In Iowa Meat Plant, Kosher 'Jungle' Breeds Fear, Injury, Short Pay
'I'm not sure these devout Jews are using Jewish ethics to treat their workers'
By NATHANIEL POPPER
May 26, 2006
John_law ....Arson, theft, back taxes, etc
etc
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Crown Heights Community
Council President
Rabbi Moshe
Rubashkin's
former Montex mill in Allentown, PA is back in the news again after a
series of arson fires.
Rubashkin
oews the city hundreds of thousands of dollars in back taxes and fees.
\His "mortgage
holder," Skyline Industries, Inc. of Brooklyn, NY now officially owns
the property. Sources tell FailedMessiah.com that Skyline Industries
is closely tied to the
Rubashkin
family and that at least two Rubashkins control Skyline's operations
and sit on its executive.
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Rabbi Aaron Rubashkin, owner of AgriProcessors (Aaron's Best™,
Rubashkin's™, Shor HaBor™, etc.), and his son Rabbi Moshe
Rubashkin collected union dues
from employees and pocketed the money themselves, rather than
turning the funds over to the union as required by law. They got caught.
The Forward
reported this Friday. (Our report on this was posted
14.5 months ago, on March 13, 2005.)
Here in PDF is the decision finding
against the Rubashkins from the National Labor Relations Board, in
case you missed it the first time around.
The 41/2-story, shuttered textile factory was gutted in an April 19
blaze that took city firefighters two days to extinguish. The fire was
determined to be an arson.
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POSTVILLE, Iowa — The animals slaughtered here at the nation's largest kosher
meat packing plant have been the object of nationwide sympathy since an animal
rights group released videos from the kill floor in December 2004. But a tour of
the mobile homes and cramped apartments just outside town, where AgriProcessors'
immigrant workers live, quickly shifts a visitor's attention to a more striking
concern: the impoverished humans who do the factory's dirty work.
Danger
One of those workers — a woman who agreed to be identified by the pseudonym
Juana — came to this rural corner of Iowa a year ago from Guatemala. Since then,
she has worked 10-to-12-hour night shifts, six nights a week. Her cutting hand
is swollen and deformed, but she has no health insurance to have it checked. She
works for wages, starting at $6.25 an hour and stopping at $7, that several
industry experts described as the lowest of any slaughterhouse in the nation.
Juana and other employees at AgriProcessors — they total about 800 — told the
Forward that they receive virtually no safety training. This is an anomaly in an
industry in which the tools are designed to cut and grind through flesh and
bones. In just one month last summer, two young men required amputations;
workers say there have been others since. The chickens and cattle fly by at a
steady clip on metal hooks, and employees said they are berated for not working
fast enough. In addition, employees told of being asked to bribe supervisors for
better shifts and of being shortchanged on paychecks regularly.
"Being here, you see a lot of injustice," said Juana, who did not want her real
name used because of her precarious immigration status. "But it's a small town.
It's the only factory here. We have no choice."
AgriProcessors' final product — sold under the nationally popular Aaron's Best
brand — is priced significantly higher than standard meat. Its kosher seal gives
it a seeming moral imprimatur in an industry known for harsh working conditions.
But even in the unhappy world of meatpacking, people with comparative knowledge
of AgriProcessors and other plants — including local religious leaders,
professors, and union organizers — say that AgriProcessors stands out for its
poor treatment of workers.
"I deal with a lot of workers in slaughterhouses," said Dana Powell, who lived
in Postville for four months last fall while unsuccessfully attempting to
unionize the plant for the United Food and Commercial Workers. "If I had to rate
this one amongst all of them, of the different houses I've been to, it's got to
be the worst."
The manager of the plant, Sholom Rubashkin, said his industry is not a pleasant
one for workers, but he denied that the company mistreats its workers, shorts
their pay or condones bribery of any sort. Rubashkin, who is the son of the
Brooklyn-based owner, pointed to the failure of the union drive as evidence of
the workers' contentment.
Health Ins
He said that AgriProcessors
offers health insurance if workers are willing to contribute a sum that is close
to $50 a week for family coverage. He has set up an emergency fund for
employees in trouble. Describing the hard work his father had done on arriving
in America from Europe in 1952, Rubashkin said: "America has always been built
by people who are coming to try to better their economic position and are
willing to do jobs that other people are not willing to do. That's how this
country is growing."
