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Immigration Raiding Swift Plants

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Sounds like these good ol boys thought they had a promise from the government (President) to look the other way-- and are now crying when the law is enforced- or even their credibility investigated....Sounds more like a Mafia mouthpiece than a businessman....Sorry I don't have any sympathy for someone that is breaking the law- if thats found to be the case........

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General News
DHS raids six Swift plants

by Pete Hisey on 12/12/2006 for Meatingplace.com


Agents from the Department of Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency entered six Swift & Co. plants this morning and began interviewing all employees. Operations at all six have been suspended until the interview process is completed, anticipated to be by the end of the day.

No criminal charges have been filed, but Sam Rovit, Swift chief executive, said that the raids violate the company's agreements with the Federal government under the Basic Pilot worker authorization program, under which Swift verifies online worker eligibility by checking worker information against government data bases. Rovit also said that the government actions may violate the civil rights of individual workers.

"Swift has played by the rules and relied in good faith on a program explicitly held out by the President of the United States as an effective tool to help employers comply with applicable immigration laws," Rovit said.

The plants affected include all of Swift's beef operations and 77 percent of pork operations. They are located in Cactus, Tex.; Grand Island, Neb.; Greeley, Colo.; Hyrum, Utah; Marshalltown, Iowa; and Worthington, Minn.

Swift added that if a substantial number of workers are removed from plants, full production will not be possible until they are replaced.
 
December 12, 2006 12:11 PM ETICE Agents Raid Processing Plants
All Associated Press NewsGREELEY, Colo. (AP) - Federal agents raided meat processing plants in six states Tuesday and arrested an unknown number of suspected illegal immigrants in an identity theft investigation.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials said the workers were being arrested on administrative immigration violations and in some cases, existing criminal arrest warrants stemming from a nearly yearlong investigation.

The investigation indicated that large numbers of illegal immigrants may have used the Social Security numbers of U.S. citizens or residents to get jobs with Swift & Co. Immigration officials said they and the Federal Trade Commission had identified hundreds of potential victims.

Six Swift processing facilities were raided Tuesday, in Greeley, Colo.; Grand Island, Neb.; Cactus, Texas; Hyrum, Utah; Marshalltown, Iowa; and Worthington, Minn.

The Greeley-based company did not immediately return a phone message Tuesday morning seeking comment.

In Greeley, cars lined the street leading to the plant as family members stood outside. One person held a sign that said, "Presents! No tears at Christmas!"

ICE officials at the plants in Greeley and Worthington, Minn., said the total number of arrests might not be released until Wednesday, when a news conference was scheduled in Washington.

"We have been investigating a large identity theft scheme that has victimized many U.S. citizens and lawful residents," said ICE spokeswoman Barbara Gonzalez, at the plant in Greeley.

Gonzalez said federal agents worked closely with the U.S. Department of Agriculture to try to minimize the disruption at the plants while carrying out the search warrants.
 
12/12/2006
Federal Immigration Raid At Packing Plants


A federal raid dubbed "Operation Wagon Train" is under way at six Swift and Company meatpacking plants nationwide, including Iowa, Nebraska, and Minnesota.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents say the operation is part of a program to round up illegal immigrants who've obtained jobs by stealing the identities of US citizens.

In Greeley, Colorado, reports indicate that agents have spread out along the railroad tracks behind the plant, with two large buses parked in front, prepared to haul away anyone who may be involved.

Authorities say the investigation began in February. Immigration agents say they've identified hundreds of potential victims.

Similar raids are going on at plants in Marshalltown Iowa; Worthington, Minnesota; Grand Island, Nebraska; Cactus, Texas; and Hyrum, Utah.


One report states that a huge crowd is gathering to block the exit of officers holding arrest detainees.
 
GREELEY, Colo. -- Weld County Social Services was gearing up Wednesday for an expected influx of cases after hundreds of workers at the Swift & Co. Packing plant were arrested in a nationwide ID theft crackdown.

Immigration and Custom Enforcement agents raided six Swift & Co. Plants Tuesday, looking for illegal immigrants working at the plants.

