Immigration officials say raids on illegals are within the law
Carolyn Hileman | January 3, 2008
By ELIZABETH LLORENTE
STAFF WRITER
The federal government is increasingly deceiving unsuspecting illegal immigrants into granting entry to their homes, a growing chorus of lawyers and civil rights groups say.They charge that in an overzealous effort to deport illegal immigrants, federal immigration agents forgo required search warrants, instead using ruses and intimidation to gain consent to enter and search private dwellings. In interviews with The Record and in a growing number of lawsuits, immigrants and critics of the raids say that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is violating the U.S. Constitution.
“They’re armed agents showing up at 5 a.m., banging on doors, kicking them in, going into people’s bedrooms, ripping covers off people in their beds, asking them questions when they’re half asleep, and seizing them and taking them away,” said Patrick Gennardo of Englewood, one of several area attorneys who have filed suits recently asking that such ICE practices be found unconstitutional. “These aren’t fine lines between consent and storming in; these are scary, major violations of the Constitution.”
But Scott Weber, field director for ICE’s office in Newark, takes exception to those claims.
“We all operate under the same Constitution,” Weber said. “My officers are not involved in sweeps or random searches. We’re looking for specific individuals that we have specific information for and active and valid warrants for their removal [from the U.S.] Our officers have extensive training in which they’re taught constitutional law, statutory law and immigration law.”
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