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LITTLE VILLAGE CHURCH ANNOUNCES HELP FOR ICE RAIDS VICTIMS

The church Mission of Our Lady of Guadalupe hosts cultural event to raise funds to bail out immigrants arrested at recent ICE raids.

WHAT: In response to recent ICE raids and arrests of undocumented immigrants, the Mission of Our Lady of Guadalupe will announce the realization of a Kermes (popular market and cultural event) in benefit of immigrant arrested by ICE at a Press Conference this Friday, April 25th 2008. In the occasion, together to the March 10 Movement, the coalition that has organized the massive immigrant rights marches, the organizers will make a call to movilized for the legalization of all undocumented immigrants this next May first.

WHEN: Press Conference, FRIDAY, APRIL 25th 2008, at 11:00 AM.
WHERE: Plaza Manuel Perez at the corners of 26th street and Kolin.
WHO: Father Jose Landaverde of the Mission of Our Lady of Guadalupe,
Jorge Mujica of March 10 Movement, Martin Unzueta of Chicago Workers
Collaborative, and immigrants recently freed from ICE detention by the
Mission’s effort and their families.

WHY: As the May Day march for immigrant rights approaches, ICE once again realizes highly publicized raids in an effort to intimidate immigrants and their supporter into not marching. But the immigrant community instead organizes ways to help the victims of these attacks and prepares with more conviction to march and demonstrate for the legalization of all undocumented immigrants.

Contacts:
Jose Landaverde, 773-475-6382
Jorge Mujica, 773-852-8815

The Kermes in benefit of the families separated by the ICE raids and deportations will occur Saturday and Sunday, April 26th and 27th, from
9:00 AM to 8:00 PM, in Plaza Manuel Perez, at the corners of 26th street and Kolin.

Kermes will count with the participation of many musical bands, among them: Banda Inicio Musical, Fuerza Calentana, Chacha y su Grupo, Teca y sus Buitres de Guanajuato, Grupo Noble, Rondalla, Romances, Banda Viento Negro, Tenango Banda, Los Chanchos de Durango, Tirados Musical, Las Aguilillas de Zacatecas, Furia De Jalis

LGBTs part of May 1 immigration march
by Yasmin Nair
The 2006 Sensenbrenner Bill ( HR 4437 ) —also known as The Border Protection, Anti-terrorism and Illegal Immigration Control Act of 2005—prompted widespread protests nationwide. In Chicago, the March 10 Movement mobilized a rally of 200,000 immigrants in downtown Chicago. Subsequently, national immigrant-rights groups began staging immigrant rights rallies on May Day ( May 1 ) to emphasize the connection between labor and immigrants.
more...

Protest & Press Conference at ICE offices: Workers Not Criminals!
March 10 Movement

When: Friday, April 18, 5pm
Where: Immigration and Custom Enforcement (ICE) Offices 101 W. Congress Parkway (SW corner of Congress Parkway and Clark)

Why: In response to nationally coordinated raids conducted by Immigration and Custom Enforcement (ICE) members of the Chicago March 10 Movement have organized an emergency protest at the downtown offices of ICE at 5pm on Friday, April 18.

ICE conducted workplace raids at Pilgrim's Pride chicken plants in five states on Wednesday, April 16th. Outrageously, ICE agents went to workers' homes as well as plants. According to reports, 400 Pilgrim's Pride workers were arrested, 4% of its total workforce of 9,400. Pilgrim's Pride is the nation's largest poultry processor.

Workers at the raided plants in Batesville (Ark.) and Live Oak (Fla.) are members of the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW). The workers at the plant in Chattanooga (Tenn) are members of the Steelworkers.

45 immigrants were arrested at the plant in Mt. Pleasant, Texas. 100 people were arrested at the plant in Chattanooga (Tenn). About 100 immigrants were arrested at the plant in Moorefield (W. Virginia). About 20 workers were arrested at the plant in Batesville (Ark.), and about 26 in Live Oak (Fla.).

ICE also conducted separate raids on April 16th in Houston; western New York; Bradford, Pa; Mentor, Ohio; and Wheeling and New Martinsville, W. Va.
ICE Raids At Pilgrim's Pride Yield 400 Arrests
Human Toll of ICE Raids WRCB-TV
Immigration agents raid Pilgrim's Pride plants Houston Chronicle
Hundreds Arrested In Immigration Raids CBS News

This is a travesty of justice. March 10 members are demanding the
immediate release of all the immigrant workers and a moratorium on all
workplace raids.

