Interpreting after the Largest ICE Raid in US History: A Personal Account of the Postville, Iowa Immigration Raid
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Erik Camayd-Freixas, Ph.D.
Florida International University
June 13, 2008
On Monday, May 12, 2008, at 10:00 a.m., in an operation involving some 900
agents, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) executed a raid of
Agriprocessors Inc, the nation’s largest kosher slaughterhouse and meat
packing plant located in the town of Postville, Iowa. The raid --officials
boasted–--was “the largest single-site operation of its kind in
American history.” At that same hour, 26 federally certified interpreters
from all over the country were en route to the small neighboring city of
Waterloo, Iowa, having no idea what their mission was about. The investigation
had started more than a year earlier. Raid preparations had begun in December.
The Clerk’s Office of the U.S. District Court had contracted the
interpreters a month ahead, but was not at liberty to tell us the whole truth,
lest the impending raid be compromised. The operation was led by ICE, which
belongs to the executive branch, whereas the U.S. District Court, belonging to
the judicial branch, had to formulate its own official reason for
participating. Accordingly, the Court had to move for two weeks to a remote
location as part of a “Continuity of Operation Exercise” in case
they were ever disrupted by an emergency, which in Iowa is likely to be a
tornado or flood. That is what we were told, but, frankly, I was not prepared
for a disaster of such a different kind, one which was entirely man-made.
I arrived late that Monday night and missed the 8pm interpreters briefing. I
was instructed by phone to meet at 7am in the hotel lobby and carpool to the
National Cattle Congress (NCC) where we would begin our work. We arrived at the
heavily guarded compound, went through security, and gathered inside the retro
“Electric Park Ballroom” where a makeshift court had been set up.
The Clerk of Court, who coordinated the interpreters, said: “Have you
seen the news? There was an immigration raid yesterday at 10am. They have some
400 detainees here. We’ll be working late conducting initial appearances
for the next few days.” He then gave us a cursory tour of the compound.
The NCC is a 60-acre cattle fairground that had been transformed into a sort of
concentration camp or detention center. Fenced in behind the ballroom /
courtroom were 23 trailers from federal authorities, including two set up as
sentencing courts; various Homeland Security buses and an “incident
response” truck; scores of ICE agents and U.S. Marshals; and in the
background two large buildings: a pavilion where agents and prosecutors had
established a command center; and a gymnasium filled with tight rows of cots
where some 300 male detainees were kept, the women being housed in county
jails. Later the NCC board complained to the local newspaper that they had been
“misled” by the government when they leased the grounds purportedly
for Homeland Security training.
Echoing what I think was the general feeling, one of my fellow interpreters
would later exclaim: “When I saw what it was really about, my heart
sank…” Then began the saddest procession I have ever witnessed,
which the public would never see, because cameras were not allowed past the
perimeter of the compound (only a few journalists came to court the following
days, notepad in hand). Driven single-file in groups of 10, shackled at the
wrists, waist and ankles, chains dragging as they shuffled through, the
slaughterhouse workers were brought in for arraignment, sat and listened
through headsets to the interpreted initial appearance, before marching out
again to be bused to different county jails, only to make room for the next row
of 10. They appeared to be uniformly no more than 5 ft. tall, mostly illiterate
Guatemalan peasants with Mayan last names, some being relatives (various
Tajtaj, Xicay, Sajché, Sologüí…), some in tears; others
with faces of worry, fear, and embarrassment. They all spoke Spanish, a few
rather laboriously. It dawned on me that, aside from their nationality, which
was imposed on their people in the 19th century, they too were Native
Americans, in shackles. They stood out in stark racial contrast with the rest
of us as they started their slow penguin march across the makeshift court.
“Sad spectacle” I heard a colleague say, reading my mind. They had
all waived their right to be indicted by a grand jury and accepted instead an
information or simple charging document by the U.S. Attorney, hoping to be
quickly deported since they had families to support back home. But it was not
to be. They were criminally charged with “aggravated identity
theft” and “Social Security fraud” —charges they did
not understand… and, frankly, neither could I. Everyone wondered how it
would all play out.
We got off to a slow start that first day, because ICE’s barcode
booking system malfunctioned, and the documents had to be manually sorted and
processed with the help of the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Consequently, less
than a third of the detainees were ready for arraignment that Tuesday. There
were more than enough interpreters at that point, so we rotated in shifts of
three interpreters per hearing. Court adjourned shortly after 4pm. However, the
prosecution worked overnight, planning on a 7am to midnight court marathon the
next day. I was eager to get back to my hotel room to find out more about the
case, since the day’s repetitive hearings afforded little information,
and everyone there was mostly refraining from comment. There was frequent but
sketchy news on local TV. A colleague had suggested The Des Moines Register. So
I went to DesMoinesRegister.com and started reading all the 20+ articles, as
they appeared each day, and the 57-page ICE Search Warrant Application. These
were the vital statistics. Of Agriprocessors’ 968 current employees,
about 75% were illegal immigrants. There were 697 arrest warrants, but
late-shift workers had not arrived, so “only” 390 were arrested:
314 men and 76 women; 290 Guatemalans, 93 Mexicans, four Ukrainians, and three
Israelis who were not seen in court. Some were released on humanitarian
grounds: 56 mostly mothers with unattended children, a few with medical
reasons, and 12 juveniles were temporarily released with ankle monitors or
directly turned over for deportation. In all, 306 were held for
prosecution.
