The Columbus Dispatch

Immigrants anxiously anticipate ICE raids

- By Caitlin Dickerson, Jose A. Del Real and Julie Bosman

WASHINGTON — All week, Veronica had distracted herself from a constant barrage of news about a series of coordinate­d immigratio­n raids the Trump administra­tion planned to begin this weekend in cities across the country.

She worked late every night, preparing for a weeklong family vacation to Florida to visit Disney World and go fishing. She booked a three-bedroom apartment for herself and 13 family members. She packed her 4-year-old daughter’s Mickey Mouse backpack and “Frozen”-themed suitcase with clothes, stuffed animals and a blanket to sleep with.

But then, the woman who cleans Veronica’s home, who is living in the country illegally, showed her cellphone videos of immigratio­n arrests happening in Miami. The woman warned that Freddie, Veronica’s husband and partner of 15 years, who also does not have legal standing and faces deportatio­n, could be swept up. Other family members and friends started to call, saying the same.

Hours before the family was scheduled pile into cars for the long drive to Florida from their home in Prince George’s County, Maryland, Veronica called her immigratio­n lawyer for advice. The lawyer told her to cancel.

“It’s a disaster because my daughter was happy that we were taking this trip. She’s only 4 years old but she knows a lot of things,” Veronica said. “Now we don’t know how we are going to explain to her that we’re not going to be able to go on vacation anymore.”

She requested that she be identified only by her first name for fear of increasing the likelihood that they could be targeted in the raids.

President Donald Trump’s promises Friday that the administra­tion would execute a series of immigratio­n arrests nationwide added to fears that have been growing among immigrant communitie­s for more than a month, as the raids have been debated, scheduled and then reschedule­d.

The operation will target some 2,000 immigrants who crossed the border illegally recently, in groups of family units. That is a departure from what is typical for Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents, who tend to focus on deporting adults who entered the country alone. But word of the operation seems to have struck fear across targeted immigrant communitie­s, including among people who have been living here for years.

The raids were planned out of Trump’s frustratio­n over the steady stream of migrant parents and children who began crossing the border in record numbers in October, with numbers increasing almost every month since. Though border crossings dropped slightly in June, the administra­tion says the situation is still a “humanitari­an crisis.”

Caving to pressure from Democratic lawmakers and immigrant advocates who had labeled the raid operation as inhumane and unnecessar­y, Trump delayed the raids in June, saying he would give Democratic lawmakers time to adjust immigratio­n laws to tighten up the asylum process. In the absence of legislativ­e change, plans for the raids re-emerged this past week, spiking fear once again.

Now, a number of immigrants — particular­ly those in the dozen or so cities that are rumored to be a focus of the event — are making plans to evade arrest. Some have fled their homes, choosing to get as far as possible from the addresses the government has on file for them. Others are hunkering down with reserves of food, planning to shut themselves inside until the operation ends.

They are helped by the fact that ICE agents cannot forcibly enter the homes of their targets under the law. But if past tactics are any measure, agents are likely to come to the operation armed with ruses to coax people outside. They will likely have new strategies that might help to counteract the preparatio­ns immigrants who are here illegally have been making with the help of their lawyers.

Anticipati­ng that they will not manage to block all the arrests through preventive strategies, immigratio­n lawyers and advocates across the country have been working swiftly to distribute contingenc­y plans for those who are captured.

Shannon Camacho, a coordinato­r of the Los Angeles Raids Rapid Response

Network for immigrants, said the organizati­on is urging immigrant parents with children who are U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents to sign caregiver affidavits, so that if the parents are deported, the children will not be left without legal guardians.

“When people are arrested, their children can’t be picked up from school, or if they’re caring for the elderly, no one will be around to give them their medicine. We tell them to have designated people in their friends or family networks to respond,” Camacho said.

Mony Ruiz-velasco, director of PASO-WEST Suburban Action Project, a community group in Melrose Park, Illinois, said her staff and volunteers were advising families to memorize at least one phone number so that they can call for help if they are detained.

