“Operation Wagon Train” — redux

Last week, we learned about “Operation Wagon Train,” the single-largest worksite-enforcement operation in the history of the United States, in which nearly 1,300 immigrants were taken into custody in a series of raids on meatpacking plants in six states. It wasn’t pretty — about 1,000 Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, some in riot gear, the crackdown.

In one of the crackdowns, federal agents identified suspects based on skin color, and ended up apprehending U.S. citizens who had done nothing wrong. In other instances, parents wrapped up in the raids were separated from their children, even infants.

In explaining the need for this massive operation, the Department of Homeland Security said it was necessary to arrest people involved in identity theft. Even at the time, it was a dubious claim, since only 5% of those arrested were charged with identity-theft related crimes. Today, Justin Rood added that “if the Feds were trying to protect citizens from identity thieves, they failed.”

Unfortunately, while the Department of Homeland Security held a press conference immediately after the raids to announce nationwide totals for arrests, they have been less chatty about the number of detainees charged with criminal violations, and the Department of Justice has announced indictments in each state as they are handed down from grand juries.

As a result, the picture is incomplete: We know that 1,282 workers were detained in the raids ten days ago. Over 100 were charged with a variety of crimes. So far, grand juries have handed down indictments for 58 of them: 20 from Worthington, Minn.; 15 from Grand Island, Neb.; and 23 from Marshalltown, Iowa, according to reports in local papers. I have not seen indictments reported from the raids in Cactus, Texas, or Greeley, Colo.

Meanwhile, the Bureau of Immigrations and Customs Enforcement has not released a tally of the number of innocent legal workers its agents detained in the raids but later released, nor details on how long they were held before being let go. ICE also has not given a total number of detainees who have been summarily deported.

The purpose of these raids is still elusive — and a growing number of Dems are asking the right questions.

Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) is on the case.

Sen. Tom Harkin of Iowa wrote Secretary of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff on Tuesday to say he is appalled by the process used to detain and deport workers in raids earlier this month at six Swift & Co. packing plants, including one in Marshalltown.

Harkin, a Democrat, said a telephone hot line for information for family members set up by the government has gone unanswered at times. It “provided no information of any use” at other times, Harkin said in the letter.

It has been “almost impossible” for lawyers and members of the clergy to gain access to workers who were detained, and workers were taken to other states without being granted access to lawyers, Harkin said.

So is outgoing Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack (D).

Governor and Presidential hopeful Tom Vilsack is moving aggressively to grab the high-profile meat-packing plant immigration raids as a signature issue, the Des Moines Register reports today. The paper says Vilsack fired off a letter to President Bush demanding info about loved ones arrested in the raid. “To this day, the whereabouts of some of these people are still unknown,” Vilsack wrote. “Considering the hardship this has on their families, silence as to their condition is not acceptable.”

The president, meanwhile, briefly mentioned “Operation Wagon Train” during his press conference yesterday, but got the facts wrong.

President Bush teed off on immigration reform in today’s press conference. But while his point may be admirable — the country needs comprehensive immigration reform — his portrayal of the facts wasn’t. Here’s how he described the results of last week’s unprecedented raids on meatpacking plants:

“I don’t know if you’ve paid attention to the enforcement measures that were taken recently at some meat-packing plants. They found people that had been working illegally, but all of them had documents that said they were here legally — they were using forged documents.”

Actually, only 65 of the nearly 1,300 detainees faced criminal charges, and only some of those involved document fraud.

Regardless, just in time for Christmas, families have been divided, communities have been torn apart, factories have come to a halt, and no one can explain exactly why this happened.

Regardless, just in time for Christmas, families have been divided, communities have been torn apart, factories have come to a halt, and no one can explain exactly why this happened.

Their papers were not in order!

  • I love these GOP policies. I hope Bush & Co. keep them up. These acts resonate loudly in the Hispanic community, and will ensure Dems receive the vast majority of Hispanic support for generations to come.

  • Gov. Vilsack and the commander of the Iowa National Guard have also drawn a line in the sand: ING facilities cannot be used in the future unless ICE provides the state with more information, planning input, etc.