Only five of the 390 originally arrested had any kind of prior criminal
record. There remained 307 outstanding warrants.
This was the immediate collateral damage. Postville, Iowa (pop. 2,273),
where nearly half the people worked at Agriprocessors, had lost 1/3 of its
population by Tuesday morning. Businesses were empty, amid looming concerns
that if the plant closed it would become a ghost town. Beside those arrested,
many had fled the town in fear. Several families had taken refuge at St.
Bridget’s Catholic Church, terrified, sleeping on pews and refusing to
leave for days. Volunteers from the community served food and organized
activities for the children. At the local high school, only three of the 15
Latino students came back on Tuesday, while at the elementary and middle
school, 120 of the 363 children were absent. In the following days the
principal went around town on the school bus and gathered 70 students after
convincing the parents to let them come back to school; 50 remained unaccounted
for. Some American parents complained that their children were traumatized by
the sudden disappearance of so many of their school friends. The principal
reported the same reaction in the classrooms, saying that for the children it
was as if ten of their classmates had suddenly died. Counselors were brought
in. American children were having nightmares that their parents too were being
taken away. The superintendant said the school district’s future was
unclear: “This literally blew our town away.” In some cases both
parents were picked up and small children were left behind for up to 72 hours.
Typically, the mother would be released “on humanitarian grounds”
with an ankle GPS monitor, pending prosecution and deportation, while the
husband took first turn in serving his prison sentence. Meanwhile the mother
would have no income and could not work to provide for her children. Some of
the children were born in the U.S. and are American citizens. Sometimes one
parent was a deportable alien while the other was not. “Hundreds of
families were torn apart by this raid,” said a Catholic nun. “The
humanitarian impact of this raid is obvious to anyone in Postville. The
economic impact will soon be evident.”
But this was only the surface damage. Alongside the many courageous actions
and expressions of humanitarian concern in the true American spirit, the news
blogs were filled with snide remarks of racial prejudice and bigotry, poorly
disguised beneath an empty rhetoric of misguided patriotism, not to mention the
insults to anyone who publicly showed compassion, safely hurled from behind a
cowardly online nickname. One could feel the moral fabric of society coming
apart beneath it all.
The more I found out, the more I felt blindsighted into an assignment of
which I wanted no part. Even though I understood the rationale for all the
secrecy, I also knew that a contract interpreter has the right to refuse a job
which conflicts with his moral intuitions. But I had been deprived of that
opportunity. Now I was already there, far from home, and holding a half-spent
$1,800 plane ticket. So I faced a frustrating dilemma. I seriously considered
withdrawing from the assignment for the first time in my 23 years as a
federally certified interpreter, citing conflict of interest. In fact, I have
both an ethical and contractual obligation to withdraw if a conflict of
interest exists which compromises my neutrality. Appended to my contract are
the Standards for Performance and Professional Responsibility for Contract
Court Interpreters in the Federal Courts, where it states: “Interpreters
shall disclose any real or perceived conflict of interest… and shall not
serve in any matter in which they have a conflict of interest.” The
question was did I have one. Well, at that point there was not enough evidence
to make that determination. After all, these are illegal aliens and should be
deported —no argument there, and hence no conflict. But should they be
criminalized and imprisoned? Well, if they committed a crime and were fairly
adjudicated… But all that remained to be seen. In any case, none of it
would shake my impartiality or prevent me from faithfully discharging my
duties. In all my years as a court interpreter, I have taken front row seat in
countless criminal cases ranging from rape, capital murder and mayhem, to
terrorism, narcotics and human trafficking. I am not the impressionable kind.
Moreover, as a professor of interpreting, I have confronted my students with
every possible conflict scenario, or so I thought. The truth is that nothing
could have prepared me for the prospect of helping our government put hundreds
of innocent people in jail. In my ignorance and disbelief, I reluctantly
decided to stay the course and see what happened next.
Wednesday, May 14, our second day in court, was to be a long one. The
interpreters were divided into two shifts, 8am to 3pm and 3pm to 10pm. I chose
the latter. Through the day, the procession continued, ten by ten, hour after
hour, the same charges, the same recitation from the magistrates, the same
faces, chains and shackles, on the defendants. There was little to remind us
that they were actually 306 individuals, except that occasionally, as though to
break the monotony, one would dare to speak for the others and beg to be
deported quickly so that they could feed their families back home. One who
turned out to be a minor was bound over for deportation. The rest would be
prosecuted. Later in the day three groups of women were brought, shackled in
the same manner. One of them, whose husband was also arrested, was released to
care for her children, ages two and five, uncertain of their whereabouts.
