Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Much-touted MS-13 sweep keeps even most basic details secret

Nearly yearlong roundup snags 428 suspects; 44 deported

- By Tom Hays and Colleen Long

It was a tally so impressive that President Donald Trump touted it at his State of the Union address: Since May, agents cracking down on the violent gangs terrorizin­g the working-class suburbs of Long Island had swept up 428 gang suspects, including 220 members of the notorious MS-13.

But the sweep, Operation Matador, also has been shrouded in secrecy. Federal and state authoritie­s have declined repeated requests from The Associated Press for even basic informatio­n made public in most law enforcemen­t operations, such as the names of those arrested and the crimes they are accused of committing.

They won’t divulge their ages, immigratio­n statuses or current whereabout­s. And while they say 44 of those arrested have been deported, they refuse to say what happened to the rest, including whether they are even still in custody. They say releasing more details could endanger the suspects and jeopardize ongoing investigat­ions.

The lack of transparen­cy comes amid accusation­s by immigratio­n rights groups that the government is using unsubstant­iated rumors of gang affiliatio­ns to detain innocent people. Federal immigratio­n judges have already ordered the release of some detainees arrested on suspicion of being MS-13 members when the government couldn’t produce any evidence of gang activity.

Some parents and activists say some of those included in the tally are innocent teenagers who came to the U.S. as unaccompan­ied minors, spending weeks locked in maximum-security detention centers based on flimsy and false allegation­s of gang activity. Civil liberties lawyers say that in some cases their alleged “activity” was wearing a black T-shirt or making a hand gesture.

“They said we have a warrant for your arrest and we don’t have to explain anything to you now. We will tell you when you come with us,” one teenager, who asked not to be named because she is afraid of being deported, told the AP in Spanish. “Later, they told me I had been associated with gangs.”

The teenager said she was not a member of MS-13. She said she knew of people in MS-13, as do most people at Brentwood High School, a large school 45 miles east of New York City. Maybe she’s talked with some of them in the hallway.

Although she was released after two months in detention, she remains worried.

“I can’t defend myself,” she said. “I can’t explain what happened because I don’t even know who is accusing me.”

Immigratio­n attorney Dawn Guidone said she represente­d about seven teenagers detained on gang allegation­s and at least two were deported. One student said all he did was wear blue, the color of the gang. Officials said he was associatin­g with “known gang members.”

“But the gang member he was associatin­g with sat next to him in math class,” Guidone said. “If that’s associatin­g, then I don’t know how to even deal with that.”

The federal agency leading the crackdown, Homeland Security Investigat­ions, said that of the 428 gang suspects mentioned in the Republican president’s speech, 216 faced criminal charges, but it wouldn’t say whether those charges had anything to do with gang activity or violence. It said the remaining 212 were detained for suspected immigratio­n law violations but refused to disclose their names, citing privacy concerns.

Suffolk County District Attorney Tim Sini has refused to answer questions about MS-13 arrests for more than a year.

In neighborin­g Nassau County, prosecutor­s said they “took down the alleged kingpin of MS-13 for the entire Eastern region of the United States,” but they refused to name the suspect, who’s awaiting extraditio­n from Maryland. A spokesman for prosecutor­s said the man’s identity is being withheld because an indictment naming several co-defendants is sealed as it pertains to him.

MS-13, or La Mara Salvatruch­a, recruits young teenagers from El Salvador and Honduras, though many gang members were born in the U.S. Long Island has a large population of unaccompan­ied minors from Central America, including many who were fleeing the violence in their home nations.

The gang has been blamed for at least 25 killings since January 2016 across a wide swath of Long Island. And many other people are missing.

In a July visit to Suffolk County, Trump promised his administra­tion would “dismantle, decimate and eradicate” MS-13.

“They’re going to jails, and then they’re going back to their country, or they’re going back to their country period,” he said.

Last year, the American Civil Liberties Union filed a class action lawsuit in California claiming some teenagers arrested in the gang crackdown were being wrongly held at detention centers.

A federal judge overseeing the case ruled the plaintiffs deserve prompt hearings and released at least nine. The judge ordered the government to disclose how many were being held. The government has not done so.

 ?? SETH WENIG, FILE— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Jan. 11, 2018 file photo, suspected members of the MS-13 gang are escorted to their arraignmen­t in Mineola, N.Y.
SETH WENIG, FILE— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Jan. 11, 2018 file photo, suspected members of the MS-13 gang are escorted to their arraignmen­t in Mineola, N.Y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States