Latinos on edge in wake of arrests in Willmar
Willmar residents fear another major raid as agents continue their search for certain illegal workers.

By Jean Hopfensperger, Star Tribune
Last update: April 13, 2007 – 11:31 PM



Latinos on edge in wake of arrests in Willmar

I-35E bridge removal this weekend
WILLMAR, MINN. -- A mobile-home park that is home to hundreds of Hispanics resembled a ghost town Friday, the fourth day of a government hunt for illegal immigrants that has shaken this western Minnesota city's Spanish-speaking community.
There were no children -- or adults -- out in the yards or on outdoor decks. The streets were deserted. And the curtains were closed in most mobile homes, with the owners' cars parked next to them.

"Nobody goes out of their houses now," said Cecilia Gonzales. She, her husband and children were the only people venturing outside for a walk Friday afternoon. "And people aren't driving their cars. A lot of people aren't going to work. Everyone is scared."

Immigration attorneys estimate that about 50 people have been arrested in the Willmar area since Tuesday, when immigration agents began knocking on doors in search of illegal immigrants with felony records.

Since then, immigrants have been hypervigilant for the vans with darkened windows used by immigration agents. Almost like a game of cat and mouse, immigrants report the latest van sightings to a local immigrant advocate, just as immigration officials are keeping tabs on them.

After a flurry of arrests earlier in the week, Friday brought a strange calm. Maria Diaz, a community organizer who has been fielding hundreds of calls on the arrests, said she was informed about just three arrests Friday.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) would not confirm any numbers, saying it's "an ongoing operation."

Meanwhile, some immigrants were going into hiding until the threat of deportation ended, advocates said.

Diaz, who hadn't slept in nearly two days, described the calls she'd been fielding.

"I've gotten calls from people saying, 'They just went to an apartment on Third Street,' " she said. "Or, 'They came and knocked on my door real hard, and then left.' Or, '[agents] took a person without a shirt living in a mobile home.' "

The climate of fear was devastating to local Hispanic businesses, particularly grocery stores, which are usually bustling on Friday afternoons. The aisles were practically empty Friday.

"Yesterday, they [ICE] parked their minivan right there," said Rodolfo Luna, a cashier at La Fiesta Market, pointing to the sidewalk in front of the downtown store. "People weren't coming in."It's affected business a lot," Luna said. "Even some of our workers didn't show up."

Targeted arrests

Willmar schools reported no major changes in attendance. But Diaz said many people weren't going to work, in particular at the Jennie-O meatpacking plants. Workers still have vivid memories of December's raids on Swift & Co. plants in Worthington, Minn., and elsewhere, advocates said.

In a prepared statement, Mike Tolbert, president of the Jennie-O Turkey Store, said the company had been in contact with ICE about a "small number of current and former employees."

ICE spokesman Tim Counts said agents were looking for specific individuals, not conducting random raids, as some immigrants speculated.

Most of those arrested are being held in Ramsey County and in Elk River, said Gloria Contreras Edin, executive director of Centro Legal in St. Paul. Some have managed to post bond. They include men and women from Honduras, El Salvador and Mexico, Diaz said.

Meanwhile, local religious and advocacy groups are collecting donations for families affected by the arrests. A community meeting with immigration lawyers is tentatively scheduled for Sunday.


Staff writer Dick Meryhew contributed to this report. Jean Hopfensperger • 612-673-4511 • hopfen@startribune.com




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