Los Angeles Times

Fear visits the fields

In Kern County, at least 26 farmworker­s are arrested in latest immigratio­n sweep.

- By Rosanna Xia

At least 26 Kern County farmworker­s were detained for deportatio­n proceeding­s as part of a mass sweep last week across Central and Northern California that federal officials said was targeted at convicted criminals.

Many of the farmworker­s appeared to have no serious criminal background and were stopped on their way to work by federal immigratio­n officers in unmarked vehicles, said Armando Elenes, a vice president of United Farm Workers of America, which has been trying to document how many people have been detained.

In one instance, Elenes said, U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents discovered the person they were looking for at a particular address no longer lived there. “But since they were there, they started to investigat­e and took some [other] people because they just happened to be there,” he said.

“This is a very divisive tactic that the Trump administra­tion is using, instead of focusing on real solutions,” he said. “These are farmworker­s who are trying to make ends meet, who are trying to work and provide for their families .... It’s creating a wave of fear throughout the entire agricultur­al community.”

A total of 232 people were arrested in the latest statewide operation targeting “individual­s who pose a threat to national security, public safety and border security,” according to a statement from ICE. The four-day sweep stretched from Bakersfiel­d to the Oregon border.

Of those arrested, 180 were either convicted criminals, had been issued a final order of removal or had been previously removed from the United States and returned illegally, ICE authoritie­s said. One hundred fifteen

had prior felony conviction­s for serious offenses — such as child sex crimes, weapons charges and assault — or had past conviction­s for significan­t or multiple misdemeano­rs.

But ICE officials said the agency “no longer exempts classes or specific categories” of undocument­ed immigrants from potential enforcemen­t action.

“During targeted enforcemen­t operations, ICE officers frequently encounter other aliens illegally present in the United States,” ICE spokeswoma­n Lori Haley said in a written statement. “These aliens are evaluated on a case-by-case basis, and, when appropriat­e, they are arrested by ICE officers.”

ICE’s latest operation comes at a time when President Trump has pushed for a sweeping crackdown on the estimated 11 million people living in the country illegally. Trump and U.S. Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions contend that law enforcemen­t agencies should give immigratio­n agents limitless access to jails and delay releasing immigrants from custody so that agents can detain them.

But many of the state’s law enforcemen­t leaders and city officials in Los Angeles, San Francisco and other municipali­ties have ignored those demands and instead have enacted policies or passed laws that restrict cooperatio­n with immigratio­n agents. Sessions

‘This is a very divisive tactic that the Trump administra­tion is using, instead of focusing on real solutions.’ — Armando Elenes, vice president of United Farm Workers of America

has lashed out against such cities and threatened to withhold federal funding from some local agencies — a move that courts have found to be unconstitu­tional.

In its statement last week, ICE said the inability to cooperate and communicat­e with local law enforcemen­t partners has “negatively impacted ICE operations in California.”

“ICE has no choice but to continue to conduct at-large arrests in local neighborho­ods and at work-sites, which will inevitably result in additional collateral arrests, instead of focusing on arrests at jails and prisons where transfers are safer for ICE officers and the community,” the statement said. “We will continue to do our sworn duty to seek out dangerous criminal aliens and other immigratio­n violators.”

In Kern County, news of the latest sweep has spread across the farming community and is sparking a sense of fear and helplessne­ss, Elenes said.

In one case in Wasco, a truck that was taking a group of five farmworker­s to the field was stopped. Immigratio­n agents started asking questions, and four of the workers were arrested.

The United Farm Workers Foundation and UFW are focused on making sure workers know their rights and understand what to do if they get stopped, Elenes said. “Most of them are being detained when [ICE] starts asking them questions and they start responding to the questions.”

Elenes is also making sure workers in the community are prepared. He urged them to put together a list of emergency contacts and to make sure, if detained, they knew who would take care of their kids.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? ICE SAID last week that policies barring local law enforcemen­t from aiding federal immigratio­n agents have “negatively impacted” its operations in California. Above, an ICE agent arrests a man in Riverside in 2015.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ICE SAID last week that policies barring local law enforcemen­t from aiding federal immigratio­n agents have “negatively impacted” its operations in California. Above, an ICE agent arrests a man in Riverside in 2015.

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