Unions
Spanish-speaking community leaders in Postville said that last year's union
drive failed for the same reason that the grievances have not been made public
before: The workers have a well-developed fear of being fired or deported. Many
of the workers are undocumented immigrants, according to numerous workers,
community leaders and the local priest.
"If you're not treated well at work, you tend to keep your mouth shut and go
deeper until it becomes, well, unbearable," said Father Floyd Paul Ouderkirk,
Postville's Roman Catholic priest. Ouderkirk previously had ministered in other
Iowa and Texas slaughterhouse towns. In those other plants, Ouderkirk said, the
workers had been less afraid to speak up and had labored in more tolerable
conditions.
In a small town like Postville, where AgriProcessors is the largest economic
engine, workers have few places to turn beyond the three churches. Ouderkirk
retired from his full-time position two years ago. He has not been replaced, but
he returns to Postville regularly to celebrate Mass in Spanish — and to hear
complaints.
"They leave so much to be desired in the moral and ethical treatment of
workers," Ouderkirk said of AgriProcessors.
The company's business model has been economically successful. AgriProcessors is
the only kosher slaughterhouse in America producing both beef and poultry. While
AgriProcessors has been expanding steadily, its closest competitor in the
poultry industry, Empire Kosher, recently fired employees and cut back
operations. Union leaders at Empire Kosher said that the cutbacks were necessary
because Empire pays its lowest-ranking unionized employees close to $3 more an
hour from the outset than AgriProcessors' lowest employees, and provides full
benefits.
Even among nonunion plants, experts say AgriProcessors' salaries are low.
"I have not heard of a six-dollar wage since I started working in Nebraska in
1990," said Lourdes Gouveia, director of the Office of Latino Studies at the
University of Nebraska, where she studies working conditions in the meat packing
industry.
Not all the workers at AgriProcessors who spoke with the Forward hated their
jobs. Workers in the maintenance department, where more locals and non-Hispanic
immigrants are concentrated, start at $9 an hour. In the more plentiful menial
positions, a handful of employees said that with a good supervisor, work at the
plant was tolerable. One supervisor on the beef side, a Postville local,
recently married a Hispanic worker and is known as a friend of the entry-level
employees. But workers said that there were few standards and little
transparency at the plant.
Trouble
The owner of
AgriProcessors,
Sholom's
father, Aaron Rubashkin, has had trouble with workers' rights before. In 1995,
the National Labor Relations Board found that he had violated labor laws at his
textile mill in New Jersey. For months on end, the mill had taken dues from the
paychecks of union employees without handing them over to the union — and had a
"proclivity for violating" the labor law, according to the NLRB judge.
The Rubashkins first set up shop in Postville in 1987, buying a defunct
nonkosher plant. The town drew national attention in 2000 when journalist
Stephen Bloom published his book, "Postville," describing the culture clash that
resulted when a group of Lubavitch Hasidim moved into a farming town of 1,500.
At the time, the hardest labor at the plant was performed by Eastern European
immigrants. Some complained to Bloom about working conditions.
Hispanic Employees
But when Bloom was in town, workers willing to do AgriProcessors' menial work
were at a premium, and the Rubashkins
would fly in workers from New York. That changed as the Eastern Europeans were
replaced by a flood of Hispanic immigrants, who required little in the way of
recruitment by the Rubashkins.
Today, more than half of Postville's 2,500 residents are Hispanic, according to
most estimates. Indeed, there is a widespread sense, as one 26-year-old man from
Mexico said, that "there is somebody outside waiting to take your job — so you
just keep working, or else."
The Hispanic immigrant workers are also less educated than the Eastern
Europeans, and several people who have dealt with both groups claimed that plant
management has given the newcomers less respect.
"They feel like they're not only treated unfairly, but treated as lesser beings
— as second-class citizens," said Caitlin Didier, who lived in Postville for
nine months in 2004 and interviewed more than 50 Hispanic workers for her
dissertation at the University of Kansas on ethnic cooperation in Postville.
A picture of the conditions at AgriProcessors emerged during a tour of the
plant. It is a modern facility with clean metallic walls and concrete floors; as
is typical in slaughterhouses, most of the rooms are cold and scattered with
stray bits of animal flesh.
In the room where chickens are killed, a few rabbis stand at the back,
administering the lethal cut. The bulk of the work is done by rows of Hispanic
men and women who grab the chickens by their feet and prepare them for death.
