from:
http://www.spectator.org/
The American Spectator -- June 2000

Illegal Elian

Elian's case goes to court tomorrow. In this preview from our next issue,
Byron York explains how the INS twisted its own rules to snatch the boy from
his Miami family.

by Byron York

Grover Joseph Rees was stunned when he learned the number of federal agents
who participated in "Operation Reunion," the raid to seize Elian Gonzalez
from his great uncle's home in Miami. The government deployed a total of 151
people, 131 from the Immigration and Naturalization Service and 20 from the
United States Marshals. "That's more than we used to deport Joe Doherty,"
remembers Rees, who was general counsel of the INS during the last years of
the Bush administration. Doherty, an Irish Republican Army terrorist
convicted of murdering a British soldier, was arrested in New York and
deported to Belfast in 1992. Fearing the heavily armed IRA might stage an
attack to disrupt the transfer, American officials made sure they were
well-prepared for any possibility. "We took a lot of extraordinary
measures," says Rees. "As I recall, there were 20 or 30 FBI agents and one
or two INS agents." It was plenty of firepower -- but just a fraction of
what was used in the Gonzalez case.

In fact, few INS operations -- at least those targeting a single alien --
have involved the level of force used in "Operation Reunion." Last August,
for example, the INS in Los Angeles required far fewer agents to capture a
suspect named Manuel Escalante, who was accused of killing 19 people in
Mexico -- lining them up against a wall and cutting them down with automatic
weapons. Nor did the INS assign as many agents to last year's search for
Rafael Resendez-Ramirez, the "Railway Killer" wanted for eight murders, whom
the agency had once picked up and mistakenly released.

Notorious criminals aside, the simple fact that the INS spent so much time
on an individual case is highly unusual. In recent years the INS has been
stung by criticism that its enforcement work consisted mostly of raiding
farms, fast-food restaurants, and other places where undocumented aliens eke
out a living. Looking for highly publicized, high-impact busts, agents
specifically targeted places where they were likely to find large numbers of
aliens -- and spent relatively little, if any, energy on time-consuming
efforts to pick up individual immigrants. "One-on-one enforcement is
inefficient," a former INS official explains. "They want to create a
deterrent effect."

In March 1999, the INS announced a plan to de-emphasize job site raids and
border patrols in order to target criminals aliens, immigrant-smuggling
rings, and document-forging operations. According to an INS statement, the
new "Interior Enforcement Strategy" -- emphasizing the mid-section of the
country rather than its borders -- was designed to "systematically combat
illegal immigration inside the United States by attacking its causes, not
merely its symptoms." Enforcement against individual aliens sank even lower
down the priority list.

Whatever its goal, INS has been plagued by gross mismanagement. Last year
Syracuse University's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs
reviewed the performance of 15 federal agencies and ranked INS dead last,
saying the agency can't seem to get anything done. "Evidence that INS cannot
manage its mission is overwhelming," the study's authors wrote. "New
immigrants sometimes wait years to have their citizenship applications
processed; the backlog of people seeking naturalization is nearly two
million. At the same time, hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants enter
the United States every year."

All of which makes the Elian Gonzalez case more than a little out of
character for the INS. The agency acted with extraordinary speed, devoting
thousands of man-hours and an extensive show of force to seize a single
alien who was not a criminal, was not brought to the U.S. by a smuggling
ring, and wasn't trying to stay by using phony papers. Why the case was so
important -- so urgent that the INS would throw its own policies and
guidelines out the window -- is a question the agency has yet to answer.

To Raid Or Not To Raid

For weeks before the April 22 raid, there was an ongoing debate inside the
Gonzalez legal team. Would the INS take drastic action? Or would it exercise
restraint and allow the legal process to take its course? Spencer Eig, the
Miami attorney who organized the legal group, tried to reassure his fellow
lawyers. "I said, 'I don't think there's going to be a nighttime raid,'" Eig
recalls. "Some of our Cuban colleagues said they thought there would be. I
attributed that to their experiences with the Castro government and thought
they were overly paranoid. I thought the U.S. government was not going to
raid an innocent family."

Eig's opinion carried particular weight because he had been, until just last
year, an experienced trial attorney for...the INS. After stints as an
adviser at Justice Department headquarters in Washington and as an assistant
U.S. attorney in New Orleans, in 1994 Eig moved to Miami, where he spent the
next five years trying immigration cases. He knew the agency did not
normally use the kind of SWAT-team tactics that some on the legal team
feared. "They ordinarily reserve these kinds of active measures for bringing
in aggravated felonies," Eig reasoned.

