Kidnapping on the streets of America

Kidnapping on the streets of America

by digby



This is us:




I keep hearing that the American people will rise up when they see immigrants being forcefully taken from their homes and family because it's so awful.

Well, this is happening every day. This is America, 2018.
Perla Morales-Luna clung to a young woman's arm as Border Patrol agents tugged her away.

The agents, one dressed in uniform, pulled her until she released her grip and shoved her into a U.S. Customs and Border Protection van waiting at the curb, her three daughters watching.

"Get in the car!" someone yelled.

Voices cried and screamed in the background. Moments later, the van drove off.

The dramatic scene unfolded in National City on Saturday during what federal authorities called a targeted operation to arrest a woman who allegedly has ties to a transnational smuggling organization and is suspected of being in the country illegally. But video of the encounter that spread across social media on Thursday alarmed immigrant rights activists, who questioned the aggressive detention tactics by federal authorities, who forcibly took her into custody in front of her family.

"It's really a grotesque way of detaining and enforcing immigration law," said Benjamin Prado, coordinator for the American Friends Service Committee's San Diego U.S.-Mexico Border Program, a human rights group working with the Morales family. "It is very quickly accelerating to a very tyrannical form of detention and arrest, snatching people up off the street." 
Border Patrol spokesman Theron Francisco said Morales was identified as an organizer for the smuggling operation, but he did not know details about her involvement. She is being held on suspicion of being in the country illegally.

Morales is waiting to be transferred to the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement for removal proceedings, Francisco said.

It's unclear if Morales will face criminal charges. That could suggest federal authorities are still investigating her alleged ties to the smuggling ring, or it could be a way for the agency to justify the tactics used in her arrest, said Niels Frenzen, director of the USC Gould School of Law Immigration Clinic.

Prado said Morales was walking near her home with her three daughters when the arrest occurred. Now, her three daughters are being cared for by an uncle.

A teacher of one of Morales' daughters who posted the clips on Facebook did not return requests for comment.

"Our biggest concern is the manner in which this raid took place, the violent manner in which they detained her and pushed her in," Prado said. "The terror and trauma that is being imposed on the children, her daughters."
This is what that sadistic piece of work Jeff Sessions came to California to insist must be allowed to happen on all of our streets whenever ICE thugs want to do it. And they want the state and local authorities to be required to help them do it.


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