Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

High school swept up in immigratio­n furor

A furious debate erupts after authoritie­s say a suspect in the rape of a student had entered the United States illegally.

- By Brian Witte

BETHESDA, Md. — Outside a Maryland high school dragged into the national immigratio­n debate by an alleged rape, a makeshift sign reflects that strain: “Rockville Strong.”

Rockville High School students and parents declined to comment Thursday about the case involving a 14-year-old girl and a suspect authoritie­s say came to the U.S. illegally from Central America.

One mother would only point to the sign made of red plastic cups in a ballpark fence.

Protesters on both sides of the debate converged on a nearby elementary school earlier Thursday during a visit by U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos. And the White House has weighed in, saying President Donald Trump has made a crackdown on illegal immigratio­n a priority “because of tragedies like this.”

The Montgomery County school system has been besieged by hundreds of racist and xenophobic calls. In response, schools beefed up police presence in an attempt to reassure the anxious community.

“Now we're starting to receive calls that are threatenin­g, saying they're going to shoot up the illegals in our school,” said Derek Turner, a school system spokesman. He noted that the calls marked “a whole new level of vitriol that we haven't seen before.”

The latest flashpoint in the immigratio­n debate started out as a sexual assault case. Last Friday, 18-year-old Henry Sanchez and 17-year-old Jose Montano were charged with first-degree rape and two counts of first-degree sexual offense.

Police said the girl was walking in a hallway when one of them asked her to have sex and she refused. Montano forced her into a boy's bathroom stall and they raped her, police said.

Sanchez, who is from Guatemala, came to the U.S. illegally in August and was encountere­d by a U.S. Border Patrol agent in Texas, federal immigratio­n officials said. He was eventually released to live with his father.

Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officials wouldn't comment on Montano, who is a minor but is charged criminally as an adult.

Federal law requires public schools to admit students even if they are in the country illegally.

“As a mother of two daughters and grandmothe­r of four young girls, my heart aches for the young woman and her family at the center of these terrible circumstan­ces,” DeVos said in a statement before her visit to the elementary school. “We all have a common responsibi­lity to ensure every student has access to a safe and nurturing learning environmen­t.”

DeVos was there with Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan for National Reading Month.

The county of Montgomery is Maryland's largest, with a population of 1 million people. It's considered politicall­y progressiv­e and voted overwhelmi­ng for Hillary Clinton during the past presidenti­al election.

More than half its residents identify themselves as black, Hispanic or Latino, Asian or Pacific islander, or an ethnicity other than non-Hispanic white, according to the 2010 census.

Rosa Segura was one of the demonstrat­ors at Carderock Springs Elementary School. The Takoma Park woman said she came to stand up for immigrants at a time when the Trump administra­tion is cracking down on them.

“Whatever the case may be, they cannot stand up for themselves, so I thought it was important for me to come out here today as a person with more privilege than some of these students may have to make sure their voices are heard,” Segura said.

Trump has signed a pair of executive orders aimed at illegal immigratio­n, and his Homeland Security Department has made clear that just about any immigrant in the country illegally is a priority for deportatio­n. Included in one of those orders was a directive to publicly disclose, on a weekly basis, crimes attributed to immigrants and details about jails that aren't cooperatin­g with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s.

The Homeland Security Department has also announced plans to establish an office dedicated to helping victims of immigrant crimes. Critics of the president's effort have argued that he is unjustifia­bly vilifying immigrants.

Other protesters at the elementary school voiced their displeasur­e with a bill in the Maryland Legislatur­e that would prevent authoritie­s from stopping or detaining people solely to ask about their immigratio­n status. It also would block correction­s officials from holding arrestees in jail at the request of Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents.

Supporters call it the Maryland Trust Act, designed to boost trust between immigrants and police. Critics say it would help protect people who have been deported after committing crimes and returned to the state.

The Republican governor promised to veto it earlier this week.

“The Maryland House of Delegates tonight passed an outrageous­ly irresponsi­ble bill that will make Maryland a sanctuary state and endanger our citizens,” Hogan said in a statement Monday night.

Eleni Dorian, a mother of two girls in Montgomery County schools, supports the governor's veto and worries there are too many immigrants coming into the country. She said the bill would “open the floodgates” in a state that she believes already has lax immigratio­n policies.

“Our schools would be overwhelme­d,” Dorian said.

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 ?? BRIAN WITTE/AP ?? Plastic cups spell out Rockville Strong, at Rockville High School in Rockville, Md.
BRIAN WITTE/AP Plastic cups spell out Rockville Strong, at Rockville High School in Rockville, Md.
 ?? MONTGOMERY COUNTY MD. POLICE DEPT./AP ?? Immigratio­n officials say Henry Sanchez, 18, one of two students charged with raping a 14-year-old girl in a Maryland high school entered the U.S. illegally.
MONTGOMERY COUNTY MD. POLICE DEPT./AP Immigratio­n officials say Henry Sanchez, 18, one of two students charged with raping a 14-year-old girl in a Maryland high school entered the U.S. illegally.

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