Results 1 to 7 of 7
  1. #1
    kfrost06's Avatar
    kfrost06 is offline Banned
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    torrance,ca
    Posts
    3,041

    Feds Deport Activist Who Sought Refuge In Church

    (AP) LOS ANGELES An immigration activist who took refuge in a Chicago church for a year to avoid being separated from her son has been deported to Mexico, the church's pastor said.

    Elvira Arellano was arrested Sunday afternoon outside Our Lady Queen of Angels church in Los Angeles. She was deported several hours later, said the Rev. Walter Coleman, pastor of Adalberto United Methodist Church in Chicago, where Arellano had taken refuge.

    "She has been deported. She is free and in Tijuana," said Coleman, who said he spoke to her on the phone. "She is in good spirits. She is ready to continue the struggle against the separation of families from the other side of the border."

    Messages left with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials were not immediately returned.

    Arellano, 32, became a symbol of the struggles of illegal immigrant parents when she took refuge in the church to avoid being separated from her 8-year-old son Saul, who was born in the U.S. and is thus a citizen.

    She had said Saturday she was not afraid of being taken into custody by immigration agents.

    "From the time I took sanctuary the possibility has existed that they arrest me in the place and time they want," she said in Spanish. "I only have two choices. I either go to my country, Mexico, or stay and keep fighting. I decided to stay and fight."

    Arellano came to Washington state illegally in 1997. She was deported to Mexico shortly after, but returned and moved to Illinois in 2000, taking a job cleaning planes at O'Hare International Airport.

    She was arrested in 2002 at O'Hare and convicted of working under a false Social Security number. She was to surrender to authorities last August.

    She sought refuge at the storefront church on Chicago's West Side on Aug. 15, 2006. She had not left the church property until she decided to travel by car to Los Angeles, Coleman said.

    Coleman said Arellano, who is staying with a friend in Tijuana, had brought to light her struggle, and for that, "she has won a victory."

    "She'll be organizing on the Mexican side of the border while we're organizing in the (United) States," Coleman said Monday. "She'll be talking to organizations throughout Mexico and congressmen in Mexico City."

    Coleman said he and other activists will continue Arellano's original plan to go to Washington, D.C. and take part in a prayer meeting and rally for immigration reform at the Capitol on Sept. 12.

    Immigration activists responded with anger to her arrest, and promised protests and vigils to support her.

    "We are sad, but at the same time we are angry," said Javier Rodriguez, a Chicago immigration activist who worked with Arellano. "How dare they arrest this woman?"

    Anti-illegal immigrant groups said the arrest was long overdue.

    "Just because the woman has gone public and made an issue of the fact that she is defying law doesn't mean the government doesn't have to do its job," said Ira Mehlman of the Federation for American Immigration Reform, which favors limits on immigration.

    Arellano has repeatedly called for a stop to immigration raids that break up families with some members who are in the U.S. legally and others illegally.

    Emma Lozano, Coleman's wife and head of immigration rights group Centro Sin Fronteras in Chicago, said she was Saul's legal guardian. At an afternoon press conference in Los Angeles, the boy hid behind Lozano and wiped away tears.

    "He's taking it better than we thought he would," Lozano said.

    While being arrested, Arellano spoke briefly with her son before submitting to authorities, Lozano said.

    "She calmed him down, hugged him and gave him a blessing," said Lozano.

  2. #2
    gixxerboy1's Avatar
    gixxerboy1 is offline ~VET~ Extraordinaire~
    Join Date
    Sep 2001
    Location
    Texas
    Posts
    32,802
    Good its about time

  3. #3
    Coop77's Avatar
    Coop77 is offline Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Venice CA
    Posts
    1,375
    If you don't want to be separated from your children, don't come over here illegally and give birth. Or take your kids back with you.

    Pisses me off when people sneak in the country and start popping out babies then think that entitles them to stay.

  4. #4
    Coop77's Avatar
    Coop77 is offline Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Venice CA
    Posts
    1,375
    Seriously I think if both parents are in the country illegally, their children shouldn't be automatically made citizens. Only encourages pregnant women to sneak across.

  5. #5
    Logan13's Avatar
    Logan13 is offline Banned
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    USA
    Posts
    4,740
    Quote Originally Posted by Coop77
    If you don't want to be separated from your children, don't come over here illegally and give birth. Or take your kids back with you.

    Pisses me off when people sneak in the country and start popping out babies then think that entitles them to stay.
    +1.....

  6. #6
    kfrost06's Avatar
    kfrost06 is offline Banned
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    torrance,ca
    Posts
    3,041
    I usually diverge from my conservative cronies on the issue of immigration but in this case the lady left her son and in my eyes losses any credibility she may have had. She's a piece of scum that used the Church and her own son for self serving interest while trying to act like a martyr. Never let her back, her poor son is the victim.

