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  1. #1
    Senior Member Brian503a's Avatar
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    Feds arrest 56 workers

    http://www.joplinglobe.com/story.php?st ... 30050&c=87

    Feds arrest 56 workers

    Warrants served on subcontractor working at Schreiber Foods site


    Susan Redden
    Globe Staff Writer
    2/23/06
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    CARTHAGE, Mo. - Nearly 60 illegal immigrants were arrested Wednesday in Carthage when federal agents served warrants against a subcontractor working on the construction of a new distribution center for Schreiber Foods.

    Officers with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement took into custody 56 workers, all said to be residents of Mexico. Officers with the Carthage Police Department and the Jasper County Sheriff's Department assisted in the arrests.

    The action came after the federal agency served a search warrant against Reich Installation Services Inc., of Pewaukee, Wis., working as a subcontractor at the Schreiber site at 1206 W. Fairview Ave.

    In addition to arresting the immigrants for residing illegally in the United States, the criminal search warrant served by federal agents authorized the seizure of business, financial and personnel records, as well as computers maintained by Reich Installation. Of the 56 people taken into custody, 28 were Reich Installation employees, and eight others worked for Top Flight, another construction site subcontractor.

    Other work affiliations still were being determined in interviews as the immigrants were being processed for deportation, said Carl Rusnok, a public information officer for the federal agency.

    "Reich Installation Services has been associated with at least two other U.S. sites where illegal aliens have been arrested within the last year," said Elissa Brown, special agent-in-charge of the agency's Chicago office. "Employers must get the message that hiring illegal aliens is against the law. ICE will especially scrutinize those employers who are repeatedly identified in these operations."

    Brown oversees the agency's Office of Investigations for a six-state area: Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky and Wisconsin.

    It is against federal law to knowingly hire or continue to employ illegal immigrants. Punishments range from $200 for a paperwork violation to $10,000 per hiring violation, and they can include potential prison sentences.

    Brown said Wednesday's operation was part of the agency's strategy for work-site enforcement aimed at promoting national security, protecting critical infrastructure and ensuring fair labor standards. Rusnok described Wednesday's events as part of "an ongoing investigation."

    Dennis Veach, Carthage police chief, said his department was contacted by the federal agency about two weeks ago for help in gathering information on workers at the construction site.

    Veach said the workers arrested were to be taken to the regional customs office in Springfield.

    According to its Web site, Reich Installation Services designs and installs custom warehouse distribution systems in factories and warehouses.

    The Stellar Group, based in Jacksonville, Fla., is the general contractor on the Schreiber project.

    The Globe was unsuccessful in attempts to learn whether Wednesday's arrests would have an effect on the construction schedule. Telephone calls to the local office of the Stellar Group and to its corporate headquarters were not returned.

    Attempts to reach a spokesman for Reich also were unsuccessful. The person who answered the telephone at the Wisconsin office said there was no one there who could answer questions from a reporter, and then hung up.

    Schreiber officials last August announced plans for the $27 million distribution center and said it would be the company's largest distribution site in the United States.

    Agency lineage

    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is one component of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. They are parts of Border and Transportation Security, which is underneath the Department of Homeland Security. The mission of Border and Transportation Security is to secure the nation's air, land, and sea borders. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services until 2003 was the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service.
    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at http://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  2. #2
    Senior Member WavTek's Avatar
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    If ICE would do this more often, you'd see a dramatic drop in illegal aliens, in our country. This is the most effective way to put a stop to illegal aliens coming to our country. NO JOBS=NO ALIENS
    REMEMBER IN NOVEMBER!

  3. #3
    Senior Member Brian503a's Avatar
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    http://www.news-leader.com/apps/pbcs.dl ... /602240376

    Published February 24, 2006
    DEPORTATION PROCESS »

    Raid nabs 56 illegal immigrants in Carthage

    Employers face fines, jail as deportation process begins.


    Nina Rao
    News-Leader

    A group of 56 illegal immigrants is being held in the Christian County jail after immigration officials raided a job site in Carthage on Wednesday. During the next few days, the workers will be processed for deportation back to Mexico.
    The Carthage bust comes only weeks after two Ozarks residents were charged with falsifying work visas for 300 workers. It also comes as Sen. John McCain kicks off a publicity blitz for his proposal to legalize the nation's 11 million illegal immigrants.

    And it comes, say local construction workers, as area wages and working conditions are being driven down by illegal immigrants and the employers willing to hire them.

    "These people will work for practically nothing," said John Creller, field representative for Bricklayers & Allied Craftworkers Local No. 15 in Springfield. "They'll work for minimum wage without health insurance, without anything. And it's hard to blame them: They're just trying to improve their lives. But the employers should be fined and jailed."

    In the Carthage case, the employers face prison sentences and fines of up to $10,000 for each hiring violation.

    But some employers seem unimpressed by such deterrents to hiring illegal immigrants.

    One of the contractors raided in Carthage has been busted three times in the past four months, said Carl Rusnok, spokesman for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE.

    Reich Installation Services, a Wisconsin-based warehouse installation company, employed 28 of the Mexicans picked up in Carthage. Others worked for other subcontractors on a future distribution center for Schreiber Foods, according to immigration officials.

    In November and December, Reich Installation work sites in Pennsylvania and Nebraska were also raided by ICE agents.

    Neither Reich Installation nor Schreiber Foods could be reached for comment late Thursday afternoon.

    Illegal immigrants picked up in Nebraska led ICE investigators to the Carthage work site, according to an affidavit filed in the case.

    That affidavit also tells the story of how using illegal immigrants has affected Reich's operations.

    Two insiders told investigators that over the past three years, Reich has "consistently undercut industry competitors by as much as 30 percent."

    During that time, the insiders had observed "a marked increase in the number of Hispanic persons employed by Reich," the affidavit states.

    And Reich is not an anomaly, said Creller: Illegal immigrants are being employed in virtually all the construction trades in Greene County.

    "They're all over," he said. "I can drive you to several jobs sites right now."

    And it affects everyone, Creller added. For customers, it might mean shoddy work. For companies that don't employ illegal immigrants, it means fewer contracts. For legal workers, it means fewer jobs.

    "You can't compete with them if they're paying $5 an hour," he said.
    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at http://eepurl.com/cktGTn

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