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  1. #1
    Senior Member legalatina's Avatar
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    ALabama: FEd's shut down IA labor & fake document firm

    Feds close firm accused of illegal workers on Alabama coast
    AP
    Posted: 2008-02-08 15:43:06
    GULF SHORES, Ala. (AP) - Federal immigration officials have shut down a Gulf Shores-based labor firm that authorities contend had supplied some 300 illegal workers for area employers.

    Some of the workers lived in a Gulf Shores trailer park owned by Gerald Jones, identified in court records as the owner of the firm, Skyline Services. Jones was not charged.

    But an employee, Roberto Pereida-Dias, 25, of Brazil, pleaded not guilty Thursday in U.S. District Court in Mobile to allegations that he made fake identifications in connection with that scheme.

    His lawyer, Bill Scully, said his client was an interpreter who had worked for the company for seven or eight months.

    Scully questioned whether the allegations constitute a violation of U.S. law since the documents his client is accused of faking are Mexican driver's licenses.

    Skyline operated out of two convenience stores in Baldwin County.

    Immigration agents seized two vans owned by Skyline Services and plan to deport 17 other illegal workers, who were apprehended last week.

    Jones, who had been in business since 1999, told the Press-Register in Mobile that he never knowingly hired an illegal immigrant.

    "Of course, an immigration officer I am not. They all had Social Security numbers and stuff of that nature," he said.

    Dwight McDaniel, the assistant special agent in charge for federal Department of Homeland Security's Bureau of Immigration & Customs Enforcement in Alabama, said the investigation continues.

    The grand jury brought charges of illegally re-entering the United States after previously having been deported against three men, including Jones' brother-in-law, Joel Pinho. According to court records, Pinho managed Jones' trailer park.

    Pinho, 61, pleaded not guilty Thursday. Attorneys for the other two men, Juan Gomez-Diego, 23, and Juan Gomez-Gaspar, 21, told U.S. Magistrate Judge Bert Milling Jr. that their clients intend to plead guilty.

    Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
    02/08/08 15:42 EST

  2. #2
    Senior Member greyparrot's Avatar
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    "Of course, an immigration officer I am not. They all had Social Security numbers and stuff of that nature," he said.
    Ok, this is getting really really old. Like we are to believe that all 300 of his illegal employees managed to "fool" him?

    Yeah, right.

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