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By Hector Tobar
CHANDLER, AZ-The city fathers of this fast-growing Phoenix suburb
had a plan to create a bright and shining center to their community,
a downtown worthy of the self-proclaimed capital of "the
Silicon Desert." The Police Department took the first step,
with what soon became known as "the roundup," an apt
term for a place where cattle still live side by side with the
factories of high-tech giants Intel Corp. and Motorola, Inc.
A plan to clear the city of illegal immigrants, the July 1997
roundup was a resounding success - and a plan gone horribly wrong.
Too late did city officials realize that their five-day operation
was targeting scores of legal residents and U.S. citizens who
happened to "look Mexican," according to witnesses.
The resulting controversy - a big-city style brouhaha tinged
with ethnic overtones - has consumed Chandler ever since. "They
just can't stop people based on looks," said Phoenix attorney
Stephen Montoya, who has filed a $35-million lawsuit against the
city. "They thought the Hispanic community would not unite
against this, but we did."
Just this month, the city manager officially reprimanded Police
Chief Bobby Joe Harris for the way he conducted the raid, while
a group of Latino activists launched a recall against the mayor
and two city council members. Much to the dismay of leaders in
this city of 143,000 people, the drama long ago took on a life
of its own. The next chapter may come in February in a federal
courtroom in Phoenix, when opening arguments are scheduled in
Montoya's civil rights suit. At the same time, the Arizona Advisory
Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights will hold hearings
on the affair. The U.S. Border Patrol conducting its own internal
investigation.
A spokesman for the Police Department declined to comment on the
operation, because of the pending lawsuit. In a written statement,
Chandler Mayor Jay Tibshraeny echoed the findings of the city's
investigation, saying the operation was flawed and that officers
were not properly trained to carry out complex immigration laws.
He called for a "cultural diversity training program"
for the department. "Things are more scrutinized" in
the wake of the controversy, said Sgt. Ken Phillips, a police
spokesman. "We're more careful."
"It's going to take 10, 15 years for people to feel comfortable
in Chandler again," said Ed Delci, a Latino native of the
city and a plaintiff in the civil rights lawsuit, although he
was not detained during the raid. "Reparations have to be
made." The raid was one of dozens of similar actions taken
by authorities in Southwestern and Rocky Mountain boomtowns, where
an explosion of Latino immigration has dramatically transformed
the social milieu. In few places are the contradictions of rapid
urban growth - and the role of immigrants, legal and illegal,
in that growth - as stark as they are in Chandler, the second-fastest
growing city in the country.
Chandler's raid may have provoked the strongest outcry, because
local authorities failed to take into account a basic truth about
the city: Its immigrants live side by side with a large, well-established
Mexican American community. Latinos make up about 15% of the
population. Four government agencies have conducted investigations,
and a group of activists staged the latest in a series of protest
marches Dec. 19. Local newspapers have editorialized against
Chandler's city leaders and its police. Perhaps the most cutting
comment came from Arizona Republic cartoonist Steve Benson, who
depicted Chandler's finest as a group of obese men with batons
standing over a cowering immigrant. "You have the right
to remain silent," the caption reads. "Any brown pigment
in your skin can, and will, be held against you."
Phillips responded, "Our people come to work, they do a good
job, and then we're perceived by some media as being the bad guy.
We take the hits and we move on." Still, it's not the sort
of publicity that Chandler's leaders envisioned when they launched
Operation Restoration. The city was breaking ground for a new
civic center, including a new police headquarters, municipal court
and library on the edge of the Spanish-style plaza first laid
out by Dr. Alexander Chandler in 1912. Chandler was once a resort
for snow-weary Midwesterners, and then a farm town where irrigation
turned the desert soil green with cotton and other crops. Later,
it became another in a line of bedroom communities swallowed by
the spreading asphalt grid of greater Phoenix. After the techno-boom
of the 1990s spurred a dozen subdivisions, Chandler had become,
in effect, two cities: an affluent sprawl of cul-de-sacs and the
old, impoverished downtown.
City officials concluded that illegal immigration - and the resulting
crowding - was partly to blame for the city center's decay. "Since
July [1994], citizens in the central and eastern portions of downtown
have continuously complained about the criminal activity relating
to illegal immigrants," one police official wrote in a post-mortem
to Operation Restoration. "This criminal activity ranges
from simple disorders and liquor violations to murder."
(FBI statistics show the city's crime rate is near the average
for Arizona.) Unfortunately, the local Border Patrol office didn't
have the manpower for the sort of wide-ranging sweep Chandler
officials felt they needed. Chandler police proposed a joint
operation, and the Border Patrol agreed.
Operation Restoration began July 27, 1997. What happened over
the next five days has been dissected in two different investigations
released so far, first by the Arizona attorney general's office
and then by the city itself. Both inquiries agree that the joint
operation was a dramatic event that saw two dozen police officers
and five Border Patrol agents fan out across downtown, sometimes
chasing suspected illegal immigrants from work sites, filling
up buses with captured people. In all, the police held and eventually
deported 432 illegal immigrants, all but three of them from Mexico.
