A local Mexican restaurant chain in Western Pennsylvania is trying to forge ahead a week after a worksite immigration raid left property damage at two of its storefronts and a workforce afraid to show up to their jobs, according to two employees and a witness who spoke with NBC News.
It all started Aug. 7 when immigration authorities showed up
at two Emiliano’s Mexican Restaurant & Bar locations in the Pittsburgh
area. As many as 16 workers were detained — nine worked at a location in
Gibsonia, a suburb north of Pittsburgh, and seven others worked at another
location in the nearby township of Cranberry.
In a social media post that same afternoon, which
included a video taken by a worker, the business accused agents of storming
into its restaurants and leaving “a trail of fear, confusion, and destruction”
that included a burned kitchen, torn ceiling tiles, broken doors, a safe cut
open by an agent and trashed food. The incident raises questions over the
tactics used by authorities at this particular raid.
This week, gas plumbers fixed a stove that was damaged
during the raid, according to two people working at the restaurant chain.
Staffing was also thin at the locations targeted by immigration authorities as
employees who witnessed the raid, including those who are U.S. citizens, remain
“in shock,” they added. “No one wants to go back, everyone is scared.”
Both workers who spoke with NBC News requested to not be
named to protect their family’s privacy because of an ongoing federal
investigation in connection with last week’s events.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of
Pennsylvania declined to clarify what the investigation it is leading is about.
As the immigration arrests were happening last week, someone
alerted an emergency response immigration hotline run
by Casa
San Jose, a local nonprofit that advocates for Latino and immigrant
communities.
The organization quickly dispatched about 20 volunteers to
both locations to act as legal observers, collect testimonies and provide
support to the workers and families affected, according to Jaime Martinez, a
community defense organizer at Casa San Jose.
At the Gibsonia location, “the raid actually caused a
kitchen fire that agents were unable to extinguish at the beginning, which put
people in danger,” Martinez told NBC News on Tuesday.
Employees who spoke to Martinez and his volunteers said the
stove was on when agents entered the kitchen because workers were cooking food
as they prepared to open the restaurant Thursday morning. The restaurant’s
manager warned agents that the open burners were on, but witnesses alleged that
agents didn’t do anything until a fire sparked, he said.
The detained employees, who had their arms and ankles shackled,
were the ones who directed the agents to find the fire extinguisher and
instructed them on how to use it after initially failing to operate it,
according to employees who spoke to Martinez and his volunteers.
“By the time the fire department got there, the fire had
already been put out with a dry chemical extinguisher, but only after this
delay,” Martinez said.
A spokesperson with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
told NBC News in an email Thursday that the “damage to the restaurant,
including the small fire, was created by the illegal aliens themselves while
they were trying to escape or hide from law enforcement officers.”
According to ICE, the agents showed up at the locations in
Gibsonia and Cranberry to execute federal search warrants based on information
it got alleging that the restaurants were employing undocumented workers, WPXI, NBC’s affiliate in Pittsburgh, reported. The
agency added that the 16 people detained lack legal status and are now in ICE
custody, undergoing immigration proceedings.
“But in the process of coming in with that warrant, they
also terrorized the community, pointed guns at people and destroyed a local
business,” Martinez said.
In response to this, the ICE spokesperson told NBC News,
“All agents and officers followed established legal procedures while executing
the warrants.”
At the Cranberry location, Casa San Jose volunteers
interviewed a worker who described seeing officers come into the restaurant,
shouting “police” and pointing their long guns at the employees. One female
employee who was in the kitchen said an agent “pointed the gun at her head”
while telling her to stop cooking, according to Martinez.
While she was not detained after showing proper
documentation, “this lady is now going to have to live with the trauma of
having law enforcement point a gun at her head while she was at work,” Martinez
said.
Martinez and one of the workers who spoke with NBC News said
agents lined up all of the cuffed employees and made them kneel while pointing
their weapons at them.
“Agents and officers operated within established law
enforcement standards in order to ensure the safety of law enforcement
officers, the public and the illegal aliens themselves,” the ICE spokesperson
said in response to this allegation.
Last week was not the first time immigration authorities
attempted to detain employees from Emiliano’s Mexican Restaurant & Bar. The ICE
spokesperson confirmed to NBC News that a June incident was part of “an
investigation that ultimately led to the execution of the warrants” this month.
Martinez said that on a night in June, he got a call on the
hotline, reporting unmarked vehicles surrounding a nearby apartment complex.
When the volunteer who was dispatched arrived at the area, she noticed the
vehicles were parked with their engines still running, in front and behind the
restaurant.
According to Martinez, it looked like federal agents inside
the vehicles were waiting for workers to come out of the restaurant as it was
closing. The vehicles left once TV crews arrived on the scene, he said.
“There were nine people in that restaurant on lockdown,”
Martinez said, adding his group doesn’t know the immigration status of those
workers since it doesn’t ask people about that as part of its policy. “But you
don’t have to be undocumented to be afraid of getting detained.”
Since launching the hotline in March, Casa San Jose has
received more than 650 calls reporting more than 100 immigration detentions in
the area and has dispatched volunteers in at least 70 instances, according to
Martinez.
In the wake of the raids at Emiliano’s Mexican Restaurant
and Bar locations, the community came together and collectively donated more
than $133,000. The workers who spoke with NBC News said the business plans to
use the funds to cover bond expenses, one month worth of salary for each
employee detained and repair damage done to the restaurant.
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