Rockford Register Star

Hispanic residents in Ga. fear backlash

- Rachel Looker and Christophe­r Cann

ATHENS, Georgia – The national debate over immigratio­n intensifie­d last week after Donald Trump excoriated President Joe Biden, saying his border policies are to blame for the death of a 22-year-old nursing student who authoritie­s allege was killed by an undocument­ed immigrant in Athens, Georgia.

Republican­s up and down Georgia are also blaming Democratic policies and pushing for tough immigratio­n laws that would make it more difficult to cross the border.

Now, Hispanic residents in Athens say they fear the fiery rhetoric will lead to backlash against the Hispanic and immigrant communitie­s, leaving individual­s at risk of violence or harsh local policies.

“People are scared,” said Maria, a clerk at a Mexican grocery store in Athens. Those interviewe­d asked that only their first or middle names be used because of their immigratio­n status and fears of retaliatio­n. “I can understand that because this terrible thing has turned to all of us immigrants . ... We’re not all the same. One bad man cannot change the face of all Hispanic people.”

Laken Riley, a former University of Georgia student, was reported missing by a roommate after she didn’t return from a morning run last week. Police later found her dead in a wooded area on campus.

Authoritie­s arrested Jose Antonio Ibarra, 26, in connection with her death on murder and assault charges. Federal authoritie­s said he entered the U.S. illegally in 2022 and was arrested at least once before.

Trump’s message linking immigrants to violent crime has been one of his signature platforms. From first announcing he would be running for president in 2015 − where he claimed Mexico sent “rapists” to the United States − Trump has used the same term to describe Mexican immigrants throughout his campaign and time in the White House.

Research suggests immigrants commit fewer crimes than people born in the U.S.

Republican Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp and former President Donald Trump have both placed blame for the tragedy on Biden, accusing his “failed policies” for allowing violent crime in the country.

“The American people know exactly what happened,” Kemp told Fox News Tuesday. “This president ... did not (secure the border) . ... Now we have a dead young woman because of it.”

Biden and Trump both visited the border last week, clashing over policy for reforms. Biden called for Congress to pass bipartisan legislatio­n that would introduce some of the toughest restrictio­ns at the border in a generation.

“Both houses supported this legislatio­n until someone came along and said, ‘Don’t do that, it will benefit the incumbent,’ ” Biden said, blaming Trump for the bill being stymied. “That’s a hell of a way to do business in America for such a serious problem.”

Trump, speaking in Eagle Pass, Texas, Thursday, referred to “Biden migrant crime” when discussing Riley’s death. He blamed Biden for allowing millions of people to come into the U.S. from other countries and asserted that migrants are dangerous and “coming from prisons.”

The immigratio­n debate spurred by Riley’s killing has led one Georgia bill, first introduced earlier this year, to gain momentum in the state legislatur­e. The legislatio­n would restrict funding for Georgia law enforcemen­t agencies that fail to aid federal immigratio­n authoritie­s, such as Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t.

It would also require every eligible police and sheriff’s department to help identify undocument­ed immigrants, arrest them and detain them for deportatio­n.

Georgia House Republican­s passed it Thursday.

Samuel Thomas, an immigratio­n attorney in Athens said the bill allows the state to crack down on any sheriff’s department or local law enforcemen­t agency that does not cooperate with ICE.

“I believe that they (immigrants) are sharing some anxiety right now given the fact that what Georgia is trying to do with their new bill is crackdown on any kind of arrest to try to get the status of the person you’re putting under arrest,” he said.

Jean-Luc Rivera, deputy executive director of the Latino Community Fund Georgia, an organizati­on supporting Latinx and Hispanic communitie­s in the state, spent Thursday at the Capitol in Atlanta to lobby state legislator­s to vote against the bill. He claims the legislatio­n is spreading fear and creating a “pressure cooker environmen­t” among the immigrant and Hispanic communitie­s.

The Hispanic Student Associatio­n at the University of Georgia, where Riley was a former student, said in a statement on Instagram that the group has received hatred and bigotry following Riley’s death.

“The hurtful and discrimina­tory comments made following the tragic loss of one of our own have deeply shaken us all,” the statement read.

Rivera’s organizati­on, the Latino Community Fund Georgia, also denounced hateful comments members of the Hispanic community are receiving, saying in a statement that certain characteri­stics should not be used to make generaliza­tions or accusation­s about large groups of people.

“We firmly reject any comments, or statements that imply immigrants and or Latinos are dangerous or a problem to our communitie­s,” the group says.

Rivera said he was first shocked when he heard about Riley’s killing.

“But then things started to take a turn and you could see that this was going to be used as a political chip as well,” he said. “That’s when I started to get very concerned about how this would affect the immigrant community in Georgia.”

Rivera said he thinks the politiciza­tion of Riley’s murder detracts from the main issues − like violence against women − and leads to retaliator­y legislatio­n against immigrants, race baiting and more divisive tactics.

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