NATION Saturday, July 13, 2019 East Oregonian A9 Trump says nationwide immigration raids set to begin Sunday By ELLIOT SPAGAT AND COLLEEN LONG Associated Press WASHINGTON — The head of Immigration and Cus- toms Enforcement on Fri- day portrayed an upcoming national operation targeting immigrant families as a rou- tine effort that could capture about 200 people and detain them in hotels before they are deported. Matthew Albence, act- ing director of U.S. Immigra- tion and Customs Enforce- ment, made his comments to The Associated Press as Pres- ident Donald Trump said the nationwide deportation sweep will begin this weekend. “It starts on Sunday and they’re going to take people out and they’re going to bring them back to their countries or they’re going to take crim- inals out, put them in prison, or put them in prison in the countries they came from. We are focused on criminals as much as we can before we do anything else,” Trump said. The operation will target people with final deporta- tion orders in 10 major cities, including Chicago, Los Ange- les, New York and Miami, and predominantly focus on Cen- tral American families who AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee Flyers in English and Spanish are shown stacked at a nearby restaurant before immigration advocates gather them and hand them out Thursday in the Little Havana neighborhood in Miami. The Trump administration is moving forward with a nationwide immigration enforce- ment operation this weekend targeting migrant families. have arrived at the U.S. bor- der with Mexico in unprece- dented numbers. The operation further inflamed the political debate over immigration as Trump appeals to his base with a pledge to crack down on migrants and Democrats cast the president and his adminis- tration as inhumane for going after families. The reality is that the operation is similar to one in 2016 under President Barack Obama and another in 2017 under Trump. The Obama- era operation resulted in about 10% of those targeted being arrested, and the Trump effort had a lower arrest rate, Albence said. That means the operation, targeting 2,000 people, could yield about 200 arrests based on previous crackdowns. Trump has said on Twitter that his agents plan to arrest millions of immigrants in the country illegally. “This family operation is nothing new,” Albence told the AP. “It’s part of our day- to-day operations.” It is highly unusual to announce an enforcement sting before it begins. The president postponed the effort once before after a phone call with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, but immigration offi- cials said it was also due in part to law enforcement con- cerns over officer safety because details had leaked. But they’re pressing ahead with this one, even though the president and other admin- istration officials have dis- cussed the long-planned fam- ily operation for weeks. “Nothing to be secret about,” Trump said. “If the word gets out, it gets out because hundreds of people know about it.” The family operation will focus on 10 court dockets with large numbers of fami- lies that have arrived recently and been ordered to leave the country, but that doesn’t mean arrests will be limited to those areas, Albence said. Authori- ties will go where their inves- tigations lead, even if it’s five states away. The operation will tar- get entire families that have been ordered removed, but some family may be sepa- rated if some members are in the country legally. Albence gave a hypothetical exam- ple of a father and child in the U.S. illegally but a mother who isn’t. “If the mother wants to return voluntarily on her own with the family, she’ll have an opportunity to do so,” he said. Families will be tempo- rarily housed in hotels until they can be transferred to a detention center or deported, Albence said. That has prompted back- lash from hotel chains that don’t want anything to do with detained families and ICE agents in their rooms and hallways. Marriott said it would not allow ICE to use its hotels for holding immigrants. Albence said if ICE runs out of space, it may be forced to separate some family mem- bers. The government is not allowed to detain family members together in tradi- tional jails. “If hotels or other places do not want to allow us to utilize that, it’s almost forcing us into a situation where we’re going to have to take one of the par- ents and put them in custody and separate them from the rest of their families,” he said. Meanwhile, activists ramped up efforts to prepare by bolstering know-your- rights pocket guides, cir- culating information about hotlines and planning public demonstrations. Vigils out- side of detention centers and hundreds of other locations nationwide were set for Fri- day evening, to be followed by protests Saturday in Miami and Chicago. Acosta exits; Trump’s big Cabinet turnover keeps growing By DARLENE SUPERVILLE AND JILL COLVIN Associated Press WASHINGTON — Add- ing to the lengthy list of departures from President Donald Trump’s Cabinet, Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta said Friday he’s step- ping down amid the tumult over his handling of a 2008 secret plea deal with wealthy financier Jeffrey Epstein, who is accused of sexually abusing underage girls. Trump, with Acosta at his side, said Friday he did not ask his secretary to leave and “I hate to see this happen.” The president, who publicly faults the news media almost daily, said Acosta put the blame there, too. Acosta “informed me this morning that he felt the con- stant drumbeat of press about a prosecution which took place under his watch more than 12 years ago was bad for the Administration, which