The New York Times has a major story this morning regarding the recent raid of the meat processing plant in Postville, Iowa. Nearly 400 illegally present workers were criminally prosecuted as a result of their work at the plant.
The Times interviewed translator Eric Camayd-Freixas after the Florida International University professor circulated a 14 page essay describing his experience working at the trials of the workers.
According to the Times, many of the workers did not understand the criminal charges and were not actually guilty of the crimes for which they were convicted.
Professor Camayd-Freixas said he was taken aback by the rapid pace of the proceedings and the pressure prosecutors brought to bear on the defendants and their lawyers by pressing criminal charges instead of deporting the workers immediately for immigration violations.
He said defense lawyers had little time or privacy to meet with their court-assigned clients in the first hectic days after the raid. Most of the Guatemalans could not read or write, he said. Most did not understand that they were in criminal court.
“The questions they asked showed they did not understand what was going on,” Professor Camayd-Freixas said in the interview. “The great majority were under the impression they were there because of being illegal in the country, not because of Social Security fraud.”
Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren, chair of the House Immigration Subcommittee has indicated that she intends to hold a hearing on the Postville prosecutions and call Professor Camayd-Freixas.
You can read the professor's essay here. Download camayd.pdf
EB backlogs or meat plant worker shorage, Chertoff and the GOP are trying to fan stagflation by reducing the number of workers in the US economy, so that we can have higher interest rates, deep recession and they are hoping to pin it all on Obama a year from now!
Posted by: George Chell | July 11, 2008 at 11:49 AM
How about a hearing on the EB backlogs?
Posted by: palanki | July 11, 2008 at 10:03 AM