Several men and women were weeping, but two women were particularly grief
stricken. One of them was sobbing and would repeatedly struggle to bring a
sleeve to her nose, but her wrists shackled around her waist simply would not
reach; so she just dripped until she was taken away with the rest. The other
one, a Ukrainian woman, was held and arraigned separately when a Russian
telephonic interpreter came on. She spoke softly into a cellular phone, while
the interpreter told her story in English over the speakerphone. Her young
daughter, gravely ill, had lost her hair and was too weak to walk. She had
taken her to Moscow and Kiev but to no avail. She was told her child needed an
operation or would soon die. She had come to America to work and raise the
money to save her daughter back in Ukraine. In every instance, detainees who
cried did so for their children, never for themselves
The next day we started early, at 6:45am. We were told that we had to finish
the hearings by 10am. Thus far the work had oddly resembled a judicial assembly
line where the meat packers were mass processed. But things were about to get a
lot more personal as we prepared to
interpret for individual attorney-client conferences. In those first three
days, interpreters had been pairing up with defense attorneys to help interview
their clients. Each of the 18 court appointed attorneys represented 17
defendants on average. By now, the clients had been sent to several state and
county prisons throughout eastern Iowa, so we had to interview them in jail.
The attorney with whom I was working had clients in Des Moines and wanted to be
there first thing in the morning. So a colleague and I drove the 2.5 hours that
evening and stayed overnight in a hotel outside the city. We met the attorney
in jail Friday morning, but the clients had not been accepted there and had
been sent instead to a state penitentiary in Newton, another 45-minute drive.
While we waited to be admitted, the attorney pointed out the reason why the
prosecution wanted to finish arraignments by 10am Thursday: according to the
writ of habeas corpus they had 72 hours from Monday’s raid to charge the
prisoners or release them for deportation (only a handful would be so lucky).
The right of habeas corpus, but of course! It dawned on me that we were paid
overtime, adding hours to the day, in a mad rush to abridge habeas corpus, only
to help put more workers in jail. Now I really felt bad. But it would soon get
worse. I was about to bear the brunt of my conflict of interest.
It came with my first jail interview. The purpose was for the attorney to
explain the uniform Plea Agreement that the government was offering. The
explanation, which we repeated over and over to each client, went like this.
There are three possibilities. If you plead guilty to the charge of
“knowingly using a false Social Security number,” the government
will withdraw the heavier charge of “aggravated identity theft,”
and you will serve 5 months in jail, be deported without a hearing, and placed
on supervised release for 3 years. If you plead not guilty, you could wait in
jail 6 to 8 months for a trial (without right of bail since you are on an
immigration detainer). Even if you win at trial, you will still be deported,
and could end up waiting longer in jail than if you just pled guilty. You would
also risk losing at trial and receiving a 2-year minimum sentence, before being
deported. Some clients understood their “options” better than
others.|
That first interview, though, took three hours. The client, a Guatemalan
peasant afraid for his family, spent most of that time weeping at our table, in
a corner of the crowded jailhouse visiting room. How did he come here from
Guatemala? “I walked.” What? “I walked for a month and ten
days until I crossed the river.” We understood immediately how desperate
his family’s situation was. He crossed alone, met other immigrants, and
hitched a truck ride to Dallas, then Postville, where he heard there was sure
work. He slept in an apartment hallway with other immigrants until employed. He
had scarcely been working a couple of months when he was arrested. Maybe he was
lucky: another man who began that Monday had only been working for 20 minutes.
“I just wanted to work a year or two, save, and then go back to my
family, but it was not to be.” His case and that of a million others
could simply be solved by a temporary work permit as part of our much overdue
immigration reform. “The Good Lord knows I was just working and not doing
anyone any harm.” This man, like many others, was in fact not guilty.
“Knowingly” and “intent” are necessary elements of the
charges, but most of the clients we interviewed did not even know what a Social
Security number was or what purpose it served. This worker simply had the
papers filled out for him at the plant, since he could not read or write
Spanish, let alone English. But the lawyer still had to advise him that
pleading guilty was in his best interest. He was unable to make a decision.
“You all do and undo,” he said. “So you can do whatever you
want with me.” To him we were part of the system keeping him from being
deported back to his country, where his children, wife, mother, and sister
depended on him. He was their sole support and did not know how they were going
to make it with him in jail for 5 months. None of the “options”
really mattered to him. Caught between despair and hopelessness, he just wept.
He had failed his family, and was devastated. I went for some napkins, but he
refused them. I offered him a cup of soda, which he superstitiously declined,
saying it could be “poisoned.” His Native American spirit was
broken and he could no longer think. He stared for a while at the signature
page pretending to read it, although I knew he was actually praying for
guidance and protection. Before he signed with a scribble, he said: “God
knows you are just doing your job to support your families, and that job is to
keep me from supporting mine.” There was my conflict of interest, well
put by a weeping, illiterate man.
We worked that day for as long as our emotional fortitude allowed, and we
had to come back to a full day on Sunday to interview the rest of the clients.