While the rabbis have their own
bathrooms and well-lit cafeterias, which Rubashkin pointed out on a tour, he
declined to show the Forward the separate facilities for the workers, which were
described to the paper as damp and dirty.
One person who saw all this up close was the investigator for the animal rights
group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, who shot the notorious video
footage of the slaughtering process. He said that the cafeteria at
AgriProcessors was in a lower class than the carpeted, climate-controlled
cafeterias at the nonkosher slaughterhouses where he has worked, while
investigating undercover, in Arkansas and North Carolina.
At those nonkosher slaughterhouses, the PETA investigator said, he received
significantly more safety training: a minimum of two days, while AgriProcessors
only gave him one hour — with a supervisor who did not speak Spanish. The
investigator said he ended up translating for the other trainees, all of whom
were Hispanic. In addition, the PETA investigator — who agreed to speak with the
Forward only if he could do so anonymously — said that when workers were injured
or sick, supervisors at AgriProcessors showed little concern and were reluctant
to provide access to the company's doctor.
"At the other two, they were more compassionate if an individual was hurt," he
said. "At Agri, they'd be more concerned about losing money than the
individual."
Rubashkin said that the company has instituted dual-language training, though he
declined to say how long the training is. He also said the company is in the
midst of building a new cafeteria for workers.
Workers and their advocates say that many tough out the conditions in Postville
because they need the money — often to pay back the smugglers who brought them
over the border. No less significant, Postville has no public transportation
into or out of town, and few immigrant workers can secure driver's licenses to
escape the isolated community. There used to be a turkey processing plant in
Postville, where locals say the conditions were better, but it burned to the
ground on Christmas Eve 2003.
Coyote
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One of the workers, a chubby
Guatemalan who agreed to go by the pseudonym Manuel, said that he paid a
smuggler $4,500 to help him sneak across the Mexican border a year ago.
He purchased a Social Security number for $100 in Illinois, and within a
few days he had landed a job at AgriProcessors.
Manuel lives in a bare apartment with four other single young men from
Guatemala, all of them undocumented immigrants. They have two beat-up
couches with cushions that sink to the floor. The carpets are stained and
a television sits on the box in which it came. The only decoration is a
calendar from Postville's Mexican restaurant, Sabor Latino, which hangs
askew on the window moulding.
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On Manuel's first day, he said, he found himself slicing up chicken carcasses
without even receiving the hour-long orientation that other workers had
described.
"There's no training," he said. "You learn by getting chewed out."
Now, Manuel arrives each day at 4:45 a.m. Although the Supreme Court decided
last year that meatpacking plants must pay their workers for donning and doffing
— dressing and undressing before and after work — Manuel and the union
organizers who lived in Postville said that the workers are not allowed to punch
in until they take their positions on the line. Rubashkin responded by saying
that the company did change the rules when the Supreme Court ruling came down.
Manuel works 10-hour days in the chicken department. Lunch breaks are 30
minutes, but after taking on and off the bloody smocks and masks at the
beginning and end, there is closer to 15 minutes' time left for eating. Dozens
of workers on a shift share the cafeteria, and the workers say there are only
three microwaves, which short-circuit when used simultaneously.
"I've said, 'Why do you treat us like this?'" Manuel said. "We're human beings,
not animals."
Short pay
Manuel came from a religious family in Guatemala, but he rarely has time for
observance. AgriProcessors does not slow down for Sundays or for any Christian
holidays, except Christmas. A more practical problem, however, arises on Jewish
holidays, when the plant closes and the workers are not paid.
Pay is a recurring complaint from AgriProcessors' workers. Manuel makes $7.25 an
hour, having moved up from $6.25. But Manuel and many other workers said that
their weekly paychecks come up three or
four hours short regularly, a claim that the union organizers reported
hearing frequently. When supervisors are alerted, they promise to correct things
but rarely do, workers and union officials said.
"They are being taken advantage of," said Powell, the union organizer. "You
could tell these workers wanted help but they were so scared and beat down by
this company."
But Manuel said he counts himself lucky when he sees the workers who have had
fingers amputated and worse. One friend of his lost a hand last summer when a
machine he was cleaning suddenly whirred to life. Manuel and many other workers
said that the young man is now back at the plant, working half time and still
hoping to collect enough to pay off his debts back home.
The fascination with the unseen world of slaughterhouses is long standing,
extending from Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle" a century ago to a Human Rights
Watch report last year. That study found that the industry has the highest
levels of injury of any manufacturing industry, and said the workers "contend
with treatment and conditions that violate their human rights."
Kosher plants occupy a small, seldom scrutinized corner of the overall meat
market. In the chicken industry, kosher companies slaughter less than 1% of the
33 million birds killed each day. There are five kosher poultry slaughterhouses
in America besides AgriProcessors, according to industry experts. But Empire
Kosher, in northern Pennsylvania, is AgriProcessors' only major competitor.
Kosher beef is mostly supplied by firms that send rabbis into nonkosher
slaughterhouses to kill selected animals. Hebrew National, the biggest national
brand of kosher beef, does not produce the glatt kosher standard now demanded by
most Orthodox Jews.
Because of market size, kosher plants have escaped the scrutiny of labor
conditions that the larger industry has received. A number of experts in the
area, including the author of the Human Rights Watch report, said they had
assumed that conditions were better in kosher slaughterhouses because they
operate in a premium market under the supervision of clergymen.
"My totally unexamined assumption was that good Orthodox Jews would probably
have a different ethos for treatment of their workers," said Gouveia, the
Nebraska professor.
Empire Kosher has had its own troubles in the past. In 2001, immigration
officials raided the plant and arrested 135 undocumented immigrants, according
to news reports.
In the kosher certification process, working conditions are not a factor,
according to the largest certifying agency, the Orthodox Union. But at
AgriProcessors' biggest competitors, Empire and Hebrew National, there is a
union regulating wages and grievances.
When it comes to outside regulatory agencies, the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration have tagged AgriProcessors this year with six violations. That
amounts to more than half the violations in all Iowa meatpacking plants during
that time, according to OSHA statistics.
Bribe_Jewish_supervisor
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The outside agency that Postville community leaders most remember is the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission, which came to town in 2003. The agency would
not comment on the incident, but
Rubashkin acknowledged that it was responding to complaints that a supervisor in
the chicken department was demanding bribes from workers.
Community leaders say that Hispanic workers were too afraid to speak with the
EEOC. The supervisor remains at the plant today, and union officials and workers
said that while he no longer demands outright bribes, he now tells workers to
buy a car from him if they want a better shift or have a relative hired.
Rubashkin said the charges were completely unfounded.
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"Him buying a car or selling a car has nothing to do with hiring," Rubashkin
said of the supervisor in question.
Another outside agency that sought to intervene was the United Food and
Commercial Workers, the union that represents Empire Kosher workers. Two union
organizers arrived in Postville last July. One of them, Powell, said the
campaign began to unravel at about the same time workers in the plant told him
that supervisors were having meetings at which they threatened to fire workers
or refer them to immigration officials if a union was formed.
Rubashkin denied that there was any intimidation. "We explained to people what a
union does — how they get in power and do what they want," he said.
In the end, the union could not even find a space in town to hold an organizing
meeting. One was scheduled in the Catholic church, but the church leadership was
pressured to cancel it, according to numerous people close to the situation.
Mark Grey, a professor at a local university who studies immigrant labor at
slaughterhouses, said that even after five years of coming to talk with workers
at AgriProcessors, he is still caught off-guard by the severity with which
workers are treated.
"I'm continually surprised at how poorly they treat these people because they're
not Jews and because they happen to be immigrants," said Grey, director of the
Iowa Center for Immigrant Leadership and Integration. The center is based at the
University of Northern Iowa, in Cedar Falls.
"The bottom line here is that I'm not sure these devout Jews are using Jewish
ethics to treat their workers," he added.
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Imperfections mar tough
laws
BONNIE HARRIS AND JONATHAN ROOS
REGISTER STAFF WRITERS
October 20, 2002
Maureen Kanka's daughter inspired a law that swept the nation.
The 7-year-old was raped
and murdered by a neighbor who was a two-time convicted sex offender.
Shortly after the 1994 crime, Kanka pushed New Jersey legislators to
pass Megan's Law, which requires public notification of a sex offender's
whereabouts. Most states followed suit.
Yet Kanka said in an interview with The
Des Moines Register
that she's conflicted about laws such as Iowa's, which bars child
molesters from living within 2,000 feet of schools or child-care
centers.
