Imperial Valley Press

Documents: Plant owners ‘willfully’ used ineligible workers

- BY JEFF AMY

JACKSON, Miss. — Six of seven Mississipp­i chicken processing plants raided Wednesday were “willfully and unlawfully” employing people who lacked authorizat­ion to work in the United States, including workers wearing electronic monitoring bracelets at work for previous immigratio­n violations, according to unsealed court documents.

Federal investigat­ors behind the biggest immigratio­n raid in a decade relied on confidenti­al informants inside the plants in addition to data from the monitoring bracelets to help make their case, according to the documents.

The sworn statements supported the search warrants that led a judge to authorize Wednesday’s raids, and aren’t o cial charges, but give the first detailed look at the evidence involved in what Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officials have described as a yearlong investigat­ion.

O cials arrested 680 people during Wednesday’s operation . Three Democratic congressme­n on Friday demanded that the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice produce informatio­n. They want to know the cost of the raids, whether employers face criminal charges, whether any U.S. citizens were detained, how many parents were separated from children and whether any still remain separated.

The statements unsealed Thursday allege that managers at two processing plants owned by the same Chinese man actively participat­ed in fraud. They also show that supervisor­s at other plants at least turned a blind eye to evidence strongly suggesting job applicants were using fraudulent documents and bogus Social Security numbers.

The documents say electronic monitoring bracelet data shows people previously arrested for immigratio­n violations and not allowed to work in the U.S. were working at all seven plants raided.

There have historical­ly been few criminal conviction­s for hiring people without documents because prosecutor­s must prove employers knowingly hired someone without legal work authorizat­ion. Employers often say they were fooled by fraudulent documents.

From October 2018 to May there were eight new prosecutio­ns for hiring people workng illegally and four new conviction­s nationwide. Among those who have been sentenced to prison are the owner of an Iowa meatpackin­g plant raided n 2008 and owner of a Tennessee meatpackin­g plant raided ast year.

Companies can also face administra­tive fines based on audits of I-9 forms, which employees fill out when they’re hired, presenting documents to prove they can work legally work.

Investigat­ors allege the most brazen fraud took place at two smaller chicken processng plants — PH Food Inc. in Morton and A&B Inc. in Pelahatchi­e. Sworn statements dentify Huo You Liang of Calfornia, known to Mississipp­i employees as Victor, as owner of both.

A PH Food employee, acting as a confidenti­al informant, told Homeland Security investigat­ors that the vast majority of the 240 employees at PH’s plant in Morton and the 80 employees at A&B’s plant in Pelahatchi­e didn’t have proper work documents, including many Guatemalan­s.

The informant said employees used their real names and made-up Social Security numbers to apply for jobs at PH and A&B. “The payroll companies, as well as PH Food Inc. and A&B Inc. do not verify the authentici­ty of their documents,” the informant told investigat­ors. Mississipp­i state law requires employers to check documents using E-Verify, an otherwise voluntary online federal system.

Calls to A&B and PH Food on Friday went unanswered.

The evidence also included a video and audio conversati­on involving secretary Heather Carrillo and the informant, recorded May 14 at PH in Morton. A summary says, “Carrillo said that she was looking for some ‘papers’ for ‘Iris,’ but ‘Iris wasn’t going anywhere because she was working with Victor (Huo You Liang) for a good time (duration of employment).’” It says Carrillo said A&B manager Salvador Delgado didn’t want it reported because Carrillo knew which of his employees were real and which were fraudulent.

The agent notes investigat­ors believe Delgado was embezzling money from A&B by adding fraudulent names and Social Security numbers to the payroll and keeping the proceeds.

The warrants state PH Food uses Personnel Management Inc. of Shreveport, Louisiana, to process payroll and perform some human resource functions, and that investigat­ors believed Liang and Carrillo tried to use the contractor to minimize responsibi­lity for illegally employing workers.

Officials earlier stated that in addition to the chicken plants, they executed a search warrant in Louisiana on Wednesday. ICE spokesman Bryan Cox declined Friday to confirm that Personnel Management had been searched. The company didn’t respond Friday to a phone message and email.

Search warrants for some other poultry plants also indicate red flags about employees’ status.

One woman told agents that a Spanish-speaking human resources employee at Koch Foods in Morton looked at two different IDs in three weeks. Ana Santizo-Tapia of Guatemala also told agents that a Koch supervisor asked if she had an ankle bracelet.

Told yes, “he said it was okay, but she needed to keep it charged,” according to the warrant. The supervisor “stated that he knew ‘they’ were poor and came to the United States to work.”

Another Koch employee said she worked at one plant in Morton for 11 months under a false name, and then got a job at the town’s second Koch plant under her real name after receiving valid U.S. documents.

Koch said in a statement Friday that the Illinois company has a “strict and thorough employment verificati­on policy” and knows of no managers or supervisor­s arrested.

A human resources employee at Peco Foods plant in Bay Springs plant talked to an ICE informant about people hired twice under different names, according to the warrant applicatio­n. The human resources employee stated that “Peco Foods management does not care.”

A Friday statement from Peco said the company relies on E-Verify and “adheres strongly to all local, state and federal laws.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/ROGELIO V. SOLIS ?? Friends, coworkers and family watch as U.S. immigratio­n o cials raid several Mississipp­i food processing plants, including this Koch Foods Inc., plant in Morton, Miss., on Wednesday.
AP PHOTO/ROGELIO V. SOLIS Friends, coworkers and family watch as U.S. immigratio­n o cials raid several Mississipp­i food processing plants, including this Koch Foods Inc., plant in Morton, Miss., on Wednesday.

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