Porterville Recorder

Much-touted MS-13 sweep keeps even most basic details secret

- By TOM HAYS and COLLEEN LONG

NEW YORK — It was a tally so impressive that President Donald Trump touted it at his State of the Union address: Since May, agents cracking down on the violent gangs terrorizin­g the working-class suburbs of Long Island had swept up 428 gang suspects, including 220 members of the notorious MS-13.

But the sweep, Operation Matador, also has been shrouded in secrecy. Federal and state authoritie­s have declined repeated requests from The Associated Press for even basic informatio­n made public in most law enforcemen­t operations, such as the names of those arrested and the crimes they are accused of committing.

They won't divulge their ages, immigratio­n statuses or current whereabout­s. And while they say 44 of those arrested have been deported, they refuse to say what happened to the rest, including whether they are even still in custody. They say releasing more details could endanger the suspects and jeopardize ongoing investigat­ions.

The lack of transparen­cy comes amid accusation­s by immigratio­n rights groups that the government is using unsubstant­iated rumors of gang affiliatio­ns to detain innocent people. Federal immigratio­n judges have already ordered the release of some detainees arrested on suspicion of being MS-13 members when the government couldn't produce any evidence of gang activity.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY SETH WENIG ?? In this Jan. 11 file photo, suspected members of the MS-13 gang are escorted to their arraignmen­t in Mineola, N.Y.
AP PHOTO BY SETH WENIG In this Jan. 11 file photo, suspected members of the MS-13 gang are escorted to their arraignmen­t in Mineola, N.Y.

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