USA TODAY US Edition

ICE arrests 280 at Texas company

- John Bacon Contributi­ng: Alan Gomez

More than 280 employees of a north Texas telecommun­ication repair company were arrested by federal immigratio­n officials in the largest work site operation in more than a decade, Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t said.

ICE’s Homeland Security Investigat­ions unit executed criminal search warrants Wednesday at CVE Technology Group and four related businesses. CVE is based in Allen, about 25 miles north of Dallas.

“The investigat­ion is ongoing, but we can disclose that this is the largest ICE work site operation at one site in the last 10 years,” said Katrina Berger, HSI Dallas special agent in charge.

She said the agency began the investigat­ion in January after receiving multiple tips that the company may have knowingly hired undocument­ed immigrants, many of whom used fraudulent identifica­tion documents.

Wendy Armas, a Guatemalan national with two teen children, told NBCDFW.com she’s worked at CVE since arriving in the USA five years ago. She said she was arrested and bused away, then released after promising to appear in court next month.

“The hardest thing was when the bus started taking off,” she said. “There was a long moment of silence, people crying, people saying, ‘I’m going to leave this country and go back to my own.’ ”

ICE officials wouldn’t say whether any managers or employers were arrested during the raid.

The Trump administra­tion has returned to large-scale immigratio­n work raids that were prevalent under President George W. Bush but shunned by President Barack Obama. Trump administra­tion officials said they will target employers and employees equally during their work raids, but ICE data shows that employees have been the biggest target for ICE agents by far.

In the 2018 fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, 113 members of management were charged with violations, compared with 666 workers. ICE agents executed 1,525 “administra­tive arrests” – those for basic immigratio­n violations that are predominan­tly used against workers.

All of those arrested will be interviewe­d by ICE staff to record any medical, sole-caregiver or other humanitari­an situations, ICE said in a statement. Based on these interviews, ICE will determine whether they remain in custody or are considered for release.

“Unauthoriz­ed workers often use stolen IDs of legal U.S. workers, which can profoundly damage for years the identity-theft victim’s credit, medical records and other aspects of their everyday life,” the ICE statement said.

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