And besides, Justice Department officials had been liberally leaking their
intention to avoid any sort of armed raid. Nine days before "Operation
Reunion," the Associated Press, citing government sources, reported that
"federal marshals and immigration agents sent to get the boy would likely
arrive in minimum numbers, wearing civilian clothes. The agents who actually
would go to the house might not even be armed." Three days before the raid,
the AP reported a "plan to use U.S. marshals and immigration agents in
minimum force and civilian clothes, with no drawn guns." And just hours
before agents arrived at the Gonzalez house, Cox News Service reported that
federal officials would "send plain-clothes immigration officers and federal
marshals to the house."

Top Justice Department officials did nothing to correct the impression that
they would exercise restraint. "You wouldn't send a SWAT team in the dark of
night to kidnap the child, in effect?" Tim Russert asked Deputy Attorney
General Eric Holder on "Meet the Press" nearly two weeks before the raid.
"No," answered Holder. "We don't expect anything like that to happen." The
day after the seizure, Holder appeared again with Russert, who asked, "Why
such a dramatic change in position?" Holder stood by his words; his original
statement was true, he explained, because "We waited 'til five in the
morning, just before dawn."

Justice officials later revealed that they chose to move in on Saturday
because they did not want to take action on either Good Friday or Easter
Sunday. In retrospect, it seems more accurate to say that they chose the
holiday -- it was both Easter and Passover -- because that was a time when
the Gonzalez side might be ill-prepared for the raid. "The Gonzalez family
had requested that action be deferred because both they and I were observing
solemn holidays," says Eig. An observant Jew, Eig left Miami on Wednesday,
April 19 to spend Passover with his wife's family in St. Paul, Minnesota. He
then entered a period of intensive religious celebration in a household that
did not have a television. He spoke to no one on the phone. When the Sabbath
arrived at sundown on Friday, he still had not communicated with anyone and
heard of the early-Saturday raid only when someone mentioned it to him later
in the afternoon. Still, he could not make any calls until nightfall, when
the Sabbath ended. One of the main members of the Gonzalez team was
completely out of the loop at the most critical moment in the entire
standoff.

America's Most Wanted

When it was all over -- when photos of rifle-toting armed federal agents
seizing Elian had been shown on television and published in the papers -- a
diverse group of critics that included congressional Republicans and liberal
Harvard professors Laurence Tribe and Alan Dershowitz began to question the
legality of the INS's tactics. "No judge or neutral magistrate had issued
the type of warrant or other authority needed for the executive branch to
break into the home to seize the child," Tribe wrote in a much-quoted New
York Times opinion piece. "The agency had no more right to do so than any
parent who has been awarded custody would have a right to break and enter
for such a purpose."

But in the days that followed Tribe's pronouncement, Justice Department
lawyers released a series of warrants and affidavits revealing their legal
premise for raiding the home. First, the INS revoked Lazaro Gonzalez'
custody of Elian. Then it issued an arrest warrant for the boy, temporarily
declaring him an illegal alien and thus subject to pickup. Then, on the
basis of its own arrest warrant, it asked for and received a search warrant
from a federal magistrate to enter the Gonzalez house and seize the child.
Then -- voila! -- after the seizure the INS declared Elian to be legal again
and gave custody to his father, Juan Miguel Gonzalez.

After their initial anger subsided, some critics conceded the INS likely had
the legal authority to act as it did. "Did they have all their ducks in a
row when they did this? I think they pretty much did," says Grover Joseph
Rees. But Rees and others point out that the Justice Department's actions,
while not illegal, were an abuse of the Attorney General's power and, at the
very least, a parody of standard department practice. The arrest
warrant/search warrant stratagem, in particular, seems more like a clever
trick than a measured response to the situation. "Neither warrant served the
purposes of this case," says a former Justice Department official. "They
weren't really searching for him, and they weren't really arresting him."

Beyond that, the very fact the raid took place at all did enormous violence
to the spirit of due process. The two sides -- the Gonzalez family and the
INS -- were in the middle of litigating the issue of Elian's application for
asylum. The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals had delivered a setback to the
government by saying the INS was wrong when it refused even to consider
asylum applications from Elian himself and from Lazaro Gonzalez on Elian's
behalf. Then, with the issue unresolved, the government blew the case wide
open by taking the child. "It was a clear example of the defendant
kidnapping the plaintiff because the lawsuit wasn't going well," says Eig.