"I don't think it's necessarily fair to push sex offenders out of one
area where they're then forced to congregate together in another," said
Kanka,
whose daughter's killer lived with two other convicted sex offenders.
"This kind of law is not going to stop someone from hurting a child if
they want to hurt a child.
"At the same time, I do know that sex offenders should not be around
children. At all. Ever. These laws don't say that. Please tell me when
they do."
Yet that's the thing about making laws, lawmakers say. They hardly ever
turn out perfect.
Laws tend to be more reactive than proactive. They benefit some while
sometimes hurting others. And they can have unintended consequences that
can be difficult to undo.
Catration

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Jewish Senator - K Kreiman
"At some point what (lawmakers) need to do is
step back and look at the whole picture to see whether their reactions
have created some additional problems — some inequities, some
unnecessary expense," said state Sen. Keith Kreiman of Bloomfield,
Democratic co-chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
He thinks a sweeping review of
all of Iowa's criminal laws is long overdue to ensure they fit
together.
Iowa's law restricting
where certain sex offenders can live has drawn the most attention
lately. But it isn't the first time
legislation — introduced with all the best intentions — has resulted
in what one criminal justice expert describes as "laws that create
more problems than safeguards."
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Cocaine penalties
When crack cocaine exploded on the drug scene in the '90s, violent crime
soared. Lawmakers responded by imposing stricter sentences for crack than
for powder cocaine, which in turn landed a disproportionate number of
blacks behind bars, contributed to prison crowding and left lawmakers
scrambling to level the field — in some cases by increasing sentences for
powder cocaine.
Meth
Iowa's meth epidemic
led to tough sentencing rules, too.
State spending on prisons and community corrections programs has nearly
tripled since 1990, reaching $281 million this year. The convict
population, including those on probation or parole, has almost doubled,
reaching 38,500 at the start of fiscal 2006.
Seven years ago, legislators approved the use of a controversial drug
treatment to reduce the sex drive of child molesters.
The "chemical castration" law, as
critics labeled the new Iowa statute, was
modeled after one passed by California in 1996.
Today, Iowa courts rarely order the hormone therapy for sex offenders,
even though it's supposed to be mandatory for those convicted more than
once of serious sex crimes.
Some doctors balk at prescribing and supervising use of the drug because
they are concerned about medical and legal risks. Others don't want to
take part in a procedure that is outside their medical practice, or they
question the treatment's effectiveness.
Jetseta Gage

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Rash Of Rapes, and Molestations
The rape and slaying of
10-year-old Jetseta
Gage of Cedar Rapids this year quickly
spurred another round of sex offender legislation in Iowa, including
longer prison sentences and DNA testing of all felons — at a projected
cost to taxpayers of $5.2 million this year.
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"Do we as legislators make laws based on emotion? At times, probably,
yes," said Rep. Wayne Ford, a Des Moines Democrat who pushed to increase
penalties for powder cocaine in 2003. "But we have to be compassionate
about the issues. I doubt the public would want anything less."
The public, after all, is the engine behind most laws, Ford and others
say. When an issue comes up that draws such little debate, as did Iowa's
2,000-foot restriction for sex offenders whose victims were minors,
politicians can sit comfortably in the public's "popular spotlight," said
Donald Bersoff, a law professor at Villanova University
and contributing editor of the journal Law and Human Behavior.
"When you have a tragic event, or a trend that causes widespread public
panic or concern, there is a big rush to hurry in and solve the problem,"
said Bersoff, whose recent article, "Some Contrarian Concerns About Law,
Psychology and Public Policy," explores the unintended consequences of
lawmaking. "But what we're often left with are laws that create more
problems than safeguards. And it's a very long process to undo really bad
laws."
Political effects
Carlos Jayne, a Des Moines lobbyist for fairness in sentencing, said the
process is further complicated by legislators who try to get political
mileage out of emotional issues.
"Who's going to be the one who stands up against a really popular law?" he
said. "The one who doesn't want to get elected, that's who."
In 2002, approval of the 2,000-foot residency restriction for certain sex
offenders was nearly unanimous in the House and Senate. Rep. Ed Fallon, a
Des Moines Democrat, was the only House member to vote against the bill,
which he said breezed through the Legislature "for political reasons, not
for reasons of good policy."