Win, the largest nonprofit provider of shelters for families with children in New York, notified families with undocument­ed members to be cautious and to leave over the weekend, if necessary, a person familiar with the instructio­ns confirmed. The nonprofit operates 11 shelters and houses about 10% of the nearly 12,000 families in the city living in shelters.

A 17-year-old girl, who lives in one of the shelters and who spoke on the

condition of anonymity, said a shelter employee used coded language to warn her family to go into hiding and to return Monday. “They said, ‘Your room is going to be very hot this weekend. Come back Monday when things cool off,’” she said.

Meanwhile, immigrants’ rights lawyers were preparing to file court motions to reopen the immigratio­n cases of people who are arrested in the operation before they can be deported. Doing so will require that the lawyers get access to the detention centers where the migrants will be held, and it is unclear whether federal officials will make such access available, lawyers said.

“We have a library at this point of different kinds of motions that we can file,” said Judy London, directing attorney of Public Counsel’s Immigrants’ Rights Project in Los Angeles. She added: “The access issue is what we are most concerned about.”

London’s organizati­on is party to a lawsuit filed this week in New York to prevent the operation. In the lawsuit, the lawyers, represente­d by the American Civil Liberties Union, claim that many of the migrants who are being targeted failed to appear in immigratio­n court — a common reason for a deportatio­n order — because the Trump administra­tion did not inform them of their

court dates.

Across the country, news of the operation sparked fear, even among immigrants who were unlikely to be affected — such as those who had never had an encounter with federal authoritie­s and were therefore unknown to the government, according to lawyers who were making preparatio­ns Friday.

That afternoon, Atlanta immigratio­n lawyer Charles Kuck took audience questions from inside the Univision 34 studio for a Facebook Live interview. Some in the audience said they had work permits or pending green card applicatio­ns, or had been granted permission by authoritie­s to voluntaril­y leave the United States but had not yet reached the deadline before which they must do so. They asked if they should be worried. In each case, his answer was no.

“There are people worrying who shouldn’t be worrying,” Kuck said in a phone interview afterward.

Democratic lawmakers also rallied around immigrants, promising to protect their rights to due process and prevent as many arrests as possible. Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Friday that the city would increase funding for legal protection­s for immigrant families, and reiterated that she had banned ICE from accessing Chicago Police Department

databases related to federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t activities.

Gov. Gavin Newsom of California posted a video on Facebook informing immigrants of their rights. And Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young of Baltimore released a statement encouragin­g anyone who was arrested to avail themselves of the city’s public immigratio­n defense fund.

The only immigrants who appear to be shielded from any deportatio­n raids, for now, are those living in New Orleans — which has been experienci­ng heavy flooding this week and bracing for Hurricane Barry. Following the agency’s usual practice during extreme weather, ICE leadership has ordered agents not to conduct enforcemen­t operations there during the storm.

Some undocument­ed immigrants have chosen to continue their routines as much as possible, in some cases a way to cope with the stress. When rumors first swirled about the latest round of immigratio­n raids, said Geovani, 24, he didn’t panic about his family’s wellbeing. In a way, this weekend would be like any other for the family from Mexico, now living in Atlanta: homecooked meals, hours lost on Facebook, down time shared among his parents and children.

 ?? [MELISSA GOLDEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS] ?? Nicole Fauster, an intern with Project South, hands out flyers about civil rights in Decatur, Ga. Planned ICE raids have immigrant advocates working overtime to anticipate dangers and spread informatio­n to terrified migrants.
[MELISSA GOLDEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS] Nicole Fauster, an intern with Project South, hands out flyers about civil rights in Decatur, Ga. Planned ICE raids have immigrant advocates working overtime to anticipate dangers and spread informatio­n to terrified migrants.
 ??  ?? Anna Ruiz, an intern with Project South, hands out informatio­n Saturday about civil rights in an Atlanta-area neighborho­od that’s home to many South Asians.
Anna Ruiz, an intern with Project South, hands out informatio­n Saturday about civil rights in an Atlanta-area neighborho­od that’s home to many South Asians.

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