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Jackal Ghoul
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Rio Grande Valley, Texas
Posts: 1,270
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American "Family Jails" & DHS limit sherrif joe racial profiling 287G program
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/19/us...NTFAM_BRF.html
The last remaining families have been moved from a former Central Texas prison that had held immigrant children and their parents. Advocates say the few remaining families left the T. Don Hutto facility in Taylor on Thursday. The facility will now house only female detainees. More women are expected to arrive in the next week. Federal officials announced last month that the Hutto facility would no longer hold the families of illegal immigrants. Instead, they will be detained at the much-smaller Berks Family Residential Center in Leesport, Pa. Hutto opened as a family detention center in 2006. Detained immigrants could be categorized by risk The Associated Press - Suzanne Gamboa - Oct 6, 2009 The agency has completed one of the reforms announced in August, removing families from T. Don Hutto detention center, a former prison in central Texas. ... Old hotels and nursing homes to house undocumented News 8 Austin Feds propose alternative housing for illegal immigrants KHOU US: Act on Immigration Detention Reform Reuters AlertNet Feds limit Ariz. sheriff's crackdown on illegal immigrants - On Deadline - USATODAY.com Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio says he will continue his controversial "crime suppression operations" despite a Department of Homeland Security decision to strip him of authority to arrest suspected illegal immigrants based solely on their immigration status, the East Valley Tribune reports. “It’s all politics,” says Arpaio, sheriff of Maricopa County. Arpaio will still have the power to check the immigration status of people booked by his officers, but not the authority to conduct street patrols looking for illegal immigrants. His “crime suppression operations” are saturation patrols in designated areas where deputies would find illegal immigrants by stopping them for traffic infractions and minor violations, the paper says. The Department of Justice and other federal agencies are investigating the sheriff’s office on accusations of racial profiling during the operations, the paper says. Arpaio said he will be able to still conduct the crime sweeps under state human smuggling laws and an obscure federal law that allows local police to arrest illegal immigrants. A spokesman for the Phoenix office of ICE declined to comment until after pending agreements with the country are signed.
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#2 (permalink) |
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Jackal Ghoul
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Rio Grande Valley, Texas
Posts: 1,270
Thanks: 31
Thanked 122 Times in 99 Posts
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Harassing waitresses, while noting his wife's virtue: NOT NAGGING HIM
During his appearance on the glen beck show,
The sheriff openly admitted or at least described, racial profiling roundups 'in the course of enforcing the law". He posed a scenario where police come across, "someone scared, look like they come form another country, or don't speak english" which then allows the police officer to detain or transfer to ICE. Joe Arpaio on Mexican Migrants: "They're All Dirty" - Phoenix News - Feathered Bastard The Vigilante: GQ Features on men.style.com "Why'd he have to blister me?" Arpaio mutters. "You know what it is? It's this civil rights, all that crap." I ask how his wife of 52 years, Ava, feels about the work he does, and the public ridicule he endures. "I gotta give her a lot of credit," he says. "If she was nagging me to come home at six every day, I wouldn't be able to be here doing this work. So the people have to give her some credit for not nagging me." But mostly it's about immigration, which he warns "will speed and guarantee the reconquista of these lands, returning them to Mexico." But, back inside his office, Arpaio complains that to speak only of securing the border, as many of the television pundits do, is "a cop-out." "It's always, We have to secure our borders first, then we'll talk about illegal immigration," he says. "What about those ten million that are already here? The border doesn't do any good for them. But we don't wanna talk about that." I mention recent reports that the Obama Justice Department—in response to complaints that the crime suppression sweeps amount to nothing more than racial profiling—has begun investigating his methods. "I will continue to do it," he says. "I'm not gonna be intimidated by the new administration or by mayors here or by any other politician trying to intimidate me, including the news media. So I will do my job, I will not surrender. If they don't like what I'm doing, change the law. I'm just enforcing the law." Lisa alerts us that it's time to leave, as the sheriff has a date with the Biltmore Ladies Lunch Group, one of the nominally civic organizations he entertains each week. Arpaio puts on his blazer and we are joined by his two bodyguards, who wear matching crewcuts and polo shirts. Driving through downtown Phoenix, Arpaio tells me how successful his enforcement efforts have been. "I feel bad that they're afraid of me, but it shows that what we're doing is working," he says. "If they're afraid of the sheriff, then they should get out of town and go back to their home country. A lot of people are leaving town already." "My daughter has adopted children of various ethnicities," he says in his defense. "I got a black, a Mexican with down syndrome even. And yet I'm the racist, I'm the fascist, I'm the Hitler!" The ladies shake their heads sympathetically. "Why do they call him that?" one whispers. Suddenly, he spots a pretty, young, Hispanic-looking waitress weaving between tables. "I shouldn't ask you this," he says, grinning mischievously, "but." The waitress freezes, and the ladies all turn to face her, smiling as her face drains of its color. "Hey, how are ya? Where are you from originally?" "Uh, Georgia. Then Florida," she responds, a tray of empty coffee cups shaking in her hand. "Florida!" Arpaio exclaims. "Now, I hope I didn't violate anything by asking you where you're from, because that's profiling!" The waitress looks at him blankly as the ladies laugh. "Go around to the businesses and see who's servicing you these days," he continues, waving his hand to dismiss her. "Go look at McDonald's. You'll see different types of people working now: white teenagers. Let the illegals go back home and let the American citizens do these jobs." Things weren't always this way. "They used to stop them from coming across the border," Ava (wife) remembers. "I don't think they were coming in droves like they do now, where they come in on these trucks. They get dropped off in drop houses, and then they get executed or killed by the people who brought 'em because they can't pay 'em! Well, that's not right. So, it all leads to bad things if they don't come over the right way." "My wife has a point about them coming over," Joe says. "All these people that come over, they could come with disease. There's no control, no health checks or anything. They check fruits and vegetables, how come they don't check people? No one talks about that! They're all dirty. I sent out 200 inmates into the desert, they picked up 18 tons of garbage that they bring in—the baby diapers and all that. Where's everybody who wants to preserve the desert?" "Where's your green people, huh?" Ava asks. I suggest that immigration reform would help solve these problems. "So is that gonna stop the flow?" Joe says. "They're still gonna cross the border illegally." "I like Mexican people," Ava tells me. "I don't think anything's wrong with them. It's fine if they're here legally. I never really felt prejudiced toward 'em at all. And I lived in Mexico, too. But I was there legally! I was there legally for sure."
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#3 (permalink) |
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Jackal Ghoul
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Rio Grande Valley, Texas
Posts: 1,270
Thanks: 31
Thanked 122 Times in 99 Posts
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Sheriff:
"If local law enforcement comes across some people that have an: erratic, scared, whatever, thery're worried, they have thier speech, what they look like, if they look like they just came form another country, we can take care of that situation." (3:55) Beck: "when was that law written cause all I hear about is that's sounds like profiling"
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