24 THE QUEENS COURIER • AUGUST 16, 2018  FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
 ICE raids in Qns. skyrocket under Trump 
 BY RYAN KELLEY 
 rkelley@qns.com 
 Twitter @R_Kelley6 
 Raids conducted by Immigration and  
 Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents in  
 Queens have increased dramatically since  
 President  Donald  Trump  took  offi  ce,  
 according to research conducted by a pair  
 of legal rights advocacy organizations. 
 Th  e Immigrant Defense Project (IDP)  
 and the Center for Constitutional Rights  
 (CCR) released the fi ndings in July in  
 the form of an interactive map called  
 ICEwatch that shows nearly 700 ICE raids  
 in the New York area since 2013. In  
 Queens alone, there have been 131 incidents  
 during that time, the highest number  
 in the fi ve boroughs. 
 Th  e map also shows that 94 of those  
 Queens raids, or 72 percent, have taken  
 place since Jan. 20, 2017, when Trump’s  
 term offi  cially began. 
 In a press release coinciding with the  
 launch  of  the  map,  IDP  Senior  Staff  
 Attorney Genia Blaser said that its purpose  
 is to expose the questionable tactics  
 used by ICE agents when arresting illegal  
 immigrants. 
 “ICE relies on fear-mongering, secrecy,  
 deceit, manipulation and force to enact  
 its devastating deportation mandate to  
 deport as many people as possible,” Blaser  
 said. “By making the reports of their dehumanizing  
 tactics widely available through  
 ICEwatch, we aim to inform the public  
 and community members around the  
 escalation of ‘unshackled’ ICE policing.” 
 Th  e map includes options for the user  
 to fi lter the incidents shown by date, type  
 of incident, county, location and ICE tactics  
 used, which reveal more trends in the  
 data. Th  ere are 698 incidents included  
 on the map, and 462 of them, or 66 percent, 
  have taken place since the president  
 took offi  ce. 
 In Queens, 50 percent of all incidents  
 on the map have been home raids and 30  
 percent have occurred at a courthouse.  
 In addition, 40 percent have involved  
 the surveillance of a suspected immigrant  
 while 28 percent have involved a ruse, or a  
 deceptive tactic meant to trick the suspect  
 into an arrest. 
 A description of each incident is also  
 available when a user clicks it on the map.  
 During a February incident in Maspeth,  
 for example, three ICE agents dressed as  
 police showed up at a individual’s home  
 and demanded to see his identifi cation  
 aft er he let them inside. Aft er he showed  
 his ID, the agents arrested him in front of  
 his 10-year-old autistic son. 
 In January, ICE agents showed up to a  
 Corona man’s home and his wife let them  
 inside because they said they were police,  
 the map states. Th  e agents arrested the  
 individual and threatened his wife while  
 their four minor children were awoken  
 by the commotion. Since the man’s arrest,  
 his wife and children have been evicted  
 and are currently living in a homeless  
 shelter. 
 In December of 2017, multiple ICE  
 agents pretending to be police started  
 banging on the door of a Woodside man’s  
 apartment before 6 a.m., according to  
 the map. Th  rough the closed door, the  
 agents told the man’s sister that they  
 were police and were looking for someone  
 named “Vasquez.” Th  e man’s sister  
 told the agents that nobody by that name  
 lived in the apartment, but the agents stated  
 they had a warrant. 
 Th  e man’s sister asked the agents to  
 slip the warrant under the door but they  
 refused, only fl ashing something quickly  
 by the peephole, the map describes. 
 Th  e man then woke up and went to the  
 door and opened it to tell the agents that  
 they had the wrong apartment. His sister,  
 whose three children were now awake and  
 watching the situation unfold, began arguing  
 with the agents saying that she needed  
 to see the warrant. She eventually let  
 the agents inside and upon requesting to  
 see everyone’s identifi cation, the agents  
 arrested the man without ever identifying  
 themselves as ICE agents. 