At least 800 workers at the Greeley plant are identified as illegal immigrants; 300 of them will be deported within the week, said Weld County District Attorney Ken Buck.


Swift had been tipped to the raid earlier, but it caught Weld County Social Services by surprise. The agency is responsible for the welfare of families and children in the county and it expected many families would be affected by the loss of income.

"Our wish would have been they would have let us know beforehand," said Judy Griego, director of Weld County Social Services, speaking to the Greeley Tribune. "We have kind of collapsed around this situation internally. Frankly, we don't know how many kids are involved in this now. It's kind of guesswork."

The top priority, Griego told the newspaper, is to find relatives or friends of detained parents. They would be first-choice caretakers, while the county would provide "wraparound services" such as emergency food or financial support.

All foster-care facilities in Weld and Larimer counties were put on alert by Weld County commissioners.

Weld County merchants expected to feel the economic blow from the raid as well.

"Quite honestly, you're looking at two weeks before Christmas, and there is buying power leaving the economy," said Sarah macquiddy, president of the Greeley Chamber of Commerce. "I'm sure that Swift will be able to survive this. But if they don't, it's really sad. The issue being made out of the illegal aliens is minuscule compared to the impact that Swift has on our economy."

Buck said that the raid adversely affects many families, who were working to put their children through school in Colorado, but there are other victims involved.

"It is a difficult day in Greeley. But it's also been a difficult day around the country as people's identities have been stolen and they've had to go and clean up their credit. And they've suffered great harm also," Buck said.

He said while some of the cases will take months to progress, others may be quickly processed.

Not all of those suspected to be illegal immigrants will be deported because federal authorities just don't have resources to go after them all at one time, Buck said.

Buck also speculated that the raid was delayed one day after ICE officials learned that Japanese officials were touring the plant on Monday, investigating beef recently shipped to Japan from the plant that did not have the proper documentation.

Federal officials would not confirm the report but emphasized the raid was the result of complaints of identity theft throughout the United States.

"The strong point here is that a lot of U.S. citizens and U.S. residents have been victimized ... By a large-scale identify theft scheme," said Barbara Gonzalez, an ICE public affairs officer.

Gonzalez said that other plants in the raid included beef plants in Grand Island, Neb., Cactus, Texas and Hyrum, Utah, and pork plants in Marshalltown, Iowa and Worthington, Minn. Operations at all six plants have been temporarily suspended.

ICE said the workers were arrested on administrative immigration violations and in some cases, existing criminal arrest warrants stemming from a 10-month investigation dubbed Operation Wagon Train.

ICE Chief Julie L. Myers told reporters in Washington that agents had uncovered a scheme in which illegal immigrants and others had stolen or bought the identities and Social Security numbers of hundreds of U.S. citizens and lawful residents to get jobs with Greeley-based meat processor Swift & Co.

"Swift has never condoned the employment of unauthorized workers, nor have we ever knowingly hired such individuals," Swift & Co. President and CEO Sam Rovit said in a written statement.

ICE officials planned a Wednesday morning news conference in Washington to further explain their investigation.

Swift had known about the investigation into its workers for months.

Rovit said the company learned of the federal investigation last March, but had been "rebuffed repeatedly" when it offered to cooperate. Rovit said the company had participated since 1997 in a federal program known as Basic Pilot, which allows employers to use a federal database to verify documents presented by job-seekers.

While the federal program confirms a Social Security number is valid, it does not detect identity theft.

Buck said he's known about the raid since last Thursday.

"Immigration authorities came to me and asked me if I would help them receive arrest warrants for 25 individuals at the Swift plant here in Greeley, and they would execute those warrants. So we went to the courts late (Monday) and received those warrants for identity theft," Buck said.

Buck said it would be an "injustice" if Swift management employees were not prosecuted for any possible involvement in the case. He said he didn't know whether any Swift employees were accused of helping the suspected illegal immigrants get stolen identities.

"But if they helped, they should be held accountable," Buck said.

