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  1. #1
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    Several sentenced for harboring illegals

    Several sentenced for harboring illegals
    ENQUIRER STAFF REPORT


    COVINGTON - A Fischer Homes subcontractor who pleaded guilty to harboring illegal aliens was sentenced this morning in U.S. District Court in Covington.

    Robert Pratt, of Tennessee, was sentenced to 1 1/2 years in prison. Federal prosecutors said he is cooperating in an ongoing criminal investigation. They didn't elaborate.

    He was charged with using illegal immigrants to provide labor at Fischer Homes construction sites via several local subcontracting companies he controlled. Federal immigration officials raided the sites last year following a two-year investigation into construction hiring practices. Illegal immigrants working as construction laborers were detained and later deported.


    Pratt's son, Howard Pratt, to 12 months for his role in the conspiracy.

    The elder Pratt daughter, Jacqueline Pratt-Medina, was sentenced to three years probation with the first six months of the sentence under house arrest with an electronic bracelet monitor.

    Medina's husband, Leopoldo Medina, was sentenced to five months in prison and three years on probation.

    http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/ ... /311120030
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  2. #2
    Senior Member ourcountrynottheirs's Avatar
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    Great story. Now if we could just do that all over the country...
    avatar:*912 March in DC

  3. #3
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    Every little bit helps. We are making progress against illegal immigration.

  4. #4
    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    It's a start!! Now if they just keep it up!
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  5. #5
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    Pratts were paid to take the fall
    this is a thousand times bigger then you guys will ever know
    thats all i can say for now

  6. #6
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    enquirer.com
    Contractor nabbed-again


    COVINGTON – As a federal judge gave a break to a former Fischer Homes subcontractor for cooperating in an ongoing investigation on Thursday, sheriff’s deputies were waiting in a back room to arrest him on state charges.

    Robert Pratt thought he was free until he had to begin serving his 1½-year sentence on Jan. 7 for using illegal labor. Instead, deputies hauled him off to the Boone County jail on a charge he had not paid workers’ compensation assessments to Kentucky.

    Pratt’s federal jail sentence was the longest for eight people arrested last year during a crackdown on the use of illegal immigrants in Northern Kentucky’s home-building industry.


    “American companies hiring me knew what was going on,â€

  7. #7
    Senior Member zeezil's Avatar
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    Contractor sentenced to 18 months
    1 of 7 accused of hiring illegals
    By Paul A. Long
    Post staff reporter

    A contractor who admitted supplying illegal immigrant workers to the Northern Kentucky home building industry was sentenced Thursday to serve 18 months in federal prison.

    After he was sentenced on the federal charges, Robert Pratt was immediately arrested by Boone County authorities on charges of fraud, saying he had underpaid unemployment taxes.

    Pratt, who lives in Franklin, Tenn., was one of seven people sentenced Thursday in U.S. District Court in Covington for knowingly hiring illegal workers. The other six - all of whom worked with or for Pratt, several of whom are family members - drew sentences ranging from probation and house arrest to 12 months and a day in prison.

    Pratt, called the ringleader and mastermind of the ring, received the stiffest sentence. Still, his penalty was cut in half from what it could have been, because he has cooperated with authorities who continue to investigate what companies knew about the illegal immigrants working for them.

    U.S. District Judge David Bunning told Pratt during the hearing that his role in organizing, paying, housing and transporting the illegal workers to their jobs called for a substantial sentence. Pratt not only used his cultural connections to Mexican workers to take advantage of them - he is bilingual and of Mexican descent - but he used his own children to set up and run some of his companies, Bunning said.

    Pratt also betrayed his fellow countrymen in the United States by using the illegal immigrants, a cheap source of labor that denies better paying jobs to those here legally and puts honest businesses at a competitive disadvantage, said Bunning.

    "You were the brain trust behind the conspiracy," Bunning said.

    In May 2006, agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement raided several Fischer Homes building sites in Boone County, rounding up nearly 100 people. Most were illegal immigrants from Mexico or Central America, but at least a dozen were contractors who provided workers for construction of the homes.

    Also arrested were four supervisors from Fischer Homes. A fifth supervisor was subsequently indicted, but the charges against all five were eventually dropped after the key witnesses against them fled the country.

    Fischer has not been charged, and its officials deny they knew of any illegal immigrants working for it.

    But the investigation is continuing. Fischer was conspicuously not mentioned during Thursday's three-hour hearing, and when Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert McBride spoke about Pratt's specific cooperation, he did so privately with the judge.

    In the other cases, McBride spoke openly about the cooperation of the witnesses and defendants.

    During his hearing, Pratt alluded to other, unnamed companies that were "fully aware" he was hiring and employing illegal immigrants.

    He said he is far from the only person who hires illegal immigrants. They are in restaurants, farms and fields, and throughout the construction and other industries, he said. He maintained that rather than taking advantage of the workers, he was helping people who were looking for good, honest work.

    "I never intended to get anyone in trouble," he said. "I never thought it was that big a deal ... when I was doing it."

    Two of the others sentenced Thursday, Pratt's son, Howard Pratt, and his daughter, Jacqueline Pratt-Medina, were the owners of companies Pratt actually ran, McBride said.

    The son and daughter shied away from running the companies - Pratt-Medina because she had little knowledge of the business and did mostly clerical work, and Howard Pratt because he avoided most work and had a poor work ethic, McBride said.

    Howard Pratt was sentenced to 12 months and one day in prison. McBride said while he did little to run the company - his father eventually fired him - he was an American citizen who took advantage of those who were not. His cooperation in the investigation was minimal, McBride said.

    His sister, on the other hand, received probation. While she also had a small role in running the company, she gave investigators information about how her father and brother flagrantly broke the law.

    McBride attributed her cooperation to "her feelings of guilt ... and trying to make this right," he said.

    OTHERS INVOLVED
    Also sentenced Thursday were:
    -- Alfredo Medina-Mejia and his brother, Leopoldo Medina, who is husband to Jacqueline Pratt-Medina. Each received five months in prison. The two men, both in the United States illegally, worked for Robert Pratt and later formed a company to hire and pay other illegal workers.
    -- Luciano Salazar, who also received a five-month prison sentence. He was a crew chief for a Pratt company and paid the illegal workers.
    -- Ruben Trejo-Soto, a naturalized American citizen. He received a sentence of 12 months and one day. He and his brother, Jose Trejo, set up R&J Framing and recruited workers from Mexico to work in Northern Kentucky.
    http://www.immigrationwatchdog.com/?p=5134
    http://news.cincypost.com/apps/pbcs.dll ... /711160378
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  8. #8
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    I always wonder just how did they target the people they decide to raid and the owners they decide to prosecute?

    There are thousands and thousands - what causes one to be a target?

    There are so many companies blatantly working illegals, yet they don't get raided?
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  9. #9
    Senior Member mapwife's Avatar
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    Once again petty little nothing sentences for crimes against humans. If it were drugs and not humans, they'd see longer sentences.
    Illegal aliens remain exempt from American laws, while they DEMAND American rights...

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