As the police questioned people leaving markets patronized by
Latinos, they invariably encountered U.S. citizens. Venecia Robles
Zavala, a resident of nearby Mesa, said she was stopped outside
a Food-4-Less market as she was leaving with her children. She
was disciplining her son, in Spanish, when an officer stopped
her and asked for her papers. "What papers?" Zavala
responded in English. "Newspapers?" "No,"
the officer said. "Immigration papers." Thirty tense
minutes later, she found a copy of her birth certificate in her
car and the officer let her go.
Another U.S. citizen, Catalina Veloz, charged that officers placed
her in handcuffs and released her only when she started to curse
at them in English. For attorney Montoya, who is representing
Zavala, Veloz and 13 others, such stops violate the equal protection
clause of the 14th Amendment, because white people
in the area were not stopped. "We see this as a law-and-order
case," Montoya said. "The police have to obey the law."
INQUIRY REVEALS POLICE OPERATION AS ILLEGAL
Four months after the raid, Arizona Atty. Gen. Grant Woods released
the results of his inquiry. The Chandler police, the report concluded,
had stopped residents and had entered the homes of suspected illegal
immigrants without warrants "for no other reason than their
skin color or Mexican appearance or the use of the Spanish language."
What's more, city officials had failed to request formal permission
from the U.S. Attorney General to pursue such an action, as required
by a 1996 federal law.
The city's own review, written by a former Arizona Republic reporter,
was released last month. The review included an expansive report
on the events leading up to the raid, highlighting the spread
of illegal immigrant camps on the outskirts of town. Residents
alleged to have witnessed "naked aliens" wandering about,
and made allegations that others tried to entice schoolgirls into
the citrus groves. "Today, as the Chandler economy diversifies
and flourishes," the report said, "hordes of Mexican
immigrants continue to be drawn northward." Still, the report
chastised the police for a lack of preparation, saying its officers
were not trained to enforce immigration laws. The Border Patrol,
meanwhile, is conducting its own internal investigation. (If
these various government agencies and bureaus didn't have each
other to investigate, they would have nothing to do. WFI
Editor)
Tibshraeny has outlined a series of measures designed to improve
relations with the Latino community. The Police Department has
hired a Latino liaison. The city's Human Relations Commission
has been resurrected. Only Harris, the police chief, has been
reprimanded. A second lawsuit, seeking $8.7 million in damages
on behalf of about 40 plaintiffs, has been filed in state court.
City spokesman Dave Bigos thinks the controversy has already
begun to dissipate, in part because there are so many new people
in Chandler. In boomtowns, community memory is a fleeting concept.
"Sure, we [angered] a large segment of the Hispanics in
the downtown area. Our biggest mistake was not establishing a
dialogue with the community before," Bigos said. "But
the majority of people are going about their jobs, and it really
hasn't touched their lives." (This apparent insensitivity
on the part of the city is the obvious source of the city's problems,
because they don't recognize how demeaning police raids can be
to innocent targets, whose lives can never quite be the same again.
WFI Editor)
More than a year after the police and Border Patrol descended
on several building projects, hauling away Latino workers, Chandler
remains a vast construction site. The new police headquarters
opened this month. At new subdivisions, with names like Clemente
Ranch and Eden Estates, Latino workers push wheelbarrows and wield
hammers as more homes sprout from the dusty red farmland. Tired
of talking about immigration, city officials would much rather
engage visitors in a conversation about the shopping "power
centers" going up on the edge of town. Bigos sits in a conference room with a large map of the city that looks a lot like maps of Southern California in the 1960s, with long dotted lines representing the new freeway that will soon reach Chandler and others planned for the next century. "The city is confident that it can take off," Bigos said. "It's the right time." For others, the mood is not quite so sanguine. Juanita Encinas, 43, sees dark forces threatening the neighborhood where she grew up. Just a few blocks from the city's central plaza, the old, sagging wood-frame houses and dusty lawns of the barrio abut a new, adobe-colored cement wall. Behind that wall, the frames of much taller homes are being erected, part of the San Marcos Country Club Estates. SOURCE: Excerpted from the 28 December, 1998, issue of the Los Angeles Times, Orange County Edition, from an article entitled, "Appearances Impede Town's Ambitions." Reprinted in the public service of the national interest of the American people.(WFI EDITOR: Ironically, before Texas was annexed by the United States, the Mexicans had a problem with illegal aliens, namely, Americans who migrated to Mexican Texas. These illegal immigrants caused so many problems that it led ultimately to the conquest and theft of over half of Mexico's national territory; but it also shifted the illegal immigration problem to the United States, which now had to contend with a massive non-white American population. At the climax of the Mexican American War, the Mexican state virtually collapsed, and a debate started in the U.S. Congress as to whether or not the U.S. should annex all of Mexico. The only thing that stopped this aggressive expansionist will was pure racism, the fact that Mexico was a Catholic Aztec country. When it was decided that only land north of the Rio Grande would be seized, there was no government in Mexico to sign a treaty, so the Americans basically installed one, that was willing to sign away all of northern Mexico. Ever since, the Mexican Government has been dominated by the long shadow of Washington D.C., because it cannot erase the institutional memory of the U.S. conquest of Mexico, which was the groundwork for the establishment of the modern state of Mexico.) |
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