He said he suspects Swift may face charges about its hiring practices.

Background On Swift

The plants in the raid represent all of Swift's domestic beef processing capacity and 77 percent of its pork processing capacity.

"Today's action at Swift will have a strong ripple effect on the rest of the livestock industry. Weld County is the most profitable agricultural county in Colorado, with over $1 billion in agricultural sales. Today's move by ICE will greatly impact the economy there," said Sen. Ken Salazar.

Since 1997, Swift has been using a government pilot program that confirms whether Social Security numbers are valid. Company officials have previously said one shortcoming may be the program's ability to detect when two people are trying to use the same number.

No charges had been filed against the company.

"Swift believes that today's actions by the government violate the agreements associated with the company's participation over the past 10 years in the federal government's basic pilot worker authorization program and raise serious questions as to the government's possible violation of individual workers' civil rights," the company said in a statement.

Swift & Co. Describes itself as an $8 billion business and the world's second-largest meat processing company. In Hyrum, Utah, where city Administrator Brent Jensen said the plant employs more than 1,000 workers, the company can process up to 2,200 cattle a day, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

"Since the inception of the basic pilot program in 1997, every single one of Swift's new domestic hires, including those being interviewed today by ICE officials, has duly completed I-9 forms and has received work authorization through the government's basic pilot program. Swift has played by the rules and relied in good faith on a program explicitly held out by the president of the United States as an effective tool to help employers comply with applicable immigration laws," said Rovit.

Myers said immigration officials were "looking very aggressively" at who may have sold the identities to the workers in several cases. She said ICE had uncovered several different rings that may have provided illegal documents.

Some immigrants targeted had genuine U.S. birth certificates and others had other kinds of false identification, Myers said.

"The significance is that we're serious about work site enforcement and that those who steal identities of U.S. citizens will not escape enforcement," Myers said.

Reaction From Rep. Tom Tancredo

"I congratulate all law enforcement agencies involved in the successful raid," said Rep. Tom Tancredo, an outspoken advocate of stricter immigration laws. "My hope at this point is that the U.S. government has the courage to prosecute the Swift & Company executives who may have been complicit in their hiring."

"When something of this scale happens, it's pretty likely that the plant managers were aware of it, often with the consent of management," Tancredo said.

ICE officials have established a hot line for family member of workers who may have been detained. That toll-free number is 1-866-341-3858.
 
That pilot program must be worthless. At the bank, we've uncovered illegals using other people's soc. #s via the process we use to check before opening a checking account. A little bank in Nebraska can figure it out in 2 minutes, but Swift and the US Government can't? Something reeks here.
 
Sandhusker, as someone who used to interview and hire people there are lot of things you can not ask on a application or in a interview, that you as a banker can ask for. Now having said that you darn sure can do some digging and find out for your self any information you want. You just have to be careful about it.
 
nenmrancher said:
Sandhusker, as someone who used to interview and hire people there are lot of things you can not ask on a application or in a interview, that you as a banker can ask for. Now having said that you darn sure can do some digging and find out for your self any information you want. You just have to be careful about it.

The only information that was used was the name and soc. #. Our 30 year old worker from "Texas" was supposed to be a 58 year old white male from Ohio - something like that. I'd say that if the Pilot Program can't find what a simple checking account background program can do, it wasn't designed to really find anything out.
 
Sandhusker said:
nenmrancher said:
Sandhusker, as someone who used to interview and hire people there are lot of things you can not ask on a application or in a interview, that you as a banker can ask for. Now having said that you darn sure can do some digging and find out for your self any information you want. You just have to be careful about it.

The only information that was used was the name and soc. #. Our 30 year old worker from "Texas" was supposed to be a 58 year old white male from Ohio - something like that. I'd say that if the Pilot Program can't find what a simple checking account background program can do, it wasn't designed to really find anything out.



Wasn't agman supporting the check system for new hires at packer plants?
 
