Orlando Sentinel

Residents reach out after ICE raids

Mississipp­i rallies around terrified children left with no parents after 680 are detained in immigratio­n sweep.

- By Jeff Amy and Rogelio V. Solis

MORTON, Miss. — Mississipp­i residents rallied around terrified children left with no parents and migrants locked themselves in their homes for fear of being arrested Thursday, a day after the country’s largest immigratio­n raid in a decade.

Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officials said 680 people were arrested in Wednesday’s raids, but more than 300 had been released by Thursday morning, ICE spokesman Bryan Cox said in an email.

Cox said 30 of those who had been released were let go at the plants, while about 270 were released after being taken to a military hangar where they had been brought after the raids. He did not give a reason except to say that those released at the plants were let go due to “humanitari­an factors.”

“They were placed into proceeding­s before the federal immigratio­n courts and will have their day in court at a later date,” he said. Officials had said Wednesday that they would release detainees who met certain conditions, such as pregnant women or those who hadn’t faced immigratio­n proceeding­s previously.

A small group seeking informatio­n about immigrants caught up in the raids gathered Thursday outside one of the targeted companies: the Koch Foods Inc. plant in Morton, a town of roughly 3,000 people about 40 miles east of the capital of Jackson.

“The children are scared,” said Ronaldo Tomas, who identified himself as a worker at another Koch Foods plant in town that wasn’t raided.

Tomas, speaking in Spanish, said he has a cousin with two children who was detained in one of the raids.

Gabriela Rosales, a sixyear resident of Morton who knows some of those detained, said she understood that “there’s a process and a law” for those living in the country illegally. “But the thing that (ICE) did is devastatin­g,” she said. “It was very devastatin­g to see all those kids crying, having seen their parents for the last time.”

On Wednesday, about 600 federal agents fanned out across plants operated by five companies, surroundin­g the perimeters to prevent workers from fleeing. Those arrested were taken to the military hangar to be processed for immigratio­n violations.

In Morton, workers were loaded into multiple buses Wednesday — some for men and some for women — at the Koch Foods plant.

A tearful 13-year-old boy whose parents are from Guatemala waved goodbye to his mother, a Koch worker, as he stood beside his father. Some employees tried to flee on foot but were captured in the parking lot.

The Rev. Mike O’Brien, pastor of Sacred Heart of Jesus Catholic Church in Canton, said he waited outside the Peco Foods plant in the city until 4 a.m. Thursday for workers returning by bus.

O’Brien said he visited a number of parishione­rs whose relatives had been arrested, including a 65year-old grandmothe­r. He said he also drove home a person who had hidden from authoritie­s inside the plant. “The people are all afraid,” he said. “Their doors are locked, and they won’t answer their doors.”

Children whose parents were detained were being cared for by family members and friends, he said.

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP ?? Gabriela Rosales, right, confers with friends Thursday outside the employee entrance to the Koch Foods Inc., plant in Morton, Miss. Federal agents raided the plant Wednesday.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP Gabriela Rosales, right, confers with friends Thursday outside the employee entrance to the Koch Foods Inc., plant in Morton, Miss. Federal agents raided the plant Wednesday.

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