    Scary, but predictable, comments on the local news blogs have been opposed to Vilsack’s stance.

  • “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore, Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed, to me: I lift my lamp beside the golden door.”

    -Emma Lazarus, 1883

  • Instead of ending the war on drugs, they’re taking DEA tactics into new arenas of law enforcement. I’d like to see an article tracing the evolution of the Gestapo or Swat-team paradigm’s implementation in our country’s internal policing.

  • It almost looks like they’re deliberately trying to generate a legal backlash that will be stuck in court for the next two years. We may even have illegal aliens suing the US government. Then of course the wingnut hate radio will feed on that, add their own brand of ignorance, and portray the legal procedings against the “Department of Homeland Security” as Democrat/liberals who love illegal immigrants and hate the USA.

    The goobers who listen to hate radio will not be able to cut through the legal intracasies and actually figure out what the DHS did illegally, they’ll just think the Dems are actively hampering the DHS.

    Other than that, the whole episode makes no sense to me.

  • GOP (nee “party of Lincoln”) world view: operations like “Wagon Train” can’t be wrong so long as they’re directed toward brown people.

  • (Black-gloved hand extended)
    Your papers, please.

    Wow. Both torture & now Gestapo tactics. This administration has most of the moves down. What’s next, red crescents on the clothing for Muslims?

    Thank God they are pro-life (and pro war, too, how does that work?) or we’d see medical experiments, too. Maybe psychological ones like the effects of sensory deprivation.

  • Just how many managers from these meat packing plants have been arrested I ask.

    Workplace immigration enforcement is great, but this is absurd. This is their idea of protecting the country? The numbers of false arrests alone make them look like total idiots.

    Well, now we know how they are going to break in the custodial staff of the new DHS Concentration Camps in Arizona. Arrest and deport them there.

  • Thank God they are pro-life (and pro war, too, how does that work?) or we’d see medical experiments, too. Maybe psychological ones like the effects of sensory deprivation. — BuzzMon, @9

    If I remember a-right, NYT reported — within the past month, I think, on a weekend — that medical experiments are, in fact, going on. On prisoners (who else)? Psychotropic drugs, maybe? Can’t remember. Supposedly, the prisoners sign an agreement to be experimented on but…

    The pro-life stance, as had been mentioned here often, extends only for the gestation period, not for the living humans once they’re born.

  • libra, that is slightly incorrect. It merely goes on hiatus until one is in a total vegetative state with no chance of recovery. Then it kicks back in again.

  • By means of a DHS activity entitled “Operation Wagon Train,” the tyrannical administration of the United States of America has, with both malice and intent, committed yet another overt act of war against the People, and the Constitution.

    I believe it was a Mr. Jefferson who once commented on what the People should do, if threatened by a tyrant….

  • This is actually the beginning of a double reverse pander. Allow me to explain:

    BG2 uses gestapo tactics to round up a bunch of ill-eagles and ships ’em back where they belong, defending ‘murica and firing up his anti-immigration base. But wait, pro-immigration/amnesty folks are (righfully) pissed off. Well, next, if all goes according to my hypothesis, he will use this ugly raid as an example of how difficult it is to enforce immigration laws with so many illegal aliens present, segwaying into a speech about amnesty and how it will reduce the need for said gestapo tactics.

    Shrewd.

  • “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore, Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed, to me: I lift my lamp beside the golden door.

    And then I’ll send ’em right back to you, yessiree!!”

    George W. Bush, 2000-2008

  • “‘And then I’ll send ‘em right back to you, yessiree!!’ – George W. Bush, 2000-2008” – Timpanist

    So unfair! Boy George II spent the first five years of his administration totally ignoring work place enforcement while 6 million more illegal immigrants entered this country. And I don’t think after this little operation he’s going to go back to it.

    He’d much rather just practically enslave them as cheep labor, especially after he signs a minimum wage increase 😉

  • I have visited three of the towns with Swift plants since the raid.

    We don’t hold the moral high ground on this one either. Much hard work to get a trusting relationship with the Hispanic community has gone up in smoke. JOHN

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