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  1. #1
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    U.S.-born children feel effects of immigration raids

    Keep in mind this is the LA Times.
    Such stories are sad but children often suffer the consequences of the actions of their parents, that's a hard fact of life
    .
    ~~

    U.S.-born children feel effects of immigration raids
    Federal agents say they try to act humanely when a parent is arrested, but advocates charge that youngsters are often traumatized and are sometimes left without supervision.
    By Anna Gorman
    Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

    June 8, 2008

    Yesenia Rangel, 12, looked out her window on a Friday morning in February and saw several officers with the letters "ICE" on their sleeves.

    Yesenia immediately called her neighbors to warn them that immigration officers were outside their Compton apartment building. Then she watched in tears as officers handcuffed her father and took him away.

    During the three weeks he was detained, Yesenia said, her schoolwork suffered and she could barely sleep.

    "I thought, 'I'm never going to see my dad again,' " said Yesenia, a U.S. citizen by birth.

    As federal authorities expand immigration enforcement in California and throughout the nation, teachers, mental health professionals and immigrant rights advocates are raising concerns about the effect on children like Yesenia who are U.S. citizens.

    Last month, a California congresswoman held a hearing on the raids' consequences for children.

    "The administration must take the necessary steps to ensure that these raids are conducted in a humane fashion and they are protective to kids, not harmful," said Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-Petaluma).

    During the hearing, an elementary school principal from the Bay Area city of San Rafael, testified that local immigration raids in 2007 traumatized children and resulted in high absenteeism and low test scores.

    National Council of La Raza President Janet Murguia testified that immigration agents instilled fear among children by conducting enforcement operations near public schools and Head Start programs. The Latino civil rights organization released a report last year that found several children were left to fend for themselves when their parents were detained.

    According to the report, about 5 million children in the U.S. have an undocumented parent and two-thirds of those children are U.S. citizens.

    Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials say they strike a balance between enforcing the law and humanitarian issues that arise.

    Last year, the agency worked with Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) to set new humanitarian guidelines for large work-site raids and to consider making special arrangements for certain people who are arrested, such as nursing or pregnant mothers or immigrants who serve as sole caregivers to children or seriously ill relatives.

    They also issued a memo directing agents not to take children into custody if they are U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents and instead try to coordinate care with child welfare authorities.

    Spokeswoman Virginia Kice said the federal agency goes to extraordinary lengths to address family concerns. But once an immigration judge has determined that a person does not have a legal right to be in the United States, the agency is going to carry out the judge's order, she said.

    Advocates who favor stricter controls on immigration said illegal immigrant parents -- not the government -- are to blame.

    "The impact on their children is their responsibility, not ours," said Barbara Coe of the California Coalition for Immigration Reform.

    Ron Prince, an anti-illegal-immigration activist, said he sympathizes with the children but that the government cannot make exceptions for families. "By not enforcing our law, we encourage people to break it," he said.

    But advocates and psychologists maintain that arresting parents in front of children and detaining and deporting them is unfair to children. They argue that the immigration guidelines are not sufficient and are not followed consistently.

    "The children have rights," said Oswaldo Cabrera, who has started a program in Los Angeles called Adopt an Immigrant to symbolically adopt illegal immigrants and to promote legislative reform. "All children have the right to be protected."

    Yesenia's father, Bulmaro Rangel, came to the country about 15 years ago and works cleaning houses. He and his wife, Maria Ramos, have four U.S.-born children ages 6 to 13.

    Rangel, 38, said he was still in his pajamas and was getting the car ready to take his four children to school when immigration officers asked him for his name and his immigration status. They arrested him and went to his front door.

    His wife, fearing that officers would arrest her too, refused to open the door and instead passed a change of clothes through the window.

    "My instinct as a mother was stronger than my instinct as a wife," Ramos, 40, said. "I had to protect my children."

    Even with her father released on bond, Yesenia said, she still worries that agents are going to return.

    In another case, Yolanda Mendez, 12, called her father one day in March 2007 to tell him that her mother, an epileptic, was sick and that she needed help. But her father didn't arrive home. "I thought something bad had happened to him," she said.

    The family reported him missing and searched throughout the city. Three days later, Yolanda said, her father, Santiago Mendez, 39, called to tell them that he had been arrested by immigration officers during a traffic stop and that he was in a detention center.

    Yolanda said she was relieved that he was alive but scared about him being deported.

    Mendez was also released on bond after several weeks. But Yolanda said his arrest and detention were unfair to her and her brother.

    "It's painful to us when they take our parents away from us," she said. "It's wrong."

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  2. #2
    Senior Member miguelina's Avatar
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    But advocates and psychologists maintain that arresting parents in front of children and detaining and deporting them is unfair to children. They argue that the immigration guidelines are not sufficient and are not followed consistently.

    "The children have rights," said Oswaldo Cabrera, who has started a program in Los Angeles called Adopt an Immigrant to symbolically adopt illegal immigrants and to promote legislative reform. "All children have the right to be protected."
    What an absolute crock! Parents of American children are arrested all the time and taken to jail, where's the empathy for them? Children of US citizens who are sent to jail suffer also, do advocates care about these kids? No they don't, the emphasis is on punishing the parent who committed the criminal act.

    So why are they bleating about how kids of illegal aliens suffer when their parents are deported? Their parents retain their freedom in their home country and they can bring their kids too! Americans in prison cannot live with their kids. Stories like this make me sick.
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  3. #3
    Senior Member Dixie's Avatar
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    But advocates and psychologists maintain that arresting parents in front of children and detaining and deporting them is unfair to children.
    Interesting. What do those psychologists have to say about what their paretns have done to them?

    The parents are committing a crime in front of their children all the time, all day long, every day... That's OK and acceptable to illegal aliens but getting arrested for their crime is not?

    Children of illegal aliens, shouldn't even be in the US, much less be anchor babies.

    Dixie
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  4. #4
    Senior Member MyAmerica's Avatar
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    The foreign consulate of those detained, should do something useful instead of meddling and take care of the children.

    It is my understanding infants, born in the U.S. to illegal aliens parents, at age 18 can chose between U.S. citizenship or citizenship in their parents native country. Unfortunately many chose dual citizenship. If the parents are from separate countries, could a person have tri citizenship?

    Mexico has dual citizenship.

    American children are traumatized by divorce, the death of a parent, and the illness of a parent and divorce is not outlawed.
    American children also see the arrest of their parent(s).
    "Distrust and caution are the parents of security."
    Benjamin Franklin

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  5. #5
    Senior Member azwreath's Avatar
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    I don't want to hear anymore of this crap from the likes of La Raza.....what's next from them, the demand that no illegal be arrested for any crime they commit because it "traumatizes" their children?

    Maybe it's time the tables were turned on the likes of La Raza. Let Marguia give "testimony" during hearings meant to find out just why her organization, and others, continue encouraging out of control birth rates among the Latino IA population as a means to colonize the US and to misinform illegals that children can be used as shields to protect them from the authorities.
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  6. #6

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    Quote Originally Posted by azwreath
    I don't want to hear anymore of this crap from the likes of La Raza.....what's next from them, the demand that no illegal be arrested for any crime they commit because it "traumatizes" their children?
    It's more like illegals can't be arrested because it "traumatizes" the illegal aliens themselves. How traumatic it must be to get arrested, the poor babies, "they are only trying to better themselves, who could blame them

  7. #7
    Senior Member zeezil's Avatar
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    They came here illegally, breaking our laws. They remain in our country illegally and continue to operate here illegally. NOW IT'S TIME TO PAY THE PIPER.
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