Many of the Guatemalans had the same predicament. One of them, a 19-year-old,
worried that his parents were too old to work, and that he was the only support
for his family back home. We will never know how many of the 293 Guatemalans
had legitimate asylum claims for fear of persecution, back in a country
stigmatized by the worst human rights situation in the hemisphere, a by-product
of the USbacked Contra wars of 1980s’ Central America under the old
domino theory. For three decades, anti-insurgent government death squads have
ravaged the countryside, killing tens of thousands and displacing almost two
million peasants. Even as we proceeded with the hearings during those two weeks
in May, news coming out of Guatemala reported farm workers being assassinated
for complaining publicly about their working conditions. Not only have we
ignored the many root causes of illegal immigration, we also will never know
which of these deportations will turn out to be a death sentence, or how many
of these displaced workers are last survivors with no family or village to
return to.
Another client, a young Mexican, had an altogether different case. He had
worked at the plant for ten years and had two American born daughters, a
2-year-old and a newborn. He had a good case with Immigration for an adjustment
of status which would allow him to stay. But if he took the Plea Agreement, he
would lose that chance and face deportation as a felon convicted of a crime of
“moral turpitude.” On the other hand, if he pled “not
guilty” he had to wait several months in jail for trial, and risk getting
a 2-year sentence. After an agonizing decision, he concluded that he had to
take the 5-month deal and deportation, because as he put it, “I cannot be
away from my children for so long.” His case was complicated; it needed
research in immigration law, a change in the Plea Agreement, and, above all,
more time. There were other similar cases in court that week. I remember
reading that immigration lawyers were alarmed that the detainees were being
rushed into a plea without adequate consultation on the immigration
consequences. Even the criminal defense attorneys had limited opportunity to
meet with clients: in jail there were limited visiting hours and days; at the
compound there was little time before and after hearings, and little privacy
due to the constant presence of agents. There were 17 cases for each attorney,
and the Plea offer was only good for 7 days. In addition, criminal attorneys
are not familiar with immigration work and vice versa, but had to make do since
immigration lawyers were denied access to these criminal proceedings.
In addition, the prosecutors would not accept any changes to the Plea
Agreement. In fact, some lawyers, seeing that many of their clients were not
guilty, requested an Alford plea, whereby defendants can plead guilty in order
to accept the prosecution’s offer, but without having to lie under oath
and admit to something they did not do. That would not change the 5- month
sentence, but at least it preserves the person’s integrity and dignity.
The proposal was rejected. Of course, if they allowed Alford pleas to go on
public record, the incongruence of the charges would be exposed and find its
way into the media. Officially, the ICE prosecutors said the Plea Agreement was
directed from the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., that they were not
authorized to change it locally, and that the DOJ would not make any case by
case exceptions when a large number of defendants are being
“fast-tracked.” Presumably if you gave different terms to one
individual, the others will want the same. This position, however, laid bare
one of the critical problems with this new practice of
“fast-tracking.” Even real criminals have the right of severance:
when co-defendants have different degrees of responsibility, there is an
inherent conflict of interest, and they can ask to be prosecuted separately as
different cases, each with a different attorney. In fast-tracking, however, the
right of severance is circumvented because each defendant already has a
different case number on paper, only that they are processed together, 10 cases
at a time. At this point, it is worth remembering also that even real criminals
have an 8th Amendment right to reasonable bail, but not illegal workers,
because their immigration detainer makes bail a moot issue. We had already
circumvented habeas corpus by doubling the court’s business hours. What
about the 6th Amendment right to a “speedy trial”? In many states
“speedy” means 90 days, but in federal law it is vaguely defined,
potentially exceeding the recommended sentence, given the backlog of real
cases. This served as another loophole to force a guilty plea. Many of these
workers were sole earners begging to be deported, desperate to feed their
families, for whom every day counted. “If you want to see your children
or don’t want your family to starve, sign here” –that is what
their deal amounted to. Their Plea Agreement was coerced.
We began week two Monday, May 19th. Those interpreters who left after the
first week were spared the sentencing hearings that went on through Thursday.
Those who came in fresh the second week were spared the jail visits over the
weekend. Those of us who stayed both weeks came back from the different jails
burdened by a close personal contact that judges and prosecutors do not get to
experience: each individual tragedy multiplied by 306 cases. One of my
colleagues began the day by saying “I feel a tremendous solidarity with
these people.” Had we lost our impartiality? Not at all: that was our
impartial and probably unanimous judgment. We had seen attorneys hold back
tears and weep alongside their clients. We would see judges, prosecutors,
clerks, and marshals do their duty, sometimes with a heavy heart, sometimes at
least with mixed feelings, but always with a particular solemnity not accorded
to the common criminals we all are used to encountering in the judicial system.
Everyone was extremely professional and outwardly appreciative of the
interpreters. We developed among ourselves and with the clerks, with whom we
worked closely, a camaraderie and good humor that kept us going. Still, that
Monday morning I felt downtrodden by the sheer magnitude of the events.
Unexpectedly, a sentencing hearing lifted my spirits.
