Feds


This just in from Kaitlin Sopoci-Belknap, Humboldt Coalition for Community Rights:

SAN FRANCISCO – Federal Court judge Susan Illston ruled against the people of Humboldt County in yesterday’s hearing on Measure T, the local law passed in 2006 by citizen’s initiative. Measure T bans non-local corporate contributions in local elections.

The Pacific Legal Foundation sought a preliminary injunction against Measure T, arguing that the law violates the First Amendment rights of corporations. The judge granted the injunction, allowing corporate money back into local elections.

The proponents of the Measure were disappointed by the ruling, but unfazed. “The court is wrong – and this isn’t the first time,” said Kaitlin Sopoci-Belknap, spokesperson for the Humboldt Coalition for Community Rights (HCCR). “Measure T follows in the footsteps of the suffragists, the abolitionists and Civil Rights activists who fought against Supreme Court decisions that upheld unjust laws. The majority of Humboldt citizens believe corporations have too much power in our society, especially in elections. Our democracy is deteriorating. We have an obligation to stand up for what’s right, even if the courts are not currently with us.”

“This ruling proves how undemocratic it is to allow a corporation to claim to be a person with constitutional rights,” said Megan Wade Antieau of Democracy Unlimited, an organizer of the event. “Apparently the judge believes upholding corporate influence in elections is more important than the rights of the people of Humboldt County.”

“We don’t need to depend on the courts to tell us the difference between right and wrong. We have candidates running for office in November who should respect the will of the voters,” said Wade Antieau.

Democracy Unlimited, one of the member organizations of HCCR, is holding a community meeting this Wednesday (Sept. 24) to invite residents to get involved in defending Measure T.

The meeting will be at the Labor Temple in Eureka (840 E Street) from 6:30pm to 9:30pm. Light dinner will be served. Carpooling is available from Arcata. For more information contact Democracy Unlimited: 269-0984.

Download Judge Illston’s Ruling here.

18 illegal alien workers for The Sun Valley Group arrested in ICE operation

Enforcement action at Arcata flower grower is part of ongoing ICE investigation

ARCATA, Calif.- U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) special agents executed a federal search warrant here this morning at the local headquarters of one of the state’s major wholesale flower growers, The Sun Valley Group, arresting 18 illegal alien workers on administrative immigration violations.

Today’s arrests are the result of an ongoing investigation that originated with a call to ICE’s tip line. During the ensuing probe, agents uncovered evidence that some of The Sun Valley Group’s workers used Social Security numbers and alien registration numbers that were either fraudulent, did not belong to them, or did not authorize employment. In addition, some of the company’s workers are believed to have falsely claimed to be United States citizens or legal permanent residents.

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As ICE continued to search and arrest people at Sun Valley today, three people observing the raid from the road by the main entrance linked arms and stood in front of one of the white vans, with most of its windows whited out, as it began to exit the company compound onto Upper Bay Road. The three stood there, facing the van. The front doors of the van opened and two ICE men stood up and leaned out.

The woman in the linked-arm group said, “We’re here for peace.”

One of the ICE men said, “We’re here for peace, too.”

Soon, a private security guard showed up to confront the trio. He said, “Let these people out.”

I didn’t hear what one of the three said, but next the guard said, angrily, what sounded like, “I’ve saved more people in my lifetime and I’m almost 80 years old.” Then something unintelligible. And then, “That’s why we’re free.”

The woman in the linked-arm group said, “But we’re not free.”

And the guard said, “I know what you want!” He walked away.

One of the three said, “Let’s walk down the road,” and so they turned around and turned right and walked down the road.

The van, meanwhile, let some cars pass — the traffic out there on that country road was pretty thick — and then it turned left, in the direction opposite of the linked-arm blockade, and drove away. But a second ICE van, meanwhile, headed for the exit and, not seeing the human-chain protest, turned right and then sat behind them for a while. The three walked on, the van sat in place. Time passed. The three unlinked and wandered to the side of the road. The van drove away.