Sen. Maggie Tinsman, a Republican from Davenport, said she voted for the
bill even though she had "serious reservations" about its effectiveness.
Public support for the law was overwhelming, she said.
"I didn't, and still don't, think it will do a lot of good," Tinsman said
of the residency restriction, adding that the law will probably have to be
revised. "But at least it showed people we are doing something. The worst
thing we can do is tell them we can't do anything. They're expecting us to
act. They're asking us for protection. Our job is to respond."
Just how effective such laws are remains unclear; in some cases it's too
soon to tell. But some officials point to declining crime rates as
evidence that the laws are working, and they don't want to do anything to
weaken them.
Sen.
Chuck Larson, a Republican from Cedar Rapids — who supported a proposal
after the Jetseta Gage case to reinstate the death penalty in Iowa for
cases in which a minor is kidnapped, sexually assaulted and murdered —
called the state's sex offender laws "well thought out and appropriate."
Three Naughty boys

"This is not a knee-jerk reaction," Larson said. "It's been upheld in
court as constitutional, and it has been expanded by cities across the
state. To me, the fact that sex offenders are having a hard time finding a
place to live isn't an unintended consequence of the law at all. The
public was clear on this. They do not want (sex offenders) around."
Supervision problems
Those responsible for enforcing the law, however, said it creates a false
sense of security while presenting new problems in supervision.
Vickie Gonzalez, a probation-parole supervisor for the 5th Judicial
District Department of Correctional Services, said her agency has beefed
up its staff since the newest batch of sex offender measures took effect
July 1 by hiring six more people to do home visits and help with
surveillance.
If more offenders are pushed into rural areas, it becomes harder to stay
in touch with them, Gonzalez said. "Here we knew where they were. Now we
have to track them down."
Maureen Kanka said she can only focus on awareness now. She hopes new laws
like Iowa's help hold the public's attention. She said she'd consider that
alone to be a win for Megan.
"We pass laws and develop and grow from tragedies," Kanka said. "It was
the death of a child, my child . . . that started a lot of this around the
country. These laws must be crafted carefully, with thought and purpose,
or they will let other children down. And it's the children who are
counting on us."
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in the
Heartland
ADL

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Jews brought in the ADL to establish hate crime laws
Page 3
At this vulnerable stage in develop-ment, youngsters cannot discern be-tween
personal power and domination.Without careful supervision and guid-ance
from loving parents, teachers, and adults, it’s only a short step to
“gettingeven” with bullies who have frightenedand tormented them, then
becomingbullies themselves, and maybe someday
committing hate crimes. Our young areseldom
shown that there are conse-quences for violent behavior; atrocitiesare
repeatedly presented as fun andfunny, entertaining, great sport, and
ameans to gaining power. But, when ayoungster shows up at school with
agun, no one is laughing any more.Big fear, big challengeThere is hope,
of course. We can live in peace. Just look at Postville, Iowa.
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In1990,
a Hasidic Jewish gentleman from the Big Apple opened a kosher meatpacking
plant smack-dab in the middleof Norwegian/German pork producing country. He
brought in about 300Hasidic rabbis from major U.S. cities,and from Jerusalem
and Tel Aviv towork in the plant. The Jews started their own school, and, of
course, theirown temples. As business grew, the Jews recruited 400 Mexican
immigrants who also moved to town. Postville natives, all 1478 of them,didn’t
know quite what to think.
Theyhad been happily and quietly living theirlives in
a secluded area in the northeastcorner of Iowa, twenty miles from theMighty
Mississippi and thirty minutesfrom the nearest McDonalds. Now this. Normally,
when new folks move totown, rural Iowans take them a pie(apple, of course) and
invite them to din-ner and church. But that wouldn’t work.These new neighbors
couldn’t eat thepie or accept a dinner invitation becauseneither was kosher.
They couldn’t even join you for
a cup of coffee at the town diner. And they certainly weren’t inter-ested in
attending the local churches.And, my goodness, these city folks dressed funny.
Fur hats and long blackcoats in Iowa? In the summer? And thenthere was the new
population of Mexi-cans in town with their unfamiliar food and raucous music.
