All,
Sorry for the long article. It hits close to home.
Regards,
Sal
States, counties cracking down on illegals
Traffic stops can lead to deportation; some Latinos cry foul
Peter Whoriskey / The Washington Post
CHARLOTTE - Police here operated for years under what amounts to a "don't
ask, don't tell" policy toward illegal immigrants.
As elsewhere in the United States, law enforcement officers did not check
the immigration status of people they came into contact with, and in the
vast majority of cases, a run-in with the law carried little threat of
deportation.
But that accommodation for the burgeoning illegal population ended abruptly
in April, when the Mecklenburg County sheriff's office began to enforce
immigration law, placing more than 100 people a month into deportation
proceedings. Some of them had been charged with violent crimes, others with
traffic infractions.
The program takes one of the most aggressive stances in the United States
toward illegal immigrants, and officials in scores of communities, including
Herndon and Loudoun County, are considering adopting their own version. The
House earlier this month was weighing a measure "reaffirming" the authority
of local law enforcement agencies to arrest people on suspicion of violating
immigration laws.
Some Latino leaders say the program here is contributing to a discriminatory
climate in which Hispanic drivers feel as if they are being "hunted" by
police. And some law enforcement agencies elsewhere have rejected that
enforcement function, saying such programs would rupture any trust that
agencies have developed in Latino neighborhoods.
But advocates see it as a way to catch illegal immigrants who slip through
the porous federal enforcement measures but run afoul of state or local
police.
Mecklenburg County Sheriff Jim Pendergraph says there should be little
sympathy for illegal immigrants caught by his program: They have already
broken the law once by being here illegally, and then been arrested on
suspicion of another crime.
"When any of them cross that border without proper documentation, they've
violated the law -- however insignificant it may seem to some people," he
said. "I've heard sad stories about folks wanting to come up here and have a
better life and earn money for their family. I've arrested bank robbers
who've had the same excuse."
‘Very tense’
While the program has led to the removal of many illegal immigrants charged
with felonies, people arrested for lesser charges such as traffic violations
are also subject to deportation. That, according to Hispanic leaders, has
created a constant worry for people who are in the United States illegally
and now fear deportation after a simple traffic stop.
Many illegal immigrants lack valid licenses. As a result, they now risk not
only arrest but also deportation whenever they drive.
"It's tense, very tense," said Angeles Ortega-Moore, director of the Latin
American Coalition in Charlotte. "It used to be everybody here loved the
Latinos. They would say, 'We like you more than the blacks.' Now we're like
the Big Bad Wolf."
"The law enforcement community is split on this issue," said Gene Voegtlin,
legislative counsel for the International Association of Chiefs of Police.
The local agencies against enforcing immigration law "are concerned about
the chilling effect it will have on immigrants' cooperation with law
enforcement," he said.
In Mecklenburg County, about 1,200 foreign-born people have been arrested
since April, on charges ranging from traffic violations and trespassing to
sex crimes, and nearly 600 have been found to be here illegally.
Among those snared earlier this month was Guadalupe Lara, an 18-year-old
Mexican carpenter.
The fifth of eight children born to farmworkers in Queretaro, he walked
across the border when he was 16 to find work. Two years later, he has only
a wispy beard and stands 5-foot-3.
He makes $7.50 an hour and lives with four others in a small, sparsely
furnished apartment. Though they lack beds, they have a television on which
Lara watches his favorite telenovela, "Heridas de Amor." He sends money home
monthly and calls home every week.
"It's difficult," he said in Spanish. "When I call they say 'How are you?' I
say 'I am fine.' " On Monday night, Lara was pulled over by police after
buying a pack of cigarettes. He was not drunk but had an open bottle of beer
in the car. He also lacked a license. He was arrested and when asked
admitted he had no papers.
Had he been detained elsewhere, that he was an illegal immigrant might not
have mattered.