I decided to do sentences on Trailer 2 with a judge I knew from real
criminal trials in Iowa. The defendants were brought in 5 at a time, because
there was not enough room for 10. The judge verified that they still wanted to
plead guilty, and asked counsel to confirm their Plea Agreement. The defense
attorney said that he had expected a much lower sentence, but that he was
forced to accept the agreement in the best interest of his clients. For us who
knew the background of the matter, that vague objection, which was all that the
attorney could put on record, spoke volumes. After accepting the Plea Agreement
and before imposing sentence, the judge gave the defendants the right of
allocution. Most of them chose not to say anything, but one who was the more
articulate said humbly: “Your honor, you know that we are here because of
the need of our families. I beg that you find it in your heart to send us home
before too long, because we have a responsibility to our children, to give them
an education, clothing, shelter, and food.” The good judge explained that
unfortunately he was not free to depart from the sentence provided for by their
Plea Agreement. Technically, what he meant was that this was a binding
11(C)(1)(c) Plea Agreement: he had to accept it or reject it as a whole. But if
he rejected it, he would be exposing the defendants to a trial against their
will. His hands were tied, but in closing he said onto them very deliberately:
“I appreciate the fact that you are very hard working people, who have
come here to do no harm. And I thank you for coming to this country to work
hard. Unfortunately, you broke a law in the process, and now I have the
obligation to give you this sentence. But I hope that the U.S. government has
at least treated you kindly and with respect, and that this time goes by
quickly for you, so that soon you may be reunited with your family and
friends.” The defendants thanked him, and I saw their faces change from
shame to admiration, their dignity restored. I think we were all vindicated at
that moment. Before the judge left that afternoon, I had occasion to talk to
him and bring to his attention my concern over what I had learned in the jail
interviews. At that point I realized how precious the interpreter’s
impartiality truly is, and what a privileged perspective it affords. In our
common law adversarial system, only the judge, the jury, and the interpreter
are presumed impartial. But the judge is immersed in the framework of the legal
system, whereas the interpreter is a layperson, an outsider, a true
representative of the common citizen, much like “a jury of his
peers.” Yet, contrary to the jury, who only knows the evidence on record
and is generally unfamiliar with the workings of the law, the interpreter is an
informed layperson. Moreover, the interpreter is the only one who gets to see
both sides of the coin up close, precisely because he is the only participant
who is not a decision maker, and is even precluded, by his oath of impartiality
and neutrality, from ever influencing the decisions of others. That is why
judges in particular appreciate the interpreter’s perspective as an
impartial and informed layperson, for it provides a rare glimpse at how the
innards of the legal system look from the outside. I was no longer sorry to
have participated in my capacity as an interpreter. I realized that I had been
privileged to bear witness to historic events from such a unique vantage point
and that because of its uniqueness I now had a civic duty to make it known.
Such is the spirit that inspired this essay.
That is also what prompted my brief conversation with the judge: “Your
honor, I am concerned from my attorney-client interviews that many of these
people are clearly not guilty, and yet they have no choice but to plead
out.” He understood immediately and, not surprisingly, the seasoned U.S.
District Court Judge spoke as someone who had already wrestled with all the
angles. He said: “You know, I don’t agree with any of this or with
the way it is being done. In fact, I ruled in a previous case that to charge
somebody with identity theft, the person had to at least know of the real owner
of the Social Security number. But I was reverted in another district and yet
upheld in a third.” I understood that the issue was a matter of judicial
contention. The charge of identity theft seemed from the beginning incongruous
to me as an informed, impartial layperson, but now a U.S. District Court Judge
agreed. As we bid each other farewell, I kept thinking of what he said. I soon
realized that he had indeed hit the nail on the head; he had given me, as it
were, the last piece of the puzzle.
It works like this. By handing down the inflated charge of “aggravated
identity theft,” which carries a mandatory minimum sentence of 2 years in
prison, the government forced the defendants into pleading guilty to the lesser
charge and accepting 5 months in jail. Clearly, without the inflated charge,
the government had no bargaining leverage, because the lesser charge by itself,
using a false Social Security number, carries only a discretionary sentence of
0- 6 months. The judges would be free to impose sentence within those
guidelines, depending on the circumstances of each case and any prior record.