The government's intransigence on the issue of asylum is particularly
perplexing. In a December 1998 press release headlined "INS Issues New
Guidelines for Children's Asylum Claims," the agency announced procedures it
said would make it easier for young people to apply for asylum. "The
guidelines recognize that children under the age of 18 may experience
persecution differently from adults and may not present testimony with the
same degree of precision as adults," the INS said. The new procedures will
"help provide the child asylum seeker with a comfortable, secure environment
in which to best present his or her claim." The guidelines, according to the
INS, were developed in consultation with the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees, as had an earlier set of policies making it
easier for women to seek asylum.

"There was no age limit; the guidelines talked about the best interest of
the child," says Cheryl Little, executive director of the Florida Immigrant
Agency Advocacy Center, which has filed a brief with the Eleventh Circuit
supporting Elian's right to an asylum hearing. "We believe that
international law and U.S. law recognize the rights of children to apply for
asylum. To say the Attorney General alone determines who has that right is
troubling." Yet that is precisely what the INS claims when it comes to Elian
Gonzalez.

Laughing Matter

It took Bill Clinton exactly one week to make his first public joke about
the Miami raid. The occasion was the April 29 White House Correspondents'
Dinner, the last Clinton would attend as president, and the targets of his
humor were Cubans who in their anger and frustration briefly flirted with
silly conspiracy theories about Elian's reunion with his father. Pointing to
pictures showing the smiling child with Juan Miguel Gonzalez, they said
Elian's hair appeared longer than it had in photographs taken that morning
during the raid. The smiling pictures must have been doctored.

At the dinner, Clinton began his remarks by pointing to a photo of himself
with a broad smile on his face. "Taken just moments ago, it proves beyond a
doubt that I am happy to be here," he said as the audience caught on to the
joke. "Now, wait a minute," Clinton continued, his voice taking on a
conspiratorial hush. "It seems that my hair in that photo is a little longer
than it is tonight." The assembled reporters, editors, and media insiders
burst into laughter; how stupid those Cubans seemed.

The president even made a little quip about the Justice Department's use of
excessive force. A party being held after the dinner was so exclusive,
Clinton said, that almost no one got an invitation. "But I'm not worried,"
he added. "I'm going with Janet Reno." The crowd laughed and applauded.

Reno herself, along with top deputy Eric Holder, was at the dinner,
accepting kudos for the raid. And that morning's Washington Post carried an
account of yet another Washington party, this one at the State Department,
at which Gregory Craig, the White House-connected lawyer who represented
Juan Miguel Gonzalez, was nearly mobbed with well-wishers. Craig, the Post
said, "won hands down in the most-kissed category, accepting smoochy
congratulations from one and all."

In other words, Washington was quite happy with the outcome of the Gonzalez
case. And it didn't take long before Republicans on Capitol Hill began to
back off their vows to hold hearings to investigate the raid. "I don't know
whether or not a hearing will be necessary," House Majority Leader Dick
Armey said in early May. "I think we need to make some inquiries and see
where we can go on that and just see where it takes us."

Don't be surprised if it takes them nowhere. But that doesn't mean the
Gonzalez matter will disappear. Even if the courts allow Juan Miguel
Gonzalez to take his son back to Cuba, the Miami raid will have long-lasting
repercussions. "I have a feeling we'll see no shortage of lawsuits filed by
people who were tear-gassed, pepper-sprayed, struck and otherwise illegally
molested during that raid," says Spencer Eig. "The right to peaceably
assemble is enshrined on our Constitution, right up there with voting and
the jury." It's not a terribly popular point to make in official
Washington -- what with all the laughing and smooching -- but it may someday
be one of the lasting lessons of Elian Gonzalez's strange stay in America.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Byron York is The American Spectator's senior writer.
This article also appears in the June 2000 issue of The American Spectator.
(Posted 5/10/00)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------

.....More terror in America!
Elian Gonzalez case
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/terrorin_america.htm


__________
earthradioTV.com - Alternative News Forum for ecology, politics &
consciousness.  MIRROR SITES:
USA     http://www.earthradioTV.com/
CZECH   http://mujweb.cz/www/ecologynews/
UK      http://members.tripod.co.uk/ecologynews/
Canada http://www.ecologynews.com/

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths,
misdirections
and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and
minor
effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said,
CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html
<A HREF="http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html">Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to