The Smithfield pig plant at Tarheel N.C. discovered workers had slipped through the screening process when they changed to the new Fedral screening brought in after 9-11. Now they have strikes on their hands and the trade union taking legal action to stop the discriminatory terminations of Hispanics!
 
Dec 13, 5:31 AM (ET)

By KIM NGUYEN


GREELEY, Colo. (AP) - Outside a meatpacking plant fence here, a frustrated Tony Garcia watched as Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents swarmed inside.

"We need help," he yelled to them. "We need answers."

There were few of those Tuesday as agents began their initial sweep through Swift & Co. plants in six states, arresting illegal immigrants who had bought or stolen other people's identities to help them get Swift jobs.

Garcia, who said he has friends who work at the Greeley plant, was worried about the fate of schoolchildren whose parents were arrested. "Who is going to pick them up?" he asked.

The raids capped a 10-month investigation into an identity-theft scheme that may have hundreds of victims, both U.S. citizens and legal residents, officials said.

Authorities did not say how mnay people were arrested at the plants in Greeley; Grand Island, Neb.; Cactus, Texas; Hyrum, Utah; Marshalltown, Iowa; and Worthington, Minn.

The United Food and Commercial International Workers union said it would ask federal judges in all six states to halt the raids. Union spokeswoman Jill Cashen said attorneys were gathering details before filing the requests.

No charges had been filed against Swift. In a written statement, President and CEO Sam Rovit said the company has never knowingly hired illegal workers and does not condone the practice.

Immigration officials last month informed Swift that it would remove unauthorized workers on Dec. 4, but Swift asked a federal judge to prevent agents from conducting the raid, arguing it would cause "substantial and irreparable injury" to its business.

Swift estimated that a raid would remove up to 40 percent of its 13,000 workers. After a closed hearing, a judge on Thursday rejected Swift's request, clearing the way for the raids.

The six Swift plants targeted Tuesday represents all of the company's domestic beef processing capacity and 77 percent of its pork processing capacity. Greeley-based Swift describes itself as the world's second-largest meat processor with sales of about $9 billion.

Swift uses a government pilot program to confirm whether Social Security numbers are valid. Company officials have raised questions about the program's ability to detect when two people are using the same number.

Advocates of stricter immigration control praised the raids, pointing out they targeted people suspected of committing other crimes in addition to entering the nation illegally.

"I'm glad that ICE is enforcing our immigration laws in light of the illegal immigration crisis we face across the country," Sen. Wayne Allard, R-Colo., said in a statement.

Others criticized the effect on families or called the raids heavy-handed.

"They are taking mothers and fathers and we're really concerned about the children," said the Rev. Clarence Sandoval of St. Thomas Aquinas Roman Catholic Church in Logan, Utah. "I'm getting calls from mothers saying they don't know where their husband was taken," he said.

Mexico's Foreign Relations Department pledged to ensure that any Mexicans caught up in Tuesday's raid have "their human rights fully respected, and are given all the necessary assistance, orientation and consular protection."

Immigration agents have also staged immigration raids at poultry plants in the South. In July 2005, nearly 120 people were arrested at an Arkadelphia, Ark., facility. Three months ago, agents raided a poultry plant in Stillmore, Ga., arresting a similar number who worked there or lived in surrounding counties.
 
Econ101 said:
Sandhusker said:
nenmrancher said:
Sandhusker, as someone who used to interview and hire people there are lot of things you can not ask on a application or in a interview, that you as a banker can ask for. Now having said that you darn sure can do some digging and find out for your self any information you want. You just have to be careful about it.

The only information that was used was the name and soc. #. Our 30 year old worker from "Texas" was supposed to be a 58 year old white male from Ohio - something like that. I'd say that if the Pilot Program can't find what a simple checking account background program can do, it wasn't designed to really find anything out.


Wasn't agman supporting the check system for new hires at packer plants?

Is this another of your hallucinations or are you just trying to plant another lie - how pathetic?
 
