Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Workers held in immigratio­n case

Federal agents detain at least two dozen at Alma food plant

- DAVE HUGHES

Federal Homeland Security Investigat­ions agents detained at least two dozen employees of an Alma food-processing plant Wednesday as part of a criminal investigat­ion.

Bryan Cox, spokesman for U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, under which Homeland Security Investigat­ions operates, wouldn’t say what agents were investigat­ing Wednesday morning at Bryant Preserving Co.

He said about 24 people were detained. He said Wednesday afternoon that he didn’t have a specific number of employees who were detained because some were still being processed. Some had been released, he said.

“If there is some violation of federal immigratio­n law, we do not turn a blind eye,” he said.

The U.S. attorney’s office for the Western District of Arkansas was aware of the raid at the plant and had no comment Wednesday, spokesman Charlie Robbins said.

Bryant Preserving released a statement Wednesday saying several plant employees were accused of document and identity fraud. It said Bryant Preserving wasn’t a subject of the investigat­ion.

“We follow all mandated verificati­on procedures and also use EVerify, a federal web-based system that allows enrolled employers to confirm the eligibilit­y of their employees to work in the United States,” the statement said.

Bryant Preserving employs 45 to 65 people

depending on the time of year, company President Phillip Bryant said.

Of the 28 employees who were detained Wednesday, 20 were women, said Mary Medina, a volunteer for Arkansas United, an immigratio­n advocacy group.

“At this moment, their kids are coming home,” she said Wednesday afternoon. “They are probably coming home to an empty home.”

About 12 Hispanic people who Medina said were worried about those who were detained showed up Wednesday afternoon at Arkansas United’s Immigrant Resource Center in the Fort

Smith Adult Education building.

Medina said Arkansas United wanted to get the word out because she believed Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t was targeting the Hispanic community to separate families.

None of the Hispanic people who were at the center wanted to go on camera when a television news crew arrived, fearing they would be subject to retaliatio­n by immigratio­n authoritie­s if they revealed themselves.

Even though they may be in the country illegally, the detained employees have rights and Arkansas United would see they get legal representa­tion to help them, Medina said.

“It’s their community,” she said. “The River Valley community

has been affected by this.”

Cox said he believed the investigat­ion at Bryant Preserving is the only Homeland Security Investigat­ions worksite investigat­ion in Arkansas.

In late July, Homeland Security Investigat­ions agents arrested at least 12 people for being in the country illegally during a raid at the Club Trois nightclub in Little Rock. Immigratio­n agents had accompanie­d Arkansas Alcoholic Beverage Control officers conducting a compliance check at the nightclub.

Prosecutio­ns of federal court cases to deport illegal aliens have been increasing. In court business Tuesday, two people, Leonel Sosme-Pucheta and Gloria Esperanza Sosme, had trial dates set in the western Arkansas’ Texarkana court division on charges of conspiracy to transport illegal aliens for financial gain.

Also on Tuesday in Texarkana, Leticia Alvarez-Bahena was scheduled for a changeof-plea hearing Oct. 3 on a charge he re-entered the country illegally after being removed.

Juvencio Gonzalez-Zepeda was ordered detained Sept. 5 after he was arrested Aug. 31, according to court records in the Hot Springs Division, on a charge he illegally re-entered the United States.

The complaint said he was identified as being in the country illegally when he was routinely screened in the Washington County jail after being arrested on suspicion of third-degree battery.

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