By Libby
I've been meaning to get to this story for a couple of weeks, but it's unfolded since then. David Neiwert covered the current status today and asks if this ICE raid is a harbinger of a police state. The short answer to that smart question, is yes and it's useful to look at how this raid went down. Two weeks ago the feds set up the operation in the aptly named town of Waterloo, Iowa.
Federal officials have imposed a news blackout at the National Cattle Congress fairgrounds in Waterloo, where they have leased almost the entire property through May 25. Tim Counts, a Midwest spokesman for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, known as ICE, declined to say Monday whether an immigration raid is pending that would use the fairgrounds as a detention center.
The Waterloo Courier on Sunday reported that contractors have installed generators adjacent to many buildings at the fairgrounds.In addition, windows on many buildings have been covered up, blocking views inside. A number of mobile-home-size trailers have been transported to the privately owned grounds.
The blackout included the state's US Senator.
At Grassley's request, his staff called ICE officials on Monday.
"During the call, the ICE officials would neither confirm nor deny anything to Senator Grassley's staff," said Beth Pellett Levine, a Grassley aide.
Then came the raid a few days ago.
Buses have begun arriving at the Cattle Congress grounds in Waterloo after hundreds were detained in an immigration raid on a Postville meatpacking plant today. Officials are not allowing media or others near the entrance. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials have declined to say how many buses are being used in the raid on the Agriprocessors Inc. plant.
At least 300 people were arrested during the operation, the largest of its kind in Iowa, said Claude Arnold, a special agent with ICE. ... He said the two helicopters circling the complex were there to provide EMT support and to watch out for the agents on the ground.
A sub-contractor working at the complex said "he was on break at 10 a.m. when '200 agents' stringed into the complex." He was questioned and released but read this media description of the deployment.
Earlier this morning, a helicopter hovered over the scene, and a number of agents formed a perimeter around the Agriprocessors facility. Vehicles from ICE and at least eight cars and vans from the Iowa State Patrol were at the plant. There were also reports of two moving vans at the scene, along with an ambulance and two black Chevrolet Suburbans.
Sounds more like Baghdad than America to me. The only difference being these agents are probably wearing black instead of camouflage. But the main point is they refused to account to anyone for their actions. Today it was illegal immigrants. Tomorrow it could just as easily be political dissenters.
If you think I'm overstating my case, then read Kirk James Murphy, MD on his life with plants. Meaning government planted agitators in activist groups. They're not just watching us, they're infiltrating and they have databases -- massive databases -- on everyone.
First thing that occurred to me as well. These are trial runs.
ReplyDeleteI'm afraid you're right Frances.
ReplyDelete