Raids in 6 States May Be Largest Ever


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Dec 13, 12:34 PM (ET)

By JENNIFER TALHELM

(AP) An unidentified man waves to friends as a Federal Immigration and Custom Enforcement agent puts...
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WASHINGTON (AP) - More than 1,200 people were arrested in meatpacking plants in six states during raids that federal officials said amounted to the largest-ever workplace crackdown on illegal immigration.

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said Wednesday the investigation uncovered a "disturbing front" in the war against illegal immigration, in which illegal immigrants are using the identities of U.S. citizens to obtain jobs.

"Violations of our immigration laws and privacy rights often go hand in hand," he said. "Enforcement actions like this one protect the privacy rights of innocent Americans while striking a blow against illegal immigration."

The raids at Swift & Co. plants across the country resulted in 1,282 arrests, including 1,217 on immigration charges and 65 on criminal charges such as identity theft. Chertoff said the investigation is continuing into several groups that may have sold identity documents to illegal immigrants.


(AP) Flora Beth De La Garza shouts at immigration police during a raid at a Swift & Company meat...
Full Image


The arrested workers were from Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Peru, Laos, Sudan, Ethiopia and other countries.

During a raid Tuesday at the Swift plant in Greeley, Colo., a frustrated Tony Garcia watched as Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents swarmed inside to arrest illegal immigrants. "We need help, we need answers," he said, questioning who would take care of the children whose parents were arrested.

The raids followed a 10-month investigation into illegal immigrants suspected of buying or stealing other people's identities to secure U.S. jobs. The scheme may have had hundreds victims, officials said.

Immigration officials last month informed Swift that it would remove unauthorized workers on Dec. 4, but Swift asked a federal judge to prevent agents from conducting the raid, arguing it would cause "substantial and irreparable injury" to its business.

The company estimated a raid would remove up to 40 percent of its 13,000 workers. Greeley-based Swift describes itself as the world's second-largest meat processor with sales of about $9 billion.


(AP) Monica Salazar, 26, holds a sign at the entrance of a Swift & Company meat processing in Greeley,...
Full Image


After a closed hearing, a judge on Thursday rejected Swift's request, clearing the way for Tuesday's raids at the plants in Greeley; Grand Island; Cactus, Texas; Hyrum, Utah; Marshalltown, Iowa; and Worthington, Minn.

The six plants represent all of Swift's domestic beef processing capacity and 77 percent of its pork processing capacity.

Advocates of stricter immigration control praised the raids and pointed out that they targeted people suspected of committing other crimes in addition to being in the U.S. illegally.

"I'm glad that ICE is enforcing our immigration laws in light of the illegal immigration crisis we face across the country," Sen. Wayne Allard, R-Colo., said in a statement.

Others called the raids heavy-handed and criticized the effect on families.


(AP) A crowd, that includes relatives of workers at a Swift & Co. meat processing plant in Greeley,...
Full Image


"They are taking mothers and fathers, and we're really concerned about the children," said the Rev. Clarence Sandoval of St. Thomas Aquinas Roman Catholic Church in Logan, Utah. "I'm getting calls from mothers saying they don't know where their husband was taken."

United Food and Commercial International Workers union spokeswoman Jill Cashen told the Post workers taken from the Worthington, Minn., plant were bused to South Dakota.

She said Tuesday that attorneys for the union would ask federal judges in all six states for injunctions to halt the raids.

Mexico's Foreign Relations Department also pledged to ensure that any Mexicans caught up in the raids have "their human rights fully respected, and are given all the necessary assistance, orientation and consular protection."

No charges were filed against Swift.

In a written statement, President and CEO Sam Rovit said the company has never knowingly hired illegal workers and does not condone the practice.

Swift uses a government pilot program to confirm whether Social Security numbers are valid. Company officials have raised questions about the program's ability to detect when two people are using the same number.

Immigration agents have also staged immigration raids at poultry plants in the South. In July 2005, nearly 120 people were arrested at an Arkadelphia, Ark., facility. Three months ago, agents raided a poultry plant in Stillmore, Ga., arresting a similar number who worked there or lived in surrounding counties and busing them to immigration courts in Atlanta, 189 miles away.

