Can police agencies be sued for not upholding the law and ignoring illegals? Wayne County, NY actually goes out of their way to keep illegals out of court unless they commit murder, which they were forced to charge an illegal for so severely beating his illegal girlfriend, he killed he pre-born child. After seeing the farmer admit of TV he knew they were illegal, I asked the WC DA why the farmer wasn't arrested for knowingly hiring illegals and he told me I needed to contact the NYS DA, it ws out of his juristiction.(????)

http://www.waynetimes.com/articles/063008/feature1.asp
Wednesday, October 01, 2008

Illegal entrants being given special treatment?
Juan Casarubia-Rendon, an illegal entrant, was stopped for DWI with a blood alcohol level of .32%, no license, no insurance, released on an appearance ticket and driven home by deputies

Some farmers won't admit it publicly, but things are changing. Years ago, Mexican migrant workers travelled the planting and harvest seasons across the country without much notice. Area farmers could rely on many of the same migrant workers returning to Wayne County and to the same farms year after year. There was no denying, the Mexican workers were hard working and filling a job sector locals shunned away from.

Of all the migrant trade, Mexicans were the most reliable, most consistent and the group with the fewest problems for local authorities. Over the past several years, local police agencies have seen a change among the transient groups. Stabbings, prostitution, drugs, check schemes and especially crimes involving driving are notably on the rise. It was estimated by one law enforcement administrator that as many as half of migrants may be operating vehicles illegally.

Although the majority of Mexican migrants still adhere to the old standards of hard work and the policy of sending weekly monies back to their families across the border, Mexican workers are falling into the same pattern followed by earlier migrant workers including Puerto Rican, Jamaican and poor Afro-Americans, once the staple of the migrant circuit.

Another change in the migrant population over the years is the rise in illegal migrant workers. The U.S. Border Patrol definitely stepped up arrests after 911, conducting searches at area farms for illegal aliens and parking lots of area supermarkets and shopping centers. The U.S. Border Patrol has reportedly been very active in the Sodus area for the past several months, according to Sodus Police Chief Sharon Purdy, stating they were responding to citizen complaints.

Some County farmers and migrant social organizations have howled about some of the enforcement that has scared some migrants from returning to the area, accusing police agencies of targeting Hispanics.

Sodus Town Supervisor, Steve LeRoy, said he has been approached several times by members of migrant social groups, complaining about police agencies and border patrol agents “hasslingâ€