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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    N.C. ICE arrests up to 25 people in immigration raids across Triangle

    ORANGE COUNTY

    ICE arrests up to 25 people in immigration raids across Triangle


    BY TAMMY GRUBB AND MARIA ELENA VIZCAINO
    tgrubb@heraldsun.com
    Correspondent
    April 13, 2018 10:07 AM


    CHAPEL HILL At least half of the men that immigration agents arrested this week in Orange and Chatham counties were not the intended targets, including three brothers who worked at a family-owned Franklin Street restaurant.

    Luis David Ordoñez and Cruz Enrique Ordoñez Guerra, who work at Roots Bakery, Bistro & Bar, were cleaning up a mobile home Wednesday on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard when men showed up wearing vests and shirts labeled "Police.” They had badges, but the word “ICE” was in small letters, neighbors said.


    Luis Ordoñez called their brother, Roots co-owner Gabriel Ordoñez Ramos, to interpret, because the agents were asking about a man who had failed to appear in court on a drunken-driving charge. Gabriel and his brothers were arrested instead.


    Now they're in a federal detention center in Atlanta, Georgia, with at least 22 other people seized across the Triangle this week. There, they will await possible bond and deportation hearings.


    "The majority of those targeted for arrest have criminal convictions beyond anything to do with their immigration status," ICE spokesman Bryan Cox said Friday.


    Durham-based El Centro Hispano identified the Orange and Chatham detainees Thursday: Besides the brothers, they included Marco Antonio Cano Velázquez, Hugo Waldemar Cano Velázquez, Manuel Isaias Ascencio Ortega, Edwin Enamorado, Otelio Mondragon, Josue Diaz Perez and Rufino Ruiz Dias.


    The nonprofit agency has started a GoFundMe page to raise $30,000 for the families' legal fees.


    Roots co-owner Turtle Harrison said he and his brother-in-law Rolando Ordoñez Ramos haven't slept in a couple of days. He drove to Raleigh to see his brothers-in-law before they were moved, but he was turned away. Now Gabriel's wife and their 5-year-old daughter are staying with his family, because she doesn't want to be alone, Harrison said.


    The arrest has deeply affected the family, he said, and their Guatemalan-style restaurant is now short-staffed. They haven't even thought about how it could affect their second location opening in Durham's Hope Valley shopping center. Gabriel came to the United States as a child, he said; the others are more recent immigrants who were bullied and beaten in their native country.


    They are good people without criminal records, who have gone to college and worked in many restaurants, Harrison said. Ordoñez and Ordoñez Guerra also worked, respectively, at Spanky's and Four Corners on Franklin Street.


    The family doesn't know how they're doing or what will happen next, he said.


    "Everybody's just absolutely distraught," Harrison said. "I'd sell everything and all the assets to the restaurants just to make sure they're OK. They're way more important than a business. ... My wife, everybody else, they would say the same thing."


    No notification


    Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents didn't let local law enforcement know they were coming, officials said.

    ICE "is not real happy" with the Orange County Sheriff's Office, which doesn't honor their requests to hold people living in the U.S. without legal permission, Sheriff Charles Blackwood said. Chapel Hill and Carrboro officers also do not make immigration status a priority.

    As a result, ICE is only alerted to immigrants in Orange County illegally when they are arrested on other charges and fingerprinted.

    Chapel Hill, Carrboro police chiefs: ‘We’re not in the immigration business’


    ICE also arrests people who come into contact with them during the process of arresting a specific person at a specific address, Cox said. They don't set up checkpoints, sweeps or raids that target random immigrants, he said.

    In 2017, 92 percent of the 143,470 people that ICE arrested across the nation either had a criminal conviction, a pending criminal charge or were subject to a federal immigration judge's removal order, he said. Roughly 74 percent had been convicted of a crime.


    That was down from 2016, when 86 percent of the 110,104 people arrested had criminal convictions, he said, and from 2015, when 85 percent of the 119,772 people arrested had criminal convictions.


    The numbers show that more people were arrested at the height of President Barack Obama's administration in 2013 — 232,287 — and 2014 — 183,703 arrests. About 73 percent of those detainees had criminal convictions,


    The Atlanta field office region, which includes Georgia and North and South Carolina, had 13,551 arrests in 2017, up from 8,886 in 2016 and 9,088 in 2015, he reported. Roughly 90 percent of the 2015 detainees had criminal convictions, compared with 88 percent who had criminal convictions in 2016 and 67 percent in 2017.


    In 2013, ICE arrested 17,600 people in the region, and in 2014, 14,274 were arrested. Between 73 percent and 75 percent had a criminal conviction.


    Priority questioned


    The National Immigration Law Center takes issue with ICE's contention that its raids are targeting specific people, particularly during President Donald Trump's administration.

