STILLMORE, Georgia (Southern Poverty Law
Center) February 16, 2008 — It was
supposed to be the start of another
school day for 15-year-old Marie Justeen
Mancha as she sat in her bedroom,
waiting for her mother to return from an
errand in town.
But on
this morning in September 2006, Mancha,
a U.S. citizen, found herself in a
situation she never expected to
encounter in her own home.
"I
started to hear the words, 'Police!
Illegals!,'" she said. "It seems as if
those words still ring in my head today
giving me fear of them busting into my
home. I walked around the corner from
the hallway and saw a tall man reach
toward his gun and look straight at me."
She was
caught in the middle of a botched
immigration raid in southeast Georgia.
Federal agents barged into homes without
showing warrants and targeted U.S.
citizens of Mexican descent, like
Mancha, solely because of their skin
color.
Mancha,
now 17, recounted the experience today
before the House Subcommittee on
Immigration, Citizenship, Refugees,
Border Security and International Law.
Her congressional testimony was part of
a hearing about problems with
Immigration and Customs Enforcement
(ICE) procedures.
Mancha,
her mother and three other U.S. citizens
of Mexican descent are plaintiffs in a
federal lawsuit filed by the Southern
Poverty Law Center against ICE in 2006.
The
lawsuit charges that ICE agents
illegally detained, searched and
harassed Hispanics solely because of
their appearance — a violation of their
Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights —
during an extensive campaign to drive
them out of the area. A sixth plaintiff
is a landlord who suffered damage to his
rental properties when agents broke into
trailers rented by Hispanics.
Mancha
told subcommittee members about the fear
she felt that morning.
"I saw
a group of law enforcement agents
standing in the living room blocking the
front door," she said. "My heart just
dropped. I didn't know what was about to
happen. When the tall man reached for
his gun I just stood there, feeling so
scared."
Mancha,
who speaks with a gentle Southern
accent, said the agents asked if her
mother was in the U.S. legally. Her
mother was born in Florida.
"I
started to feel closed in, like I
couldn't say no or not answer them
because they were blocking the front
door," she said of the agents, who never
showed a search warrant.
"At
times, I didn't want to be Mexican
because of what we go through and how
people look at us different and treat us
and assume we're all undocumented," she
told the subcommittee.
The
raids began on September 1, 2006, and
lasted for several weeks. They were
intended to locate unauthorized
immigrants who worked at a poultry plant
in Stillmore, a town of about 1,000
people in Emanuel County. But rather
than conduct a raid only at the plant,
dozens of agents fanned out across
residential areas in three counties —
stopping motorists, breaking into homes
and threatening people with tear gas and
guns. Hundreds were terrorized. Many
fled into the woods.
For
Mancha, the agents left her home after
she answered their questions, telling
them that she and her mother are U.S.
citizens. Her mother arrived as the
agents left.
"I ran
to her and started crying — telling her
what just happened," Mancha said. "I was
so scared. I still am. I carry that fear
with me every day — wondering when
they'll come back."