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  1. #1
    Senior Member mapwife's Avatar
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    The lucrative life of a smuggler

    http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/ ... s0416.html

    U.S. employers send for immigrants

    Julie Watson and Olga R. Rodriguez
    Associated Press
    Apr. 16, 2006 12:00 AM


    SASABE, Mexico - When Pedro Lopez Vazquez crossed illegally into the United States last week, he was not heading north to look for a job. He already had one.

    His future employer even paid $1,000 for a smuggler to help Vazquez make his way from the central Mexican city of Puebla to Aspen, Colo.

    "We're going to Colorado to work in carpentry because we have a friend who was going to give us a job," Vazquez said.

    Vazquez, 41, was interviewed along the Arizona border after being deported twice by the U.S. Border Patrol. He said he would keep trying until he got to Aspen.

    His story is not unusual. A growing number of U.S. employers and migrants are tapping into an underground employment network that matches one with the other, often before the migrants leave home.

    "It continues to become clear who controls immigration. It's not governments, but rather the market," said Jorge Santibanez, director of the Tijuana-based think tank Colegio de la Frontera Norte.

    As debate over immigration heats up in the United States, more U.S. companies in need of cheap labor are turning to undocumented employees to recruit friends and relatives back home, and to smugglers to find job seekers.

    Darcy Tromanhauser, of the non-profit law project Nebraska Appleseed, said companies in need of workers rely on the networks to "pass along the information more effectively than billboards."

    "It started out more explicitly, where (meatpacking) companies used to have buses to transport people to come up, and they would advertise directly in Mexico," she said. "Now I think that happens more informally."

    At the same time, it has become less risky for companies to recruit undocumented migrants. Since the Sept. 11 attacks, U.S. prosecution of employers who hire such workers has dwindled to a trickle as the government puts its resources toward national security.

    The few cases that are prosecuted, however, highlight how lucrative a business recruiting undocumented workers has become. In one case, a single smuggler allegedly earned $900,000 over 15 months placing 6,000 migrants in jobs at Chinese restaurants across the upper Midwest.

    Shan Wei Yu, a 51-year-old Chinese-American, was sentenced in December to nine years in federal prison on charges involving the transportation of 40 of those migrants. Investigations involving the others continue.

    Rick Hilzendager, special agent for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Grand Forks, N.D., said Shan connected 6,000 migrants from Latin America with jobs in Chinese restaurants in Illinois, Michigan, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin.

    Based in Shan's home in McKinney, Texas, the Great Texas Employment Agency placed ads in newspapers in the Chicago area offering cheap labor from Latin America, investigators said.

    Shan sent a recruiter with Spanish interpreters to find migrants in Dallas willing to be fry cooks and dishwashers, Hilzendager said. A team made up mostly of undocumented Chinese immigrants rented cars and drove them up.

    Shan allegedly charged a $150 finder's fee for each migrant while the drivers earned $300 per worker. Restaurant owners deducted the $450 from workers' first-month paychecks of $1,000.

    "It was just so easy," Hilzendager said.

    Nick Chase, assistant U.S. attorney in North Dakota, said Shan offered to replace workers free of charge if one left within two weeks of starting.

    "It was a two-for-one special, like a pizza," Chase said. "Everything about it was ugly."

    The employees, housed in cramped apartments provided by employers, worked 14-hour shifts and had little outside contact. The case broke open in August 2004 after two Mexican migrants working at the Buffet House in Grand Forks fled poor conditions and were picked up along a highway by Border Patrol agents.

    To make a real dent in this network, the U.S. government would need to go after employers or make them pay the costs of legalizing workers, migration activists say.

    But an August 2005 report by the Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress, indicates the opposite is happening.

    From 1999 to 2004, the number of businesses that faced fines dropped from 417 to three, the GAO said. Data after 2004 could not be compared because the government changed the way it records data.

    Investigators say fake documents make it difficult to prove an employer has knowingly hired an undocumented worker. The business community argues that employers aren't equipped to spot fraud and warns that more investigations could lead to workplace discrimination.
    Illegal aliens remain exempt from American laws, while they DEMAND American rights...

  2. #2
    Senior Member crazybird's Avatar
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    Some national security........what a joke.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  3. #3
    Xianleather's Avatar
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    Homeland security is just as asleep as the rest of the Government....

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