Virtually all the defendants would have received only probation and been
immediately deported. In fact, the government’s offer at the higher end
of the guidelines (one month shy of the maximum sentence) was indeed no
bargain. What is worse, the inflated charge, via the binding 11(C)(1)(c) Plea
Agreement, reduced the judges to mere bureaucrats, pronouncing the same litany
over and over for the record in order to legalize the proceedings, but having
absolutely no discretion or decision-making power. As a citizen, I want our
judges to administer justice, not a federal agency. When the executive branch
forces the hand of the judiciary, the result is abuse of power and
arbitrariness, unworthy of a democracy founded upon the constitutional
principle of checks and balances. To an impartial and informed layperson, the
process resembled a lottery of justice: if the Social Security number belonged
to someone else, you were charged with identity theft and went to jail; if by
luck it was a vacant number, you would get only Social Security fraud and were
released for deportation. In this manner, out of 297 who were charged on time,
270 went to jail. Bothered by the arbitrariness of that heavier charge, I went
back to the ICE Search Warrant Application (pp. 35-36), and what I found was
astonishing. On February 20, 2008, ICE agents received social security
“no match” information for 737 employees, including 147 using
numbers confirmed by the SSA as invalid (never issued to a person) and 590
using valid SSNs, “however the numbers did not match the name of the
employee reported by Agriprocessors…” “This analysis would
not account for the possibility that a person may have falsely used the
identity of an actual person’s name and SSN.” “In my training
and expertise, I know it is not uncommon for aliens to purchase identity
documents which include SSNs that match the name assigned to the number.”
Yet, ICE agents checked Accurint, the powerful identity database used by law
enforcement, and found that 983 employees that year had non-matching SSNs. Then
they conducted a search of the FTC Consumer Sentinel Network for reporting
incidents of identity theft. “The search revealed that a person who was
assigned one of the social security numbers used by an employee of
Agriprocessors has reported his/her identity being stolen.” That is, out
of 983 only 1 number (0.1%) happened to coincide by chance with a reported
identity theft. The charge was clearly unfounded; and the raid, a fishing
expedition. “On April 16, 2008, the US filed criminal complaints against
697 employees, charging them with unlawfully using SSNs in violation of Title
42 USC §408(a)(7)(B); aggravated identity theft in violation of 18 USC
§1028A(a)(1); and/or possession or use of false identity documents for
purposes of employment in violation of 18 USC §1546.”
Created by Congress in an Act of 1998, the new federal offense of identity
theft, as described by the DOJ
(http://www.usdoj.gov/criminal/fraud/websites/idtheft.html), bears no relation
to the Postville cases. It specifically states: “knowingly uses a means
of identification of another person with the intent to commit any unlawful
activity or felony” [18 USC §1028(a)]. The offense clearly refers to
harmful, felonious acts, such as obtaining credit under another person’s
identity. Obtaining work, however, is not an “unlawful activity.”
No way would a grand jury find probable cause of identity theft here. But with
the promise of faster deportation, their ignorance of the legal system, and the
limited opportunity to consult with counsel before arraignment, all the
workers, without exception, were led to waive their 5th Amendment right to
grand jury indictment on felony charges. Waiting for a grand jury meant months
in jail on an immigration detainer, without the possibility of bail. So the
attorneys could not recommend it as a defense strategy. Similarly, defendants
have the right to a status hearing before a judge, to determine probable cause,
within ten days of arraignment, but their Plea Agreement offer from the
government was only good for… seven days. Passing it up, meant risking 2
years in jail. As a result, the frivolous charge of identity theft was assured
never to undergo the judicial test of probable cause. Not only were defendants
and judges bound to accept the Plea Agreement, there was also absolutely no
defense strategy available to counsel. Once the inflated charge was handed
down, all the pieces fell into place like a row of dominoes. Even the court was
banking on it when it agreed to participate, because if a good number of
defendants asked for a grand jury or trial, the system would be overwhelmed. In
short, “fast-tracking” had worked like a dream. It is no secret
that the Postville ICE raid was a pilot operation, to be replicated elsewhere,
with kinks ironed out after lessons learned. Next time,
“fast-tracking” will be even more relentless. Never before has
illegal immigration been criminalized in this fashion. It is no longer enough
to deport them: we first have to put them in chains. At first sight it may seem
absurd to take productive workers and keep them in jail at taxpayers’
expense. But the economics and politics of the matter are quite different from
such rational assumptions. A quick look at the ICE Fiscal Year 2007 Annual
Report (www.ice.gov) shows an agency that has grown to 16,500 employees and a
$5 billion annual budget, since it was formed under Homeland Security in March
2003, “as a law enforcement agency for the post-9/11 era, to integrate
enforcement authorities against criminal and terrorist activities, including
the fights against human trafficking and smuggling, violent transnational gangs
and sexual predators who prey on children” (17). No doubt, ICE fulfills
an extremely important and noble duty. The question is why tarnish its stellar
reputation by targeting harmless illegal workers. The answer is economics and
politics. After 9/11 we had to create a massive force with readiness “to
prevent, prepare for and respond to a wide range of catastrophic incidents,
including terrorist attacks, natural disasters, pandemics and other such
significant events that require large-scale government and law enforcement
response” (23). The problem is that disasters, criminality, and terrorism
do not provide enough daily business to maintain the readiness and muscle tone
of this expensive force. For example, “In FY07, ICE human trafficking
investigations resulted in 164 arrests and 91 convictions” (17).
Terrorism related arrests were not any more substantial. The real numbers are
in immigration: “In FY07, ICE removed 276,912 illegal aliens” (4).