 “ICEwatch shines a light on ICE’s program  
 of terrorizing communities through  
 raids, ruses, home invasions, courthouse  
 arrests and other forms of coercion,” said  
 Ghita Schwarz, Center for Constitutional  
 Rights senior attorney. “By demonstrating  
 the wide reach of ICE’s destructive and  
 Photo courtesy of ICE 
 unlawful tactics, we hope to educate and  
 empower immigrants and allies.” 
 When reached over the phone on Aug.  
 14, IDP spokesperson Alejandra Lopez  
 said that the incidents included on the map  
 were verifi ed through the organization’s  
 partnerships with Regional Immigration  
 Assistance Centers and the New York  
 Immigrant Family Unity Project. Firsthand  
 accounts from witnesses who called  
 IDP’s hotline have been vetted through  
 the attorneys representing those who have  
 been arrested, Lopez explained. 
 While there are incidents that were left   
 off  the map because they could not be verifi  
 ed, Lopez added that there are also raids  
 that go unreported so the map should not  
 be seen as comprehensive. 
 ICE has not yet responded to a request  
 for comment about the map. 
 22 busted in latest crackdown on Queensbridge Houses drug deals 
 BY JENNA BAGCAL 
 jbagcal@qns.com/ @jenna_bagcal 
 Detectives  slapped  the  cuff s  on  22  
 Queens residents for illegal drug dealing  
 charges following a yearlong investigation  
 at NYCHA’s Queensbridge Houses  
 in Long Island City. 
 On Wednesday, Aug. 8, 19 Long Island  
 City residents, two from Jackson Heights  
 and one individual from South Ozone  
 Park were variously charged with crimes  
 of criminal sale of a controlled substance,  
 including heroin, cocaine and marijuana, 
  criminal possession of a weapon and  
 other charges. 
 Th  e investigation into the case began  
 in September 2017 and was conducted by  
 the NYPD’s Narcotics Borough Queens  
 Division and District Attorney Richard A.  
 Brown’s Narcotics Investigation Bureau.  
 Over the course of a year, investigators  
 conducted extensive physical surveillance  
 and undercover police offi  cers  posed  as  
 narcotics customers. 
 In  addition,  nine  court-authorized  
 searched warrants executed at nine locations  
 within the Queensbridge Houses  
 and four handguns were seized during the  
 course of the investigation. 
 “Th  is investigation is another example  
 of police and prosecutors working  
 together to reduce drug dealing that too  
 oft en plagues our neighborhoods,” Brown  
 said. “We are committed to continue to  
 employ aggressive and innovative tactics  
 to track down and prosecute drug dealers  
 and other criminals who seek to terrorize  
 our communities. It is imperative  
 that we stop those who would fl ood  our  
 streets with drugs and lure our children  
 into lives of crime.” 
 Th  ese arrests are not the fi rst of their  
 kind at the Queensbridge Houses, which  
 is the largest public housing development  
 in New York City. In December 2017,  
 a 43-year-old man was sentenced to 10  
 1/2 in prison aft er he was caught running  
 a drug-traffi  cking operation out of  
 the housing complex. A year before in  
 December 2016, seven individuals were  
 arrested  and  charged  with  traffi  cking  
 large amounts of crack cocaine, fentanyl  
 and oxycodone. 
 Police  Commissioner  James  O’Neill  
 thanked the Queens DA’s Offi  ce and cops  
 who were involved in the investigation  
 and spoke about the importance of catching  
 illicit drug traffi  cking operations. 
 “To keep driving crime and disorder  
 down past already record-lows in New  
 York City, it is imperative that we identify  
 and dismantle illegal narcotics organizations  
 like this one,” O’Neill said. “Th e  
 people who live and work in all of our  
 neighborhoods deserve to be safe from  
 drug-dealing and its associated violence.” 
 If found guilty of their crimes, many of  
 the defendants could face prison sentences  
 ranging from one to 12 years. 
 Photo via Shutterstock 
 
				
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