But in Mecklenburg, two sergeants and 10 deputies at the jail are trained to
handle immigration infractions, running checks in databases and holding
people in custody if necessary
Some of those arrested face immediate deportation. Some are held on bond
pending an immigration hearing. Lara was relatively lucky. Because he had no
prior immigration or criminal charges, he was given a notice to appear
before an immigration judge in Atlanta and released. He is likely to be
ordered deported.
Lara says police now unfairly target Latinos. More than 90 percent of those
discovered to be illegally in Mecklenburg are from Latin America.
"The police are just looking for problems with Hispanics," Lara said. "They
know we don't have driver's licenses -- we can't get them -- and so they
pull us over."
A lot of people here are very afraid because they think the police will pull
them over for anything," said Liliana "La Chula" Ramos, a host on local
Spanish radio. "It's very difficult for people to get licenses now, and
people have to go to work, so they're out there driving."
Philip Turtletaub, a Charlotte immigration lawyer, says he sometimes
receives six or seven calls a day from relatives of illegal immigrants
caught by the program. He tells them not to waste their money.
"Most people I can't do anything for," he said.
‘Putting the pressure on these people’
While he ventured no opinion on the program's fairness, he said he thinks it
could make life as an illegal immigrant in the region so uncomfortable that
fewer illegal immigrants would choose to live there.
"They're putting the pressure on these people. They're scaring them. People
say we can't deport 10 million. But you don't have to. If you deport enough
of them, others will go back voluntarily because they don't want to live in
these conditions."
Besides Mecklenburg, six other state and local law enforcement agencies have
started similar programs in recent years. A dozen more are being worked out
with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. And in the past three months,
hundreds of state and local departments have inquired about similar efforts,
said Robert J. Hines, who heads the program for the ICE.
"When you are removing the criminal element from the community, it's hard to
point a finger and say it's a bad thing," Hines said.
Loudoun County Sheriff Stephen O. Simpson said his department is considering
participating. Last night, Herndon Police Chief Toussaint E. Summers Jr. was
expected to ask Town Council permission to apply for such a program.
Alexandria, Arlington, Fairfax and Prince William officials said they are
not considering the idea, and police officials in suburban Maryland say
there is lukewarm interest in deputizing officers to enforce immigration
laws.
"In the Montgomery County area, we've taken more the track that we celebrate
diversity," said Gaithersburg Police Chief Mary Ann Viverette, who is also
the president of the International Association of Chiefs of Police.
Immigration is "not an issue we want to enforce."
In federal testimony from August, Pendergraph, the Mecklenburg County
sheriff, said "political correctness" is preventing some communities from
adopting the program, and that "will eventually be the downfall of this
country if someone doesn't wake up."
Influx of Latinos
Like much of the mid-Atlantic region, Charlotte has seen a rapid rise in the
number of Latino immigrants over the past 15 years, many of them here
illegally. Between 2000 and 2005, the estimated number of illegal immigrants
in North Carolina rose 38 percent, from 260,000 to 360,000, according to a
Department of Homeland Security report.
The influx, particularly conspicuous in a metropolis clinging to its
small-town past, has caused ripples of concern.
"Texas, New York and California might be used to large influxes of illegal
immigrants -- but we're not," said Mecklenburg County Commissioner Bill
James, who favors stronger enforcement. "James Carville had it right: We're
just Mayberry with a major airport."
Local support for broad enforcement coalesced in July 2005 after a truck
driven by an illegal immigrant whose blood-alcohol level was nearly triple
the legal limit, hit a car, killing a local teacher and leaving the
teacher's wife in a vegetative state. The accident resulted in Ramiro
Gallegos's fifth impaired-driving charge in five years -- and led to the new
enforcement policy.
"No more excuses," U.S. Rep. Sue Myrick said at a news conference at the
time, calling for tougher enforcement. "You're drunk. You're driving. You're
illegal. You're deported. Period."
Staff writers Bill Turque, Karin Brulliard, Ernesto Londoño and Candace
Rondeaux contributed to this report.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company
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