Suddenly, no one seemed to speak English anymore.But
now, 14 years later, Postvillenatives are living side-by-side with theirJewish
and Hispanic neighbors. Itwould be wrong to say they’re all bestbuddies, but
it’s peaceful. In the begin-ning, there was some name-calling, andthere were a
few minor incidents, butthere was never a physical injury, orwhat you could
label a hate crime.Postville, Iowa may not be the classicexample of an
American town, but itshows us that living peacefully with cul-tural
differences can be done.How do we do it? There’s no quick fix, but first
things first:there must be tighter control over whatthe media chooses to show
its viewers.Certainly the media is not the sole con-tributor to our escalating
tolerance forviolence, but its omnipresence in ourdaily lives is significant.
Non-violencemust be taught at home and in theschools. We must learn to find
delight,not fear, in cultural differences, to cele-brate our sameness, our
individual andcommon human dignity, and come toconfidently embrace all that is
positivein change and differences. There will bemany who answer this call to
simple jus-tice because their faith-based con-science prods them to, and some
will dowhat’s right simply because they areweary of living with fear. But what
about those who aren’tmotivated to help eradicate fear and vio-lence?
According to Harry Dent, anational business consultant and notedinvestment
strategist, the volatility oftoday’s stock market is due to unrest anddistrust
between people throughout theworld. Harry predicts the market willnot calm
down until we learn, once andfor all, to accept our global multicultur-alism.
He suggests that maybe we canhope to convert the holdouts when
theirinvestments rear up and take a bite outof the bottom line. In other
words, whenit becomes clear peace and understand-ing are in the best interests
of everyone. We must move beyond hate, the vio-lence it causes, and the fear
it hidesbehind. President Franklin D. Roo-sevelt was more prophetic than
theworld realized when, in 1933, he wiselycautioned Americans caught in the
gripof the Great Depression, “We havenothing to fear but fear itself.” Char
Cordes is directorof communications anddevelopment for the CedarRapids
regional communi-ty. She has been an activemember of Sisters United News (SUN)since
1999, and is also a member ofthe National Communication Networkof Women
Religious (NCNWR) andthe National Catholic DevelopmentConference (NCDC). Char
can bereached at ccordes@mercycr.org.21SUMMER 2004Sources: www.FBI.gov,
Reports & Publicationslink, Uniform Crime Reports link,Hate Crimes quick link
Postville: A Clash of Cultures inHeartland America, Iowa Public Tele-vision
documentary, based on book byStephen G. Bloom, non-fiction, 2000STOP Teaching
Our Kids To Kill, Lt.Col. Dave Grossman and GloriaDeGaetano, non-fiction,
1999The Roaring 2000s, Harry Dent, non-fiction, 2002Perhaps evenmore
frighteningare the everydaycruelties humanspractice in theirown small
circles,the things thatdon’t make theheadlines.
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That question runs
through two recent books about strangers who ride into town and decide
to stay. In Stephen G.
Bloom's Postville, small-town Iowa is shaken when an unfriendly
group of Lubavitcher Hasidim buy a failed Iowa slaughterhouse
so that they can supply kosher meat and poultry
to Orthodox Jews worldwide. The story in Arlene Stein's Stranger
Next Door is more complicated: In a small Oregon town, an
evangelical Christianity springs up among dispossessed white men and
women and finds political focus in a campaign against "special rights"
for gay people (who are all but nonexistent here). Each book
structures its story around a local election that everyone understands
to be a referendum on those cast as aliens. The back story is that of
a global economy increasingly shifting work away from local white men
while bringing in outsiders whose habits and values seem arrogant,
inconsiderate, and strange.
Postville is the lighter read, and
frames its microcosmic culture clash with Bloom's own story. In 1993
Bloom, a San Francisco journalist, takes a job as a journalism
professor at the University of Iowa. At first he and his wife are
enchanted by Iowa City's exotic cultural habits: people sitting on the
wraparound porch, driving under the speed limit, fishing with
fresh-dug worms, eating all-pork meals at the county fair. But after a
few years, the Blooms notice that they don't quite fit, both as "city
slickers," as the locals call them, and as Jews. For their fellow
Iowans, Christianity is neutral background; Jesus is unthinkingly
invoked by teachers and scoutmasters, neighbors sing Christmas carols
outside their door as if this were benign, and the newspaper's Easter
headline is "He Has Risen."