Meanwhile, just outside the gate, people gathered: a worried-looking Spanish-speaking man who said he had a friend who worked there; two women who arrived with two little boys to find out what was going on, who then waited, watching, while the little boys played and said, “Hi moto” to passing motorcycles. One of the women said she’d heard about the raid on the radio. She said, “My cousin works here. It’s so sad.”

Another woman arrived to see if she could find out about a family member. She said, “Everybody’s here working to feed their family. Also, everything costs too much: the rent, gas, food.”

One woman asked spokesperson Virginia Kice, with ICE, where people were being taken to and if their families had been contacted. Kice told her they were being taken to the McKinleyville Coast Guard station, first, but that ICE wasn’t “equipped to process them” there so, at some point, the people ICE determined to detain further would be taken to one of its contracted facilities in the area. The woman said she was a U.S. citizen, but her husband was in the process of applying for citizenship and she wondered if he would be detained. Kice gave her a card for the Friends and Family line, that reads in part: “If you believe a family member, relative or friend has been detained by ICE, please call one of the following numbers: (707) 536-8808; (707) 536-8595; (707) 536-7470.”

Several people arrived to join others observing, one of whom identified herself as being with Redwood Curtain Copwatch.

A guy named Victor, an HSU student in the environment and community program, videotaped the events as they unfolded. He was angry — at what was going on, and at how the media reports, or doesn’t report, such things, he said. “I’m a student, I’m a Mexican, and I’m never going to forget it,” he said. “I’m here because I’m against the capitalist exploitation that takes place at Sun Valley in terms of pesticide use, and exploitation of immigrant labor. And I’m against the separation of families by federal agents.”

A man and woman drove by and stopped, asked what was going on.

“ICE raid,” someone told them.

The man said, “Oh. We were just coming here to drop her resume off.” And they drove away.

Lauren Beaman, who says she works “as a collective with Redwood Curtain Copwatch,” and who’d been at the gate earlier then left, returned with bilingual cards — Tarjeta de Derechos/Rights Card — she’d photocopied to pass around to people.

Occasionally, Sun Valley workers came and went on foot through the gate. One woman came out, saying, “Some of the people they arrested weren’t even on the list” that ICE agents had. “Everyone who is Mexican they took.”

photos by Bob Doran

The federal depart of Immigrations and Customs Enforcement — aka “La Migra,” previously known as the INS — is staging some kind of huge operation in Arcata. Bob Doran is in the parking lot of Westwood, where something like 10 vehicles are staged. McKinleyville’s Dennis Mayo tells KHUM’s Mike Dronkers that a huge number of vehicles were staged at Toni’s Restaurant off Giuntoli, and have just moved out.

UPDATE: Sun Valley has been surrounded, they say — big place to surround. One ICE official tells Bob Doran that they are there to execute a search warrant.

UPDATE: While we wait for details, you might want to read up on what has led to this, today. Here’s a Blogthing report from Japhet Weeks about the ICE letter that led to Sun Valley cleaning house back in June. Here’s the follow-up NCJ cover story.

The key thing to remember: Back then, they insisted that they were at the very beginning of their investigation.

UPDATE: They’ve rolled in paddy wagons.

UPDATE 11:46 a.m.: Virginia Kice of ICE talks to our Bob Doran and Mike Dronkers on KHUM. It’s an ongoing investigation. A number of individuals will likely be taken into custody: suspected immigrants, that is. Company executives were not mentioned. They expect to be there into the afternoon.

Kice will not say how many agents are involved, supposedly “for security reasons.” They had “air support” during the operation — a fixed-wing plane.

“Things have gone very very smoothly so far,” Kice says. “The employer has been very cooperative.”

Doran has seen three people handcuffed and put into vehicles at the site.

UPDATE, 12:45 p.m.: ICE’s Virginia Kice tells the Journal that their current warrant authorizes agents to look for individuals living and/or working in the country illegally — not company brass. Not at this time, anyway.

“We don’t anticipate any criminal arrests today, but I want to emphasize that this is an ongoing investigation,” she says.

UPDATE, 12:50 p.m.: Audio …

Virginia Kice speaks with Mike Dronkers of KHUM:


Virginia Kice press conference at the gates of Sun Valley:


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