Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. changes plan for raids on migrants

Few arrests seen; operation now spread out over a week

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

Coordinate­d federal raids targeted migrant parents and their children over the weekend, but only a few cities reported a handful of arrests.

The operation was originally intended as a nationwide show of force, part of President Donald Trump’s plan to apprehend thousands of recently arrived migrants who are not eligible to remain in the country. But the plan was changed at the last minute because of news reports that had tipped off migrant communitie­s about what to expect, according to several current and former Department of Homeland Security officials familiar with the matter.

Instead of a large, simultaneo­us sweep, authoritie­s created a plan for a smaller and more diffuse series of apprehensi­ons to roll out over roughly a week. Individual Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t field offices were given the discretion to decide when to begin, one official said.

The first reports of Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t activity arrived Friday and Saturday. In Chicago, a mother was apprehende­d with her daughters, but the family was immediatel­y released under supervisio­n, according to a person familiar with the operation.

In New York City, Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents attempted two arrests Saturday in the Sunset Park area of Brooklyn, and a third in East Harlem, according to the mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs.

“No arrests were made to our knowledge,” the mayor’s office said in a statement.

An additional operation was reported in Florida.

Immigratio­n authoritie­s planned to continue making arrests throughout the week in at least 10 cities. They had identified at least 2,000 targets for the raids, but typically, only 20% to 30% of the targets of Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t are apprehende­d.

The operation was originally scheduled for late June, but it was postponed after opposition from Democratic lawmakers and migrant advocates. Trump confirmed Friday that it would go ahead over the weekend.

Mark Morgan, the acting director of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, said on Sunday’s Fox & Friends Weekend that the operation was about “the rule of law” and “those individual­s who remain here illegally, especially those who’ve received due process more than any other nation in the world would provide someone that came here illegally, to include those with final [deportatio­n] orders, that there are consequenc­es to those that remain here illegally.”

Mexican officials, meanwhile, say they expect 1,807 Mexicans who have been issued final deportatio­n orders in the U.S. will be returned to their country in the coming days.

Officials at the Mexican Foreign Affairs Ministry say there was no indication of an uptick in arrests of Mexicans without visas in major U.S. cities as of mid-Sunday, but that Mexican consulates are ready with legal assistance for additional migrants caught in sweeps.

For its part, Mexico deported 364 Hondurans back to their country on Friday and Saturday alone, part of an effort to reduce arrivals of Central American migrants in the U.S.

MIGRANT SANCTUARIE­S

The threat of arrests alone was enough to spark concern and upend weekend plans for many migrants, including those who feared that the raids could sweep up far more people than just those who were targeted.

Many were hunkering down indoors or went into hiding as far as possible from the addresses that the federal authoritie­s had on file for them.

Churches in areas that expected Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t operations responded in a variety of ways.

Cardinal Blase Cupich, the archbishop of Chicago, wrote a letter to archdioces­e priests this month saying, “Threats of broad enforcemen­t actions by [Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t] are meant to terrorize communitie­s.” He urged priests in the archdioces­e — which serves more than 2 million Catholics — not to let any immigratio­n officials into churches without identifica­tion or a warrant.

The Rev. Robert Stearns, of Living Water in Houston, organized 25 churches in the city to make space available to any families who wanted to seek sanctuary while they sorted out their legal status. A dozen churches in the Los Angeles areas also declared themselves sanctuarie­s.

The early-morning crowd for Spanish-language Mass was only slightly smaller than usual at St. Clare de Montefalco in Chicago, where stacks of paper advising migrants of their rights during arrests sat on card tables outside the sanctuary. Multiple attendees, seemingly nervous about the threatened sweeps, declined interviews.

Another Chicago church run by vocal migrant-rights advocates reported a big drop in attendance, however.

At Chicago’s Adalberto United Methodist, the Rev. Emma Lozano attributed the large number of no-shows to fear. She said street vendors who sell food outside the church also were absent.

In Los Angeles, the Rev. Fred Morris of the North Hills United Methodist Hispanic Mission said he was relieved to see everyone who usually attends the early Sunday morning service.

“Everybody is nervous,” Morris said. “They are angry, very angry at being terrorized by our president.”

REMOVING FAMILIES

The operation is one of the first to target not only single adults who are in the country illegally, but also parents and children who are part of the recent wave of migrant families who have arrived from Central America and elsewhere on the southern border.

All of those targeted have been issued orders of deportatio­n, in many cases because they failed to appear in immigratio­n court as directed. Lawyers for some of the migrants say that a large number of recent arrivals were not informed of their court dates and did not know where or when to appear.

John Cohen, the former acting undersecre­tary at the Department of Homeland Security during President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, called the raids impractica­l. Cohen said there were a large number of deportatio­ns during the Obama administra­tion but that they mainly involved single adults who had been convicted of crimes.

“During Obama, the overwhelmi­ng majority of enforcemen­t actions targeted criminal aliens,” Cohen said. “This operation apparently specifical­ly targets families who for the most part present no risk.”

Cohen said the raids were not likely to improve the situation at the border, where holding facilities have been packed with migrants.

Trump pushed back Sunday against reports that the holding facilities were keeping migrants in substandar­d conditions, tweeting that centers for children are fine and that areas for single men “were clean but crowded — also loaded up with a big percentage of criminals.”

“Sorry, can’t let them into our Country,” Trump tweeted. “If too crowded, tell them not to come to USA, and tell the Dems to fix the Loopholes - Problem Solved!”

Ken Cuccinelli, the acting director of U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, said the facilities weren’t designed for the “swamping” of migrants and that Congress could address the conditions by providing more funding and changing asylum laws that he said encourage migrants to come to the U.S.

“Congress has let it happen,” Cuccinelli said on ABC’s This Week.

U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, said he expects a vote before lawmakers’ August recess on his bill to stem the flow of migrants. He proposes requiring that migrants from Central America apply for asylum in Mexico or their home countries instead of in the U.S. The legislatio­n also would provide more aid to those nations, particular­ly El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras.

“This is a sick system,” Graham said on Fox News’ Sunday Morning Futures. “It is rotten to its core.”

But U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., a 2020 presidenti­al candidate, said Trump is trying to keep Americans’ focus off issues such as improving U.S. infrastruc­ture.

“He wants chaos because it distracts everyone from all of these other things we should be talking about,” Klobuchar said on ABC. “He wants us to be talking about this today, and he uses these people as political pawns.”

Officials at the Mexican Foreign Affairs Ministry say there was no indication of an uptick in arrests of Mexicans without visas in major U.S. cities as of mid-Sunday, but that Mexican consulates are ready with legal assistance for additional migrants caught in sweeps.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Caitlin Dickerson of The New York Times; by Sophia Tareen, Adriana Gomez, Colleen Long, Julie Walker, Claire Galofaro and staff members of The Associated Press; and by Mark Niquette and Ben Brody of Bloomberg News.

 ?? The New York Times/MELISSA GOLDEN ?? Adelina Nicholls, executive director of the Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights, briefs staff members and volunteers Sunday in anticipati­on of immigratio­n raids in Atlanta.
The New York Times/MELISSA GOLDEN Adelina Nicholls, executive director of the Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights, briefs staff members and volunteers Sunday in anticipati­on of immigratio­n raids in Atlanta.

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