LOS ANGELES, Feb. 12 (Xinhua) -- Civil rights
activists have accused U.S. immigration officials of denying legal aid to some
of the 130 suspected undocumented workers caught during a raid by federal agents
in Los Angeles, local media reported Tuesday.
In a news conference outside the
Federal Building in downtown Los Angeles Monday, Stacy Tolchin, an attorney with
the National Lawyers Guild, accused officials from the U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency of not allowing some of the workers access to
attorneys for their post-raid interviews.
Tolchin said the ICE, which is under the leadership
of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, was using "coercion tactics" to
force the workers into admitting they were unlawfully in the United States
before they could get a court hearing.
Also at Monday's news conference, a worker detained
last week said ICE agents were physically and verbally abusive to the workers
during last week's raid on a factory.
ICE agents told the workers they could not call their
families, separated the men from the women and handcuffed some people so tightly
their hands turned purple, he said.
Tolchin said activists were considering filing a
civil rights lawsuit against the ICE.
After the raid last week, the ICE let some of the
workers go, but summoned them for interviews scheduled for this week, Tolchin
said.
But ICE spokeswoman Virginia Kice said after the news
conference that the workers were not required to have attorneys present because
ICE officials were merely gathering information and not conducting criminal
proceedings.
Kice said the interviews were necessary because ICE
officials did not have enough time or space to process all 130 workers in the
immediate hours after the raid.
Some of the workers had humanitarian issues and had
to be returned to the plant before the end of their work shift, she said.
"They'll have an opportunity to go before an
immigration judge," Kice said.
More interviews are scheduled for the rest of this
week, she said.
Eight suspected undocumented workers were arrested
and another 130 were taken into detention during the raid.
It is illegal to knowingly hire illegal immigrants,
but no company officials were immediately arrested, although the investigation
was ongoing, Kice said.