The raids and other forms of repression serve no purpose other than to
create fear and terror in immigrant communities across the country.
Activists demand a halt to right-wing hysteria that criminalizes the
undocumented depicting them as a threat rather than what they truly
represent: hard-workers who have the right to justice and dignity.

On May Day 2008, we will be marching for equal rights for all workers,
legalization now!, an immediate end to workplace raids and deportations.
Join us tomorrow and May 1st.

For more information please contact:

Jorge Mujica: 773.852.8815
Rosi Carrasco: 708.715.7397
Raquel Vega: 708.715.7397
Martin Unzueta: 773.653.3664










Why haven't we had something like this in Chicago?

"Mayor Gavin Newsom said the campaign was simply an amplification of a longstanding position of not cooperating with immigration raids or other enforcement. The city passed a so-called sanctuary ordinance in
1989.

Still, Mr. Newsom said, it never hurts to advertise. "It's one thing to have a policy on paper," he said. "It's another to communicate it directly to people who could be impacted."

The television and radio campaign will tell immigrants they have "safe access" to public services, including schools, health clinics and — perhaps most importantly — the police, something that local law
enforcement officials say is a chronic problem in émigré communities."

April 6, 2008
San Francisco Reaches Out to Immigrants

By JESSE McKINLEY

SAN FRANCISCO — The city of San Francisco has started an advertising push with a very specific target market: illegal immigrants. And while the advertisements will come in a bundle of languages — English, Spanish, Chinese, Russian, Vietnamese — they all carry the same message: you are safe here.

In what may be the first such campaign of its kind, the city plans to publish multilanguage brochures and fill the airwaves with advertisements relaying assurance that San Francisco will not report them to federal immigration authorities.

Mayor Gavin Newsom said the campaign was simply an amplification of a longstanding position of not cooperating with immigration raids or other enforcement. The city passed a so-called sanctuary ordinance in
1989.

Still, Mr. Newsom said, it never hurts to advertise. "It's one thing to have a policy on paper," he said. "It's another to communicate it directly to people who could be impacted."

The television and radio campaign will tell immigrants they have "safe access" to public services, including schools, health clinics and - perhaps most importantly - the police, something that local law enforcement officials say is a chronic problem in émigré communities.

"It is a trademark of a criminal predator to convince victims that because of the victims' immigration status that they - not the predator - will be treated as the criminal," said Kamala Harris, the city's district attorney. "We want to remove that tool from the criminal's tool belt."

Ms. Harris said particular problems in immigrant communities include human trafficking, fraud and elder abuse, which she said was widely underreported.

San Francisco is not alone in its sanctuary status; New York, Detroit and Washington have policies that discourage the police from enforcing immigration law. Nevertheless, the campaign's announcement prompted a round of eye-rolling among anti-immigration forces in California and Washington, many of whom are still galled by the city's 2007 decision to grant identification cards to anyone who could prove residence, regardless of legal status.

"I guess it's what you expect from San Francisco," said Ira Mehlman of the Federation for American Immigration Reform in Washington, which lobbies for stronger immigration enforcement. "But now, not only are they helping people break the law of the federal government, they are advertising it. I don't know of any other city actually looking for illegal immigrants."

Rick Oltman, national media director for Californians for Population Stabilization in Santa Barbara, said the campaign could actually be a boon for other Bay Area cities if it drew illegal immigrants out of those communities and into San Francisco.

"The only people who are the losers here are the people of San Francisco who are going to hate the way the city looks in two or five years, when the illegal immigrant population grows massively," said Mr. Oltman, who said such populations had a negative effect on crime, education, health and the environment.

But Mr. Newsom said his advertising campaign was less a hard sell than a hard look at the reality of immigration policy.

"We're not arguing against common-sense reforms," he said. "We're not arguing against reforms at all. But in lieu of that, we're doing the best we can to say if they see a crime report it, and if they have a child educate them."


©
Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company



Shouldn't the Chicago City Council be able to pass something like this?