  7. #7
    kfrost06's Avatar
    kfrost06 is offline Banned
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    torrance,ca
    Posts
    3,041

    Deported Illegal Immigrant, Activist Sparks Rally

    (AP) LOS ANGELES A Mexican woman who became a lightning rod for pro-immigration activists when she sought sanctuary in a Chicago church was arrested in Los Angeles and deported because she was a fugitive, the head of the local immigration enforcement office said Monday.

    "ICE has a sworn duty to ensure that our nation's immigration laws are applied fairly and without regard for a person's ability to generate public support," said Jim Hayes, director of the Los Angeles office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

    Elvira Arellano, 32, was taken into custody by ICE agents near La Placita Church in downtown Los Angeles around 2:15 p.m. Sunday.

    "Arellano was processed at ICE's staging facility in Santa Ana, and was transported ... to the border crossing at San Ysidro, where she was turned over to Mexican immigration officials late yesterday," ICE announced in a statement Monday morning.

    "Arellano was taken into custody without incident based upon an order for removal originally issued in 1997," the ICE statement said.

    Arellano and her son Saul, 8, who is a U.S. citizen, were in Los Angeles to press for changes in immigration laws and were staying at La Placita Church. She has been struggling to avoid deportation to avoid being separated from her son -- saying immigration raids unfairly break up families that have a mix of legal and illegal residents.

    Hayes said federal officials don't consider Arellano a martyr for the cause of immigration rights. He insisted she was simply the subject of a deportation order who was living and working in the country illegally.

    "She illegally returned to the United States, a felony under federal law, which is punishable by up to 20 years in federal prison," Hayes said. "In 2002, ICE agents arrested Miss Arellano at Chicago's O'Hare airport, where she was working illegally for a janitorial business whose employees had access to secure areas of the airport."

    After Arellano’s arrest, “she was transported there (to San Ysidro) without permission or consent of herself or the Mexican consulate, which wanted to intervene or talk to her," immigration activist Carlos Montes said.

    Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said Arellano's arrest and deportation are indicative of "Washington's failure to enact comprehensive immigration reform."

    "Until we resolve the status of the estimated 12 million undocumented people living and working in the United States by giving them some meaningful pathway to citizenship, families will continue to be torn apart," Villaraigosa said. "As mayor of a city that is over 40 percent foreign-born, I can tell you, when families are torn apart, our communities are torn apart."

    Arellano's supporters held a candlelight vigil Sunday night outside the downtown Metropolitan Detention Center to call for her release.

    Pro-immigration activists held another vigil Monday night at the Federal Building in downtown Los Angeles, Montes said. They are also planning a march in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 15, and have issued a call for a national day of boycott on Sept. 12 -- urging immigrants to avoid work and school.

    "We are appalled and disappointed (by) the behavior of our federal authorities who arrested and deported immigrant rights activist Arellano," said Juan Jose Gutierrez, director of Latino Movement USA.

    Gutierrez said the actions of federal officials send a message that "there will be no mercy toward undocumented workers."

    "The question remains, how can our government justify this cruel behavior towards hardworking, taxpaying undocumented workers?" he asked.

    Gutierrez said immigration activists will hold a march and rally on Oct. 12 in Los Angeles, calling for "full rights for immigrants."

    Arellano visited three area churches Sunday to call for amnesty for illegal immigrants, but was arrested before she could go to a fourth.

    Arellano defied an order to report to the Department of Homeland Security on Aug. 15, 2006, to be deported. Instead, she took refuge in the Adalberto United Methodist Church in the Humboldt Park area of Chicago, which became a center for the New Sanctuary Movement, which is recruiting churches around the country to harbor illegal immigrants.

    According to the New Sanctuary Movement, at least 600,000 families in the United States have at least one member facing deportation because they are not legal residents.

    Delgado said they are asking all sanctuary churches in the country to "stand in solidarity" and start a "mobilization tomorrow to urge Congress to fix the broken immigration system."

    She said 25 churches in California are providing sanctuary for eight families.

    Arellano has said she sought to remain in this country so her son, who was born in the United States, can get better medical care for his attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder.

    She told reporters she came to the United States because the North American Free Trade Agreement hurt the Mexican economy, making it harder for her to find a job there.

    Arellano first came to the United States in 1997 and was deported to Mexico shortly afterward.

    She returned and moved to Illinois in 2000, taking a job cleaning planes at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport.

    She was arrested in 2002 and later convicted of working under a false Social Security number.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •