Accessibility links

Breaking News
USA

Immigration Raid Takes 97 Into Custody at Tennessee Plant


FILE - U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents look for an undocumented immigrant during an early morning raid in Dallas, March 6, 2015. On Friday, agents raided a Tennessee meat processing plant and arrested 97 people.
FILE - U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents look for an undocumented immigrant during an early morning raid in Dallas, March 6, 2015. On Friday, agents raided a Tennessee meat processing plant and arrested 97 people.

A federal immigration raid that took 97 people into custody at a Tennessee meat processing plant may be the biggest employment crackdown under President Donald Trump’s administration, civil rights activists said Friday.

Eleven people were arrested on criminal charges and 86 were detained for being in the country illegally, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokeswoman Tammy Spicer said in a statement Friday.

The Thursday raid on Southeastern Provision, a meat processing plant in Bean Station in eastern Tennessee, is the largest single worksite immigration enforcement action since the administration of President George W. Bush, said Jessie Hahn, labor and employment policy attorney at the National Immigration Law Center.

“This is part of the stepped-up Trump mass deportation enforcement agenda for sure,” Hahn said.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents serve an employment audit notice at a 7-Eleven convenience store, Jan. 10, 2018, in Los Angeles.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents serve an employment audit notice at a 7-Eleven convenience store, Jan. 10, 2018, in Los Angeles.

Cracking down on employers

The current administration has promised to crack down on employers who hire immigrants living in the country illegally, and several raids have taken place across the country. A total of 21 people were arrested after immigration agents raided 7-Eleven stores nationwide in January.

A Tennessee activist said the processing plant raid is another example of the emphasis on enforcement.

“What we saw here, while it is the largest and certainly credibly egregious raid, it does fit in the larger practice and patterns of the Trump administration of targeting workers, indiscriminately arresting immigrants and really terrorizing communities across the country,” said Stephanie Teatro, co-executive director of the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition.

Spicer declined to confirm whether it is largest workplace raid under the current president.

Suspected tax evasion

Officials with ICE, Homeland Security, the IRS Criminal Investigation Division and the Tennessee Highway Patrol executed a federal search warrant on the meat processing plant Thursday morning, Spicer said.

During the search, Homeland Security officials encountered 97 people who are subject to removal from the U.S., she said. Ten workers were arrested on federal criminal charges, and another was arrested on a state charge. Of the 86 people arrested and placed in deportation proceedings, ICE kept 54 in detention and released 32 from custody, Spicer said.

An affidavit filed with the search warrant and signed by a special agent with the IRS says the government has probable cause to believe that the company and its owners have committed tax evasion and are employing immigrants in the country illegally. An undercover police officer was hired at the company using a false name and he was paid in cash, the affidavit filed by IRS Special Agent Nicholas Worsham said.

Court records say James Brantley is the president of the business and his wife, Pamela, is listed as an employee. Public records do not list their phone number. The Associated Press left phone and email messages with company but they were not returned.

Several children saw both parents placed in detention and many did not show up for school Friday because of fear in the immigrant community, Teatro said.

Many of the people employed at the plant had worked there for years and are long-standing members of this rural community, she said.

Rights activists have mobilized to help with donations and legal assistance and people have rallied to help the workers and their families, Teatro said.

“That’s because in the face of the threats of the Trump administration, communities have been organizing and coming together to defend their rights and we’re not going to stop organizing, and the community isn’t going to stop standing with these families until they’re returned home.”

This story was written by the Associated Press.

XS
SM
MD
LG