Seven illegal immigrants arrested in Perkins, Sandusky traffic stops
By MIKE FITZPATRICK | Wednesday, April 1, 2009 7:12 AM EDT

SANDUSKY

Seven illegal immigrants were arrested early Sunday morning in two separate traffic stops.

It marked the second time this month local police aided in catching illegalimmigrants.

On March 2, a Perkins police officer pulled over a van and found 12 illegal immigrants from Mexico.

All of the immigrants in that arrest were living in Ft. Wayne, Ind., and have since been deported to Mexico, according to an immigration spokesman.

A Perkins police officer pulled over a 2002 Chevrolet Prizm at 1:46 a.m. Sunday morning after he spotted the vehicle making an illegal turn onto West Perkins Avenue.

Porifirio A. Lopez, 28, 1200 block S. Bay Drive, Port Clinton, admitted when interrogated he was in the country illegally.

He told police he'd been living in Port Clinton for two years.

Binicio C. Munoc, 29, 1700 block W.Perkins Ave., was a passenger in the vehicle. He was also in the country illegally, police said. Both men were taken to the Erie County jail, where they were detained for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency.

Nine minutes after Perkins police pulled over the two men, Sandusky police pulled over a 2000 Dodge Caravan after it was spotted traveling the wrong way on Tiffin Avenue near the railroad tracks.

Police discovered five illegal immigrants inside the van. They took Fidel Morales-Sunun, 47, first block Grand Ave., Norwalk; Julio Hernandez, 42, first block Grand Avenue, Norwalk; Gamaliel Morales-Sunun, 29, 5100 block U.S. 250, Norwalk; Roman Velazquez-Gonzalez, 28, 5100 block U.S. 250, and Eloy Rodriguez, 38, first block Grand Ave., Norwalk, to the Erie County jail, where they were held for ICE officials, the report stated.

On Monday, a woman who declined to give her name took custody of the van from Sandusky police.

The woman said she knew family members of one of the detainees and went to the police station Sunday morning after the men were taken into custody. She said she acted as an interpreter for the men.

The men were in Erie County to earn money for their families, she said. Illegal immigrants are often employed in jobs Americans refuse to do, such as low-paying factory work or jobs in the agricultural industry, she said.

"Mexicans come over here to support families and kids," she said. "They're not here to steal jobs."

Typically, illegal immigrants are flown by ICE back to their native countries.

Khaalid Walls, a spokesman for the Detroit division of ICE, did not return two calls for comment.

http://www.sanduskyregister.com/article ... 261083.txt