    Since January 2017, when Trump issued an interior enforcement executive order, anyone who is undocumented has been a priority for deportation, center officials note, and ICE also now prosecutes anyone who entered the country illegally at any time. Previously, that only affected people caught in the act of entering the country illegally or near the border.


    There's also the growing issue of "collateral" arrests and deportations, officials said, which includes people without legal status who are in the wrong place at the wrong time and also young people with Deferred Action for Childhood Arrival status.

    Collateral arrests create a very real fear in the immigrant community, said Raleigh Immigration Law Firm attorney Beckie Moriello.

    "Obama was deporting a lot of people, but he was generally through, at least in North and South Carolina ... the jails and the courts, so people who had some sort of criminal charge," Moriello said. "Now, sometimes you have to put 'criminal' in quotes, because it's a minor traffic ticket, which most people don't consider to be a crime."


    "These last few arrests, where it's just ICE going after people, this is kind of like the boogeyman. This is stuff that you hear about, but it doesn't really happen," she said.


    The latest arrests also include people who don't have existing removal orders or other issues, Moriello said.


    "This is very new and very disturbing, and it's rightfully going to cause panic," she said.


    Knock at the door


    A knock at the door startled Olimpia Godoy, her daughter Nathaly Grijalva and their neighbor Thursday night.

    They hesitated to answer, looking at each other with wide eyes before Grijalva got up. She looked twice out the window at three young people standing on the porch, clipboards and papers in hand, and looked back at her mother, still uncertain.


    The tension eased when they learned it was a group from Siembra NC, a Greensboro-based immigrant organization, that was visiting the affected communities with advice about how to identify Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and defend their rights.


    Neighbors and their children are afraid to be outside for very long now, Godoy said, as Grijalva interpreted. Because the ICE agents looked like police, they also are worried that neighbors will be less likely to report crimes to the local law enforcement, she said.


    “We’re not against police catching real criminals, but not people who are here to work,” Godoy said.


    Update: ICE raids reportedly detain 10 people in Orange County


    That's what Siler City brothers and air-conditioning repairmen Marco Antonio Cano Velázquez and Hugo Waldemar Cano Velàzquez were getting ready to do Wednesday when ICE arrested them.


    Their only crime was moving to this country, their wives said.


    Marco’s wife Blandi Morales had left their Siler City home just 20 minutes earlier to take her 10-year-old son to school and run an errand. The couple have been married for five years and also have a 2-year-old son together.


    Now, she’s trying to figure out how to keep her family afloat, while working with a lawyer to help her husband. Her sons are sad and very confused about what’s happening, she said.


    Her sister-in-law Viviana, who was afraid to give her full name, is in a similar position. She and Hugo have three children – 2- and 8-year-old boys and a 12-year-old girl. She found out about the arrests when Hugo’s boss called; he has never missed work, she said.


    Viviana talked to Hugo by phone for a few minutes Wednesday. His record is clear and he is trying to stay calm, she said, but he told her to work hard and see if they can get him out. If they can’t, he told her to care for their children, she said.


    Tammy Grubb: 919-829-8926; @TammyGrubb

    Maria Elena Vizcaino: @vizcainomariae

    http://www.heraldsun.com/news/local/...208784089.html
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    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


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    Administrator ALIPAC's Avatar
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    25 is hardly a dent in the more than 400,000 illegal aliens freely roaming North Carolina with little or no fear of American laws or law enforcers.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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    Senior Member hattiecat's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ALIPAC View Post
    25 is hardly a dent in the more than 400,000 illegal aliens freely roaming North Carolina with little or no fear of American laws or law enforcers.
    Amen! Now, if ICE would only enact worksite enforcement on NC construction sites so some of them might self deport.

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    MW
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    Quote Originally Posted by hattiecat View Post
    Amen! Now, if ICE would only enact worksite enforcement on NC construction sites so some of them might self deport.

    Funny you mention construction site enforcement. I was recently in a new subdivision being constructed and pulled up to a curb where a handful of Hispanics (8-10) were having their lunch. I asked a question and not a single one of them understood what I was saying, not one. I live in N.C.

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

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    REPORT THESE CONSTRUCTION SITES TO ICE!!!
    ILLEGAL ALIENS HAVE "BROKEN" OUR IMMIGRATION SYSTEM

    DO NOT REWARD THEM - DEPORT THEM ALL

  7. #7
    MW
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    Quote Originally Posted by Beezer View Post
    REPORT THESE CONSTRUCTION SITES TO ICE!!!
    Unfortunately speaking English is not a requirement for someone being here legally. Becoming a U.S. Citizen, yes, being here legally, no. If I had actual proof, I'd report the company so fast you'd get dizzy just watching.

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


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