ICE is under enormous pressure to turn out statistical figures that might
justify a fair utilization of its capabilities, resources, and ballooning
budget. For example, the Report boasts 102,777 cases “eliminated”
from the fugitive alien population in FY07, “quadrupling” the
previous year’s number, only to admit a page later that 73,284 were
“resolved” by simply “taking those cases off the books”
after determining that they “no longer met the definition of an ICE
fugitive” (4-5).
De facto, the rationale is: we have the excess capability; we are already
paying for it; ergo, use it we must. And using it we are: since FY06 “ICE
has introduced an aggressive and effective campaign to enforce immigration law
within the nation’s interior, with a top-level focus on criminal aliens,
fugitive aliens and those who pose a threat to the safety of the American
public and the stability of American communities” (6). Yet, as of October
1, 2007, the “case backlog consisted of 594,756 ICE fugitive
aliens” (5). So again, why focus on illegal workers who pose no threat?
Elementary: they are easy pickings. True criminal and fugitive aliens have to
be picked up one at a time, whereas raiding a slaughterhouse is like hitting a
small jackpot: it beefs up the numbers. “In FY07, ICE enacted a
multi-year strategy: …worksite enforcement initiatives that target
employers who defy immigration law and the “jobs magnet” that draws
illegal workers across the border” (iii). Yet, as the saying goes,
corporations don’t go to jail. Very few individuals on the employer side
have ever been prosecuted. In the case of Agriprocessors, the Search Warrant
Application cites only vague allegations by alien informers against plant
supervisors (middle and upper management are insulated). Moreover, these
allegations pertain mostly to petty state crimes and labor infringements. Union
and congressional leaders contend that the federal raid actually interfered
with an ongoing state investigation of child labor and wage violations,
designed to improve conditions. Meanwhile, the underlying charge of
“knowingly possessing or using false employment documents with intent to
deceive” places the blame on the workers and holds corporate individuals
harmless. It is clear from the scope of the warrant that the thrust of the case
against the employer is strictly monetary: to redress part of the cost of the
multimillion dollar raid. This objective is fully in keeping with the target
stated in the Annual Report: “In FY07, ICE dramatically increased
penalties against employers whose hiring processes violated the law, securing
fines and judgments of more than $30 million” (iv).
Much of the case against Agriprocessors, in the Search Warrant Application,
is based upon “No-Match” letters sent by the Social Security
Administration to the employer. In August 2007, DHS issued a Final Rule
declaring “No-Match” letters sufficient notice of possible alien
harboring. But current litigation (AFL-CIO v. Chertoff) secured a federal
injunction against the Rule, arguing that such error-prone method would unduly
hurt both legal workers and employers. As a result the “No-Match”
letters may not be considered sufficient evidence of harboring. The lawsuit
also charges that DHS overstepped its authority and assumed the role of
Congress in an attempt to turn the SSA into an immigration law enforcement
agency. Significantly, in referring to the Final Rule, the Annual Report states
that ICE “enacted” a strategy to target employers (iii); thereby
using a word (“enacted”) that implies lawmaking authority. The
effort was part of ICE’s “Document and Benefit Fraud Task
Forces,” an initiative targeting employees, not employers, and implying
that illegal workers may use false SSNs to access benefits that belong to legal
residents. This false contention serves to obscure an opposite and long-ignored
statistics: the value of Social Security and Medicare contributions by illegal
workers. People often wonder where those funds go, but have no idea how much
they amount to. Well, they go into the SSA’s “Earnings Suspense
File,” which tracks payroll tax deductions from payers with mismatched
SSNs. By October 2006, the Earnings Suspense File had accumulated $586 billion,
up from just $8 billion in 1991. The money itself, which currently surpasses
$600 billion, is credited to, and comingled with, the general SSA Trust Fund.
SSA actuaries now calculate that illegal workers are currently subsidizing the
retirement of legal residents at a rate of $8.9 billion per year, for which the
illegal (no-match) workers will never receive benefits. Again, the big numbers
are not on the employers’ side. The best way to stack the stats is to go
after the high concentrations of illegal workers: food processing plants,
factory sweatshops, construction sites, janitorial services—the easy
pickings. September 1, 2006, ICE raid crippled a rural Georgia town: 120
arrested. Dec. 12, 2006, ICE agents executed warrants at Swift & Co. meat
processing facilities in six states: 1,297 arrested, 274 “charged with
identity theft and other crimes” (8). March 6, 2007 —The Boston
Globe reports— 300 ICE agents raided a sweatshop in New Bedford: 361
mostly Guatemalan workers arrested, many flown to Texas for deportation, dozens
of children stranded. As the Annual Report graph shows, worksite raids
escalated after FY06, signaling the arrival of “a New Era in immigration
enforcement” (1). Since 2002, administrative arrests increased tenfold,
while criminal arrests skyrocketed thirty-fivefold, from 25 to 863. Still, in
FY07, only 17% of detainees were criminally arrested, whereas in Postville it
was 100% —a “success” made possible by
“fast-tracking”— with felony charges rendering workers
indistinguishable on paper from real “criminal aliens.” Simply put,
the criminalization of illegal workers is just a cheap way of boosting ICE
“criminal alien” arrest statistics. But after Postville, it is no
longer a matter of clever paperwork and creative accounting: this time around
130 man-years of prison time were handed down pursuant to a bogus charge. The
double whammy consists in beefing up an additional and meatier statistics
showcased in the Report: “These incarcerated aliens have been involved in
dangerous criminal activity such as murder, predatory sexual offenses,
narcotics trafficking, alien smuggling and a host of other crimes” (6).