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"Immigration officials last month informed Swift that it would remove unauthorized workers on Dec. 4, but Swift asked a federal judge to prevent agents from conducting the raid, arguing it would cause "substantial and irreparable injury" to its business. "

It would cause them "substantial and irreparable injury" to their business if they followed the law? Now I've heard everything.
 
1-In a written statement, President and CEO Sam Rovit said the company has never knowingly hired illegal workers and does not condone the practice.



2-The company estimated a raid would remove up to 40 percent of its 13,000 workers. Greeley-based Swift describes itself as the world's second-largest meat processor with sales of about $9 billion.

How would they estimate that up to 40% would be removed if they didn't know they were illegal????????????????????????????????????????? :???:
 
We raise cattle on this ranch but our other ones raise oranges and grape fruit and they don,t turn anyone away that wants to work.
The truth is no one but the mexican will do this kind of work.And the politicions and do gooders aren,t smart enough to fix the problem here either.It is a damn shame we can make all the people that are on out of work getting food stamps and so one take these jobs but face it we have to have the Mexicans or we would go hungry.They need to come across the border and get a card so they can be traced and have to go home once a year.No free lunch when they are here let mexico take care of the Dr bills and every thing else while they are up here also.Just a dream it won,t probally happen.
 
Sundance said:
We raise cattle on this ranch but our other ones raise oranges and grape fruit and they don,t turn anyone away that wants to work.
The truth is no one but the mexican will do this kind of work.And the politicions and do gooders aren,t smart enough to fix the problem here either.It is a damn shame we can make all the people that are on out of work getting food stamps and so one take these jobs but face it we have to have the Mexicans or we would go hungry.They need to come across the border and get a card so they can be traced and have to go home once a year.No free lunch when they are here let mexico take care of the Dr bills and every thing else while they are up here also.Just a dream it won,t probally happen.[/quote

I just put my name on a letter today asking the President to veto a bill the senate has introduced or passed which would give illegal aliens Soc. Security benefits. I think my name was the 453 name. I would imagine Bush wouldn't veto anything that benefits big businesss.
 
In South Africa, a system was used for migrant labour, especially on the mines, in which the labour was contracted in their own country, trained and worked their contract on the mines, then returned home with an end ofcontract bonus. Most returned and as experienced workers were welcomed back, but always on a contractual basis, and always returning to their own country so as to break their period of residence and the system of documenting prevented any illegally changing jobs.
Medical schemes, bonuses and pensions were all included in the contract
with the contracter so no public funds were involved at any level.
 
anybob here in florida they use something like that crew leaders they have 80 to 100 mexicans in the crew the company writes one check for the contract to the crew leaders.They pay the men they are bonded also.This could be very easy to do something like the africans do.
We need them but we don,t need to take care of them.
 
What really makes me mad tho is that now there will be busloads of Civil Rights attornies and protesters- along with the corporate world- all coming to the defense of these illegal immigrants-- when the truth is they are crooks, thieves-- they stole/bought stolen identies of real true US citizens which won't/don't have anyone protecting them... :mad: :mad:

Under the current system if your identity gets stolen/used its up to you to prove you didn't do it or it wasn't you :roll: Just last month I had to write a letter for a farmer/rancher that has resided, lived in, and ranched in this county for 30+ years....His name and identity were stolen and someone ran up rent/gas/electric/ bills in Minneapolis for many thousands $-- and they have now turned it over to a credit collection agency and turned it in on his credit rating....He will have to pay the costs of hiring an attorney, going to court and proving the bill is not his, and getting it removed from his credit rating.... :(

Thats the reason I believe the only way to handle the problem is to close our borders tight-- round up all these illegal immigrants that are criminals-- and then look at reopening under a guest worker program-- but only as a "guest worker"-- no promises of Social Security, etc. or citizenship...
Something along the lines of AndyBobs South Africa worker plan.....
 
Arresting and prosecuting the folks that hire them would go a long way in prevention also.

If the migrants knew it would be hard to get a good job, they wouldn't be filing over the border in droves.
 

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