Subject: FW: Press Release: Núñez, Assembly Members Call on Chertoff to Halt Unconstitutional Raids

Press Release: Núñez, Assembly Members Call on Chertoff to Halt
Unconstitutional Raids

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Richard Stapler

April 17, 2008
(916) 319-2408

Núñez, Assembly Members Call on Chertoff to Halt Unconstitutional Raids

ICE Actions Spread Fear, Deny Rights to Southland Workers

SACRAMENTO - Assembly Speaker Fabian Núñez (D-Los Angeles) and more
than 28 Assembly Members today called on Homeland Security Chief
Michael Chertoff to halt raids in California by his agency's
Immigration and Customs Enforcement division after a series of
incidents in southern California that have raised civil liberties
concerns and imperiled families and businesses.
The ACLU of Southern California will also soon feature materials
pertinent to the raids on their website at http://www.aclu-sc.org/.

Text of the letter:

April 17, 2008

The Honorable Michael Chertoff
U.S. Department of Homeland Security
245 Murray Lane, SW
Washington, D.C., 20528

Dear Secretary Chertoff:

It is with a feeling of great dismay and mounting frustration that we respond to your comments in the Associated Press article dated April 12, 2008, regarding the Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) recent raids.

As ICE continues with its record number of worksite raids throughout Southern California, a pattern of serious problems has emerged with regard to its interrogation, detention and deportation practices. Given your somewhat blithe defense of the department's actions, we felt it imperative to illustrate several examples of what actions you are defending.

On February 7, 2008, ICE carried out a worksite raid at MicroSolutions Enterprise, a toner and ink manufacturing company in Van Nuys. This raid resulted in numerous very clear violations of constitutional rights as well as the egregious and offensive mistreatment of workers.

Reports surfaced that during the raid workers were forced to self-segregate by documentation status. During the raid itself, ICE officials did not release legal residents and U.S. citizens until they were interrogated - ICE seemed to assume that the workers were guilty until proven innocent.

Additionally, ICE officials denied workers access to legal counsel as they were questioned and continued interrogations even when workers requested the right to legal counsel. It was not until the ACLU, the National Immigration Law Center, and the National Lawyers Guild sued ICE that workers were allowed legal counsel during their interviews. Legal representation is especially a concern when a person may be a
legal resident but simply does not have possession of his or her documents.

Over 130 workers were detained and even those released on "humanitarian grounds" -- such as pregnant women, nursing mothers, and those with medical conditions -- were forced to wear electronic monitoring devices when they were sent back to their families and children. ICE then added another harsh and punitive restriction on these workers - a home curfew of 7 p.m. to 7 a.m.

Of course, the American citizens most profoundly harmed by the raids are the children left at home alone when their parents are arrested. Often these individuals were also transported to detention facilities far away from their families. In this case, nearly half of the workers had children, and roughly two thirds of these children were American
citizens. These Americans will be forced to either grow up apart from their parents or be denied some of their country's greatest promises as a result of this irrational enforcement action.

The manner in which ICE has conducted its workplace raids and overly aggressive investigation practices is unacceptable on societal grounds and questionable, at best, on legal grounds. When enforcement actions are conducted beyond the scope of warrants and based on individualized suspicion, they result in harm to family members, housemates, neighbors, and other innocent bystanders (many of whom are lawful
residents, or even U.S. citizens). As a result, families have been torn apart and communities left traumatized. Moreover, this method of indiscriminate immigration enforcement does little, if anything, to improve the safety and security of the United States.

While ICE's workplace raids generate attention and fear, they do not, as a rule, seem to be targeted at California's overriding immigration concerns: employers who knowingly and willingly abuse workers by disregarding the immigration laws. ICE's mission is critical and, granted, difficult without a comprehensive legal and policy framework.
However, it must be held accountable for the manner in which it is carrying out the law in California. You can't simply brush aside constitutional rights just because the President and Congress have yet to pass comprehensive immigration reform.

In the coming weeks, we plan to schedule a meeting with you in which we can have a frank exchange. We hope that during this meeting you can provide us with some assurances as to how you will address the aforementioned issues. We also call on you to conduct an investigation into the practices described in this letter. Until such time as that investigation is completed, we call on you to halt worksite raids that are not conducted based on probable cause, given the serious abuses outlined above.

Sincerely,

FABIAN NUÑEZ KAREN BASS