he so strongly believes in, and he graciously tendered his resig- nation,” Trump tweeted later in the day. Trump said Pat Pizzella, the department’s deputy sec- retary since April 2018, would succeed Acosta on an acting basis. Pizzella served in the administrations of Republican George W. Bush and Demo- crat Barack Obama. A coa- lition of civil rights, human rights, labor and other groups opposed his nomination by Trump to the department’s No. 2 slot, citing Pizzella’s record on labor rights. Acosta was the U.S. attor- ney in Miami when he over- saw a 2008 non-prosecu- tion agreement that allowed Epstein to avoid federal trial but plead guilty to state charges and serve 13 months AP Photo/Andrew Harnik President Donald Trump speaks to members of the media with Secretary of Labor Alex Acosta on the South Lawn of the White House on Friday before Trump boards Marine One for a short trip to Andrews Air Force Base, Md. and then on to Wisconsin. in jail. Similar charges filed against Epstein by federal prosecutors in New York this week had put Acosta’s han- dling of the 2008 agreement with the now-jailed financier back in the spotlight. Years ago, Epstein had counted Trump and former President Bill Clinton among his friends, but Trump said this week he was “not a fan.” Acosta said he didn’t want his handling of Epstein’s case to overshadow the president’s agenda and said his resig- nation would be effective in seven days. “My point here today is we have an amazing economy, and the focus needs to be on the economy,” he said. Top Democratic lawmak- ers and presidential candi- dates had demanded that Acosta resign. But Acosta had defended his actions, insisting at a news conference Wednes- day that he got the toughest deal on Epstein that he could at the time. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said he should never have been appointed by Trump and confirmed by the Senate. “Thank God he’s gone,” she said. Acosta had also frustrated some conservatives who wanted him gone long before the Epstein uproar. Among their objections were his deci- sions to proceed with several employment discrimination lawsuits and to allow certain Obama administration hold- overs to keep their jobs. His resignation extends a record level of turnover at the highest levels of Trump’s administration, with act- ing secretaries at key depart- ments, including the Penta- gon and Homeland Security. Roughly two-thirds of the Cabinet has turned over by the two-and-a-half year mark of Trump’s term. Only the departments of Treasury, Transportation, Housing and Urban Devel- opment, Education, Energy, Commerce and Agriculture continue with the leaders that were first confirmed. Epstein, 66, reached the deal in Florida in 2008 to secretly end a federal sex abuse investigation involving at least 40 teenage girls that could have landed him behind bars for life. He instead pleaded guilty to Florida state charges, spent 13 months in We Hear You! jail, paid settlements to vic- tims and registered as a sex offender. A federal judge has said Acosta violated federal law by keeping Epstein’s victims in the dark about the plea arrangement, and the Jus- tice Department has been investigating. The deal came under scru- tiny earlier this year after reporting by The Miami Herald. Trump had defended Acosta earlier this week while saying he’d look “very closely” at his handling of the 2008 agreement. Acosta had attempted to clear his name and held a news conference — encour- aged by Trump — to defend his actions. In a 50-plus-min- ute lawyerly rebuttal, he argued his office had secured the best deal it could and had worked in the best interests of Epstein’s victims. “We did what we did because we wanted to see Epstein go to jail,” he said. Pressed on whether he had any regrets, Acosta repeat- edly said circumstances had changed since then. “We now have 12 years of knowledge and hindsight and we live in a very differ- ent world,” he said. “Today’s world treats victims very, very differently.” After federal attorneys in New York announced the new charges against Epstein this week, Acosta tweeted that he was pleased by their decision. “The crimes committed by Epstein are horrific,” Acosta tweeted. “Now that new evi- dence and additional testi- mony is available, the NY prosecution offers an import- ant opportunity to more fully bring him to justice.” Acosta took office as the nation’s 27th labor sec- retary in early 2017, lead- ing a sprawling agency that enforces more than 180 fed- eral laws covering about 10 million employers and 125 million workers. The depart- ment also plays a role in com- batting human trafficking. Before he was named a U.S. attorney, Acosta was an assistant attorney gen- eral for the civil rights divi- sion in President George W. Bush’s first term. Before joining the Trump adminis- tration, he was dean of the Florida International Uni- versity law school. FRIENDS & FAMILY SUNDAY, JULY 14, 2019 ONLY! OPEN 8 AM - 10 PM BIG Rewards 20% OFF EVENT * SATURDAY, JULY 13, 8 AM - 10 PM Just use your rewards card at checkout. Not a BIG Rewards member yet? Sign up today and start saving. Ask an associate for more details. PRESENT THIS COUPON IN STORE OR USE ONLINE You deserve total audiological care. Professional. Experienced. Local. YOUR ENTIRE PURCHASE* NOW ALSO BUY ONLINE! Discount Automatically Applied at Checkout. Renata Anderson, MA Pam Wagenaar, Administrative Assistant 2237 SW Court, Pendleton 541-276-5053 www.renataanderson.com *Promotional offer valid only at Big Lots stores and biglots.com on pre-tax purchases. Limit one coupon per customer, per transaction. 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