio­n officials raid a Koch Foods Inc. plant in Morton, Mississipp­i, on Wednesday.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS /ASSOCIATED PRESS Friends, co-workers and family watch as U.S. immigratio­n officials raid a Koch Foods Inc. plant in Morton, Mississipp­i, on Wednesday.

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