San Diego Union-Tribune

$1.17M SETTLEMENT REACHED OVER RAID AT PLANT

Immigrant workers claimed agents used racial profiling, force

- BY MIRIAM JORDAN Jordan writes for The New York Times.

Nearly 100 immigrants who were rounded up during a 2018 raid at a meat-processing plant in Tennessee have reached a $1.17 million settlement against the U.S. government and federal agents, who they said used racial profiling and excessive force during the operation, stepping on a person’s neck and punching another in the face.

The agreement, approved late Monday in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee, is very likely the first class settlement over an immigratio­n enforcemen­t operation at a work site, according to immigratio­n experts. In the past, only individual immigrants have reached settlement­s related to immigratio­n raids.

Under the terms of the settlement, members of the lawsuit will receive $550,000, or more than $5,700 each. Six named plaintiffs will receive a total of $475,000 from the federal government to resolve their claims under the Federal Tort Claims Act, which allows individual­s to be compensate­d for negligent or wrongful acts by agents of the federal government.

The Homeland Security Department did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Monday, but neither the federal government nor the agents admitted wrongdoing in the case.

Legal experts called it a rare victory for immigrants living in the country illegally.

“It is very hard to win a settlement from the U.S. government and agents in immigratio­n enforcemen­t cases,” said Stephen Yale-Loehr, a law professor at Cornell Law School who specialize­s in immigratio­n. “The outcome is particular­ly important because federal agents were held accountabl­e for overreachi­ng and racial profiling.”

In April 2018, armed agents with the Homeland Security Department and the IRS burst into the Southeaste­rn Provision meatpackin­g plant in Bean Station, a rural town in northeaste­rn Tennessee, and rounded up all but one Latino worker, including at least one U.S. legal resident and one American citizen. The only exception was a man who had hidden in a freezer.

The raid, which federal agents called “The Great American Steak Out,” was part of the Trump administra­tion’s crackdown on illegal immigratio­n — at the border and inside the country — with high-profile work-site raids that had last occurred when George W. Bush was president.

The operation followed an IRS investigat­ion that had found evidence that the owner of the company, located outside the city of Morristown, was paying plant workers in cash to evade taxes.

Latino workers were handcuffed and transporte­d to a National Guard Armory, where most were put in deportatio­n proceeding­s. At least 20 immigrants were swiftly deported. Others were released and have been fighting in court to remain in the United States.

In February 2019, several nonprofit organizati­ons, including the National Immigratio­n Law Center and the Southern Poverty Law Center, filed a lawsuit against the federal agents and the U.S. government, accusing them of targeting workers based on their ethnicity and violating their civil rights. (Last August, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee certified the case as a class action, paving the way for relief for all the Latino workers.)

A search warrant had authorized entry into the plant by federal agents, but it did not authorize the arrest of any workers, even if they were living in the country illegally, according to court documents.

The settlement will not automatica­lly allow the workers to remain in the country indefinite­ly. But they will receive a letter from the federal government confirming that they are class members in the lawsuit, which they can submit to help their immigratio­n cases. And one of the deported plaintiffs will be allowed to return to the United States.

Workers not in the country will receive their settlement through money-transfer services, such as Western Union.

Advocacy organizati­ons will now try to secure permanent legal residency for the immigrant workers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States