Homeland Security: Operation Endgame

Read the Document Here: Endgame

Important background reading:
10-Year U.S. Strategic Plan For Detention Camps Revives Proposals From Oliver North

See also: U.S. immigration raids are about to get ugly

Important DVD: Endgame: Blueprint for Global Enslavement by Alex Jones
Alex Jones is a true patriot, a genuine hero. – Actor/Director Charlie Sheen

Important Book & DVD: Read The David Icke Guide to the Global Conspiracy and watch David Icke: Freedom or Fascism: The Time to Choose and you will know a lot about secret societies and you will understand that the emblem of Homeland Security contains fascist symbols and once you know this you will find them everywhere.
The book is heavy 2.1 pounds with 500 pages but easy to understand – maybe not easy to digest.

This was the Introduction to this article:

Feds say raid is nation’s largest

May 13, 2008


Cedar Rapids, Ia. – The number of illegal immigrants detained Monday in Postville has risen to 390 in what federal officials now describe as the largest single-site raid of its kind nationwide.

The detainees include 314 men and 76 women, according to figures released this morning by federal authorities. Fifty-six detainees – mostly women with young children – have been released under the supervision of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

“We’re here to discuss not only the largest operation of its kind ever in Iowa, but in fact the largest single-site enforcement operation of its kind in the country,” U.S. Attorney Matt M. Dummermuth said.

The detainees included 290 who claimed to be Guatemalans, 93 Mexicans, three Israelis and four Ukrainians. Among the detained were 12 juveniles, six of whom have been released.

Customs and law enforcement agents worked through the night processing the detainees, said Claude Arnold, the ICE special agent in charge of the operation. Detainees were “administratively arrested” but have not yet been criminally charged, he said.

Detainees who are charged with aggravated identity theft, unlawful use of a Social Security number or other offenses will be given lawyers and sent to appearances in one of three makeshift courtrooms at the detainee center in Waterloo, Arnold said.

The set-up includes three courtrooms – two in trailers and one in an existing room. A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s office said the court proceedings would be open within space constraints.

Video footage shot by federal agents showed a large “intake area” in McElroy Auditorium with folding chairs and tables. The footage, which did not show any detainees, included images of a kitchen, break room, restroom and shower facilities used by detainees.

Arnold would not disclose how many people were involved in Monday’s effort, citing security concerns.

Two injuries were reported last night at the detention center in Waterloo, Arnold said. One involved a man who fled from agents and injured his leg. The man was treated at a hospital and released.

A second injury involved a customs agent who suffered minor cuts after slipping and falling down a stairwell.

“The plans went very well,” Arnold said. “As you can imagine, it’s a huge undertaking, so it takes awhile for people to get into the groove and for things to start rolling. But they were moving along very well.”

Dummermuth declined to comment about possible charges against managers at Agriprocessors, Inc., citing the ongoing investigation. A federal affidavit released Monday detailed several eyewitness accounts of employee abuse, including one floor manager who allegedly struck a worker with a meat hook.

Nationwide, ICE agents arrested 863 people on criminal charges in 2007 and made more than 4,000 administrative arrests – a tenfold increase from five years before, according to the agency’s Web site.

A similar factory raid in New Bedford, Massachusetts last year netted 361 arrests, most of whom faced deportation and were separated from their families.

Arnold said authorities were providing the Waterloo detainees with three meals a day and a nightly snack. The women detained were sent to the Hardin County Jail in Eldora. Arnold said that sheriff’s deputies at the jail would turn away any media representatives or visitors trying to contact the inmates.

A second press conference is planned for 4 p.m. today at the U.S. Attorney’s office in Cedar Rapids.

Intake area

Federal agents electronically fingerprinted and photographed each detainee. Authorities were still trying to match people to the 697 criminal charges that included aggravated identity theft and unlawful use of a Social Security number. The number of workers detained, they said, was not likely to change.

“We’re not sure yet how many people in the complaint were encountered yesterday,” Arnold said. “We’re still working through that process, that’s all I can say at this point. We’re still working to identify those who were encountered.”

Two detainees were released directly from the intake area Monday night, Arnold said. One was released to care for a child, he said, and other was allowed to leave for unspecified medial reasons.

The detainees slept on cots Monday night in a large gymnasium-like area. Federal agents provided them with games, newspapers and television.

Bob Teig, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney in Cedar Rapids, disputed rumors that federal agents had been traveling door-to-door in Postville to find suspected illegal immigrants.

GRANT SCHULTE
[email protected]

May 13, 2008

Source: Des Moines Register


2 thoughts on “Homeland Security: Operation Endgame”

  1. Go get some common sense please and you’ll be doing the world a great favor. It is people like you I genuinely feel sorry for because when the end does come you will be one of the many people who will suffer forever due to your ignorance. May God have mercy on your soul for blaspheming the holy spirit.

    Reply

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.