In February the Charlotte Observer began a 6 part series titled "The Cruelest 
Cuts"   The series illustrates how one N.C.-based poultry processor, House of 
Raeford Farms, masked injuries inside its plants and ignored its largely Latino 
workers who complained of debilitating pain. To conduct the series, the 
newspaper interviewed more than 200 poultry workers across the Southeast and 
reviewed thousands of pages of OSHA documents, academic studies, workers' 
compensation cases and rarely-examined company injury logs.  
http://www.charlotteobserver.com//poultry/  
http://www.charlotteobserver.com/spanish/story/173046.html
   
  June 2008- Expose on Bill Moyers Journal 
http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/06272008/profile.html
   
   
  Feds: 300 suspected illegals held after SC raid  By MITCH WEISS
Associated Press Writer
  Posted: Tuesday, Oct. 07, 2008
   
    GREENVILLE, S.C. Federal agents detained more than 300 suspected illegal 
immigrants Tuesday in a raid at a chicken processing plant that has been under 
investigation for months.
  The raid took place during a shift change, when police and federal agents 
spread through the House of Raeford's Columbia Farms plant and ordered all 
workers to show identification, according to officials and witnesses.
  Maria Juan, 22, was one of about 50 relatives and friends of workers who 
huddled at the edge of the plant after the raid, some weeping and others 
talking frantically on cell phones. She was seeking information about her 
68-year-old grandmother, a legal immigrant from Guatemala who went to work 
without identification papers but was later released.
  "Families are going to be broken apart," Juan said. "There will be kids and 
babies left behind. Why are they doing this? Why? They didn't do anything. They 
only wanted to work."
  Immigration officials kept the workers inside the plant and spent most of the 
morning trying to interview them and figure out how many are in the U.S. 
illegally, Assistant U.S. Attorney Kevin McDonald said.
  The number could be large. A recent review found that immigration paperwork 
for more than 775 of 825 workers contained false information, McDonald said. 
Immigration agents scoured the plant for paperwork and other information for 
the investigation.
  House of Raeford processes chickens and turkeys in eight plants in North 
Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Louisiana and Michigan. A sales manager at 
the Greenville plant referred questions to the company's Rose Hill, N.C., 
headquarters, where a woman answering the phone said there was no immediate 
comment.
  Federal prosecutors and immigration agents have been investigating the 
plant's hiring practices for several months. Twelve people have been charged, 
most accused of falsifying documents. Seven have pleaded guilty, three are 
awaiting trial and two have fled, McDonald said.
  The Charlotte Observer first reported in February that plant workers were in 
the country illegally and company managers knew it.
  One plant worker backed up that account Tuesday.
  "Everyone knew most of the workers were illegal. It was no secret. We just 
came in and did our work and you kept to yourself," said Dorothy Anthony, who 
works with sister Alice on the deboning line.
  The women, both American citizens, were released after showing ID.
  Many workers live near the plant and drivers in the neighborhood stopped 
Tuesday to ask about them.
  Officials are arranging to care for the children of workers detained in the 
raid, one of several nationwide this year.
  In August, more than 600 suspected illegal immigrants were detained at a 
Mississippi transformer plant in the largest single-workplace immigration raid 
in U.S. history. And in May, federal immigration officials swept into 
Agriprocessors, the nation's largest kosher meatpacking plant, in Iowa. Nearly 
400 workers were detained and dozens of fraudulent permanent resident alien 
cards were seized from the plant's human resources department, according to 
court records. 

   
   

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