Los Angeles Times

Border agent questions 2 for speaking Spanish

Doing so in Montana ‘is very unheard of,’ the women are told.

- Associated press

HAVRE, Mont. — U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials are reviewing an encounter between a Border Patrol agent and two women who were speaking Spanish at a gas station in northern Montana, the agency said Monday.

Allegation­s have been made before of law enforcemen­t officers in Montana racially profiling people to find out their immigratio­n status.

The women, who are U.S. citizens, said the agent detained them for about 35 minutes Wednesday in Havre, a small city about 30 miles from the U.S.-Canada border. One of the women, Ana Suda, asked the agent why he asked for their identifica­tions.

“I recorded him admitting that he just [stopped] us because we [were] speaking Spanish, no other reason,” Suda wrote in a Facebook post published early Wednesday. “Remember do NOT speak Spanish sounds like is illegal.”

Neither Suda nor her friend, Mimi Hernandez, answered their cellphones or responded to text messages on Monday. In Suda’s video of the encounter, posted by KRTV of Great Falls, the agent says speaking Spanish “is very unheard of up here.”

Suda told the New York Times that she plans to file a formal complaint with Customs and Border Protection. She told the Washington Post that she planned to contact the American Civil Liberties Union for legal advice.

ACLU of Montana legal director Alex Rate said Monday that he hadn’t heard from the women yet. “The facts are troubling,” Rate said.

Customs and Border Protection spokesman Jason Givens declined to answer questions about the incident. He released a statement saying the incident is being reviewed to ensure that all appropriat­e policies were followed.

“Although most Border Patrol work is conducted in the immediate border area, agents have broad law enforcemen­t authoritie­s and are not limited to a specific geography within the United States,” the statement said. “They have the authority to question individual­s, make arrests, and take and consider evidence.”

Border Patrol agents are authorized by law to make warrantles­s stops within a “reasonable distance” from the border — defined as 100 miles under federal regulation­s. That broad authority has led to complaints of racial profiling by agents who board buses and trains and stop people at highway checkpoint­s.

Havre, which has just under 10,000 residents and is near two Native American reservatio­ns, has a mostly white population, with Latinos making up 4%, according to the U.S. census.

Last year, the 183 agents in the Havre sector made 39 arrests — just 0.01% of the 310,531 arrests made nationwide made by Border Patrol agents. Eleven of those 39 people arrested were Mexican.

Last week’s confrontat­ion happened within a day of the posting of another video showing a New York attorney ranting against Spanish-speaking restaurant workers and threatenin­g to call Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t to have them “kicked out of my country.”

A federal lawsuit filed last month claims that Havre Border Patrol agents detained for nearly 24 hours a newlywed pregnant woman and her husband from Mexico in 2016, even though both had provided agents with documentat­ion of their right to be in the country.

Customs and Border Protection has not yet filed a response to the civil claims of false arrest and imprisonme­nt, negligence and intentiona­l infliction of emotional distress.

In 2015, the Montana Highway Patrol establishe­d a policy forbidding the detention of a person to verify the individual’s status, settling a lawsuit alleging that troopers routinely pulled over people for minor infraction­s to do just that.

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