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Pasadena Star-NewsBorder issues draw a crowd Friday, August 13, 2004 - Enforcement of
the nation's immigration laws has not been halted, stopped or intimidated
and has even been stepped up, a Homeland Security official told an
emotionally charged gathering of about 1,000 on Friday.
At the town hall meeting, organized by Rep. Darrell Issa, R- Vista,
many attendees passionately interjected their disapproval while officials
spoke, saying they were not satisfied with the answers they got and wanted
their government to do more to remove undocumented immigrants.
Immigration and border patrol issues have resurfaced in the state as a
hot-button issue since a new 12-member unit from the Temecula Border
Patrol station arrested about 420 illegal immigrants in June, including 79
from Ontario.
"Sometimes I'm asked a question: 'Are you going to start the sweeps
again?'' said Asa Hutchinson, undersecretary for border and transportation
security. "If you are referring to sweeps as indiscriminately rounding up
people, the answer is no. If you're talking about law enforcement
operations that go out there and remove illegal aliens in this country, we
are going to continue to do that.'
The June arrests in the state's interior drew criticism from some
Latino groups who feared they used racial profiling and created
unnecessary fear in the community. Supporters argue that Border Patrol is
simply doing its job to enforce the laws, no matter how far from the
border.
But Border Patrol union representatives say Hutchinson and Homeland
Security are preventing them from doing their job. They haven't been able
to conduct the kinds of sweeps done in Ontario and Corona, though they are
doing other types of enforcement, T.J. Bonner, president of the National
Border Patrol Council, said Friday.
"We suspect it's because they caved in to the political will from the
demonstrations of thousands of people who, by the way, most of them are
here illegally in this country,' Bonner said. "Uniformed patrols are an
effective interior enforcement. People who have broken the law have no
right to be secure in our country.'
Immigration and Customs Enforcement is the agency charged with interior
immigration enforcement, while Border Patrol focuses on arresting people
along the border, at transportation hubs and in areas with a connection to
the border, Hutchinson said.
Border Patrol will still support the operations of Immigration and
Customs Enforcement in the interior, he said. It will also have lead
enforcement in areas surrounding the checkpoints within 100 miles of the
border, he said.
As evidence that operations in general have continued since the arrests
in Ontario, Hutchinson pointed to a joint effort between three government
agencies, including Customs and Border Protection, which netted 389
arrests of illegal immigrants at LAX starting in July.
That effort, dubbed the Los Angeles Area Initiative, was intended to
curb human smugglers there. There have also been recent changes that allow
illegal immigrants who are within 100 miles of the border and who have
entered the country less than two weeks before, to be deported without
first seeing an immigration judge, he said.
Many attendees spoke about their concerns about the drain that illegal
immigrants were having on the nation's health care system, school system
and economy.
Some waved American flags. Others held signs or bore T-shirts with
slogans like "Illegal Aliens are Criminals' or "High 5 For Border Patrol.'
The room burst into an applause and standing ovation for talk show
hosts John Kobylt and Ken Champeau from KFI, who have actively supported
sweeps of undocumented immigrants like those in June.
Jerry Mock, 59, of Corona attended the meeting to impress upon
government representatives that he has had enough.
"We should start enforcing our immigration laws and close the borders,'
he said. Janice Gammill, a retired waitress from Costa Mesa, said she was
there for her children and her grandchildren.
"We're under an invasion and our government is not protecting us,' she
said.
Brenda Gazzar can be reached by e-mail at
brenda.gazzar@dailybulletin.com or by phone at (909) 483-9355.
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