October 10, 2008

When ICE Comes to Your Town

By Raj Jayadev
New America Media

SAN JOSE – Eloy, Ariz., is nothing like San Jose. More than a thousand miles away, placed in the middle of the desert, it is a blazingly hot, desolate and an unremarkable town, roughly an hour and a half south of Phoenix. It is so secluded that Greyhound doesn’t even go there.

Eloy is also host to one of the largest immigration detention centers in the country, and for many is the last stop before deportation.

But now, a week after the largest immigration enforcement operation in California history, which brought in more than 1,000 people, and was a sort of coming out party for Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s new San Jose Fugitive Operation Team, the distance from San Jose and Eloy already seems significantly shorter.

An estimated 436 people were arrested by ICE from the San Francisco Bay Area – many likely headed to Eloy – and immigrant communities here are on notice: they are in a new era of immigration enforcement, and ICE could be anywhere.

The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement was established in 2003, as the largest investigative arm of the Department of Homeland Security. In order to expand ICE’s field efforts, it created Fugitive Operation Teams to locate, arrest and remove “fugitivesâ€