Never mind the character assassination: next year when we read the FY08 report,
we can all revel in the splendid job the agency is doing, keeping us safe, and
blindly beef up its budget another billion. After all, they have already
arrested 1,755 of these “criminals” in this May’s raids
alone.
The agency is now poised to deliver on the New Era. In FY07, ICE grew by 10
percent, hiring 1,600 employees, including over 450 new deportation officers,
700 immigration enforcement agents, and 180 new attorneys. At least 85% of the
new hires are directly allocated to immigration enforcement. “These
additional personnel move ICE closer to target staffing levels”(35).
Moreover, the agency is now diverting to this offensive resources earmarked for
other purposes such as disaster relief. Wondering where the 23 trailers came
from that were used in the Iowa “fast-tracking” operation?
“In FY07, one of ICE’s key accomplishments was the Mobile
Continuity of Operations Emergency Response Pilot Project, which entails the
deployment of a fleet of trailers outfitted with emergency supplies,
pre-positioned at ICE locations nationwide for ready deployment in the event of
a nearby emergency situation” (23). Too late for New Orleans, but there
was always Postville… Hopefully the next time my fellow interpreters hear
the buzzwords “Continuity of Operations” they will at least know
what they are getting into.
This massive buildup for the New Era is the outward manifestation of an
internal shift in the operational imperatives of the Long War, away from the
“war on terror” (which has yielded lean statistics) and onto
another front where we can claim success: the escalating undeclared war on
illegal immigration. “Had this effort been in place prior to 9/11, all of
the hijackers who failed to maintain status would have been investigated months
before the attack” (9). According to its new paradigm, the agency fancies
that it can conflate the diverse aspects of its operations and pretend that
immigration enforcement is really part and parcel of the “war on
terror.” This way, statistics in the former translate as evidence of
success in the latter. Thus, the Postville charges— document fraud and
identity theft—treat every illegal alien as a potential terrorist, and
with the same rigor. At sentencing, as I interpreted, there was one condition
of probation that was entirely new to me: “You shall not be in possession
of an explosive artifact.” The Guatemalan peasants in shackles looked at
each other, perplexed.
When the executive responded to post-9/11 criticism by integrating law
enforcement operations and security intelligence, ICE was created as “the
largest investigative arm of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)”
with “broad law enforcement powers and authorities for enforcing more
than 400 federal statutes” (1). A foreseeable effect of such broadness
and integration was the concentration of authority in the executive branch, to
the detriment of the constitutional separation of powers. Nowhere is this more
evident than in Postville, where the expansive agency’s authority can be
seen to impinge upon the judicial and legislative powers. “ICE’s
team of attorneys constitutes the largest legal program in DHS, with more than
750 attorneys to support the ICE mission in the administrative and federal
courts. ICE attorneys have also participated in temporary assignments to the
Department of Justice as Special Assistant U.S. Attorneys spearheading criminal
prosecutions of individuals. These assignments bring much needed support to
taxed U.S. Attorneys’ offices”(33). English translation: under the
guise of interagency cooperation, ICE prosecutors have infiltrated the judicial
branch. Now we know who the architects were that spearheaded such a well
crafted “fast-tracking” scheme, bogus charge and all, which had us
all, down to the very judges, fall in line behind the shackled penguin march.
Furthermore, by virtue of its magnitude and methods, ICE’s New War is
unabashedly the aggressive deployment of its own brand of immigration reform,
without congressional approval. “In FY07, as the debate over
comprehensive immigration reform moved to the forefront of the national stage,
ICE expanded upon the ongoing effort to re-invent immigration enforcement for
the 21st century” (3). In recent years, DHS has repeatedly been accused
of overstepping its authority. The reply is always the same: if we limit what
DHS/ICE can do, we have to accept a greater risk of terrorism. Thus, by
painting the war on immigration as inseparable from the war on terror, the same
expediency would supposedly apply to both. Yet, only for ICE are these agendas
codependent: the war on immigration depends politically on the war on terror,
which, as we saw earlier, depends economically on the war on immigration. This
type of no-exit circular thinking is commonly known as a
“doctrine.” In this case, it is an undemocratic doctrine of
expediency, at the core of a police agency, whose power hinges on its ability
to capitalize on public fear. Opportunistically raised by DHS, the sad specter
of 9/11 has come back to haunt illegal workers and their local communities
across the USA.
A line was crossed at Postville. The day after in Des Moines, there was a
citizens’ protest featured in the evening news. With quiet anguish, a
mature all-American woman, a mother, said something striking, as only the plain
truth can be. “This is not humane,” she said. “There has to
be a better way.”