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And so when Bloom hears about the Lubavitcher
Hasidim in Postville, 350 miles north, wearing their payot (those
curly earlocks) and black hats in a state "where pigs outnumber people by
almost five to one," he's riveted. "While I knew the Lubavitchers to be
fierce fundamentalists who proselytize other Jews the way Jehovah's
Witnesses go after nonbelievers," he writes, "I also realized that the
Hasidim in Postville were as close to family as Iris and I could in
our new home state." Although the Hasidim, notoriously xenophobic, don't
answer his calls requesting an interview, eventually a non-Jewish plant
manager at the kosher slaughterhouse invites him to come by. Once he's
inside, the Hasidim recognize his ethnicity and start recruiting.
The fact that Bloom is actually going inside the
slaughterhouse flabbergasts the locals, whom he interviews as well (and
who don't realize that he can be Jewish without a yarmulke and so forth).
Postville is so small--population 1,465--that
"no one used turn signals because everyone knew where everyone else was
going." The local newspaper covers everyone's vacation destinations,
afternoon visitors, and birthday-party decorations. It's a
town so monoculturally descended
from German Lutheran settlers that before
World War II, German was spoken more often than English on the street.
But by
1987, when Aaron Rubashkin, a
Brooklyn butcher, came looking for a place to
start a glatt-kosher slaughterhouse, Postville was in economic
crisis. Fueled by the worldwide Orthodox boom and advances in
international shipping, Rubashkin's business became wildly successful,
bringing money into town.
The Jews
Nevertheless,
10 years later, the locals aren't
exactly happy with their marriage of necessity. "The Jews," as they're
called, drive like maniacs, never mow their lawns, build without permits,
bargain furiously (which the locals feel implies the price is unfair), and
wait months, if ever, to pay their bills. Disregarding the fundamental
rule of Iowa coexistence, the Hasidim won't even make eye contact on the
street. One of Bloom's local informants asks: "Hadn't their mothers taught
them any manners?"
Bloom does his best to be fair to the Hasidim as
he explores their hermetically sealed world. He notes his relief at the
familiar speech rhythms, the questions upon questions. He accepts an
invitation for a Shabbat stay with a Hasidic family, revels in the food,
and prays with his hosts on command. But finally, Bloom is a liberal, not
a fundamentalist: He's
repelled by their intolerance, their insularity, their open delight in
cheating "the goyim," and their manipulative arguments.
He quotes one Hasid as saying proudly: "I am a
racist... . Why haven't the Jews been extinguished after scores of
attempts throughout history? That we are still here defies logic. There is
only one answer. We are
better and smarter. That's why!" Bloom's
heart is with the Postville local who says: "It's not such a great
religion if they don't want to be a part of the community, is it?"
Bloom's background as a daily journalist shows;
while the book brims with factual details, it lacks a sustaining
narrative. As a result, parts of Postville are compulsively
readable, filled with vivid information about such things as the town's
history, kosher killing and evisceration, the filthy, algae-covered
mikveh for Hasidic men, and Rubashkin's all-expenses-paid importation
of labor. But there's too much filler: reconstructed "conversations" full
of nothing much, for instance, and detail about an assimilated Jewish
doctor who'd coexisted nicely before the Hasidim came.
Business Tax = Anti Semite
Bloom's own story doesn't fully hold the book
together. Nor does the confrontation he constructs:
a vote over whether the town
should annex the slaughterhouse land and that of other local businesses,
subjecting them to city taxes and law--an effort the Hasidim call
anti-Semitic. Annexation passed; the Hasidim
stayed. Postville's biggest disappointment is its failure to take
on the larger questions: What does it mean that more people worldwide are
taking refuge in separatist ideologies like the Lubavitchers'? And what is
to be done when a separatist culture crashes into a pluralist one?
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Kosher Hill
Stephen Bloom notes what happened
when a group of ultra-Orthodox Jews bought a slaughterhouse in Postville, Iowa,
in 1987, and soon began to make their influence felt in the town:
"Generally, newcomers are eager to assimilate to a new culture. That's why
they came in the first place. But instead of arriving at the lowest rung of
the
economic ladder, these Jews had arrived already on top. The Jews who
settled in Postville came from cities, and many brought with them large
sums
of money ... Sholom
Rubashkin
built an enormous house on Wilson Street
in an area of Postville thta
the locals quickly labeled 'Kosher
Hill.' Iowans
were loathe to show such material wealth. 'That
Rubashkin
home is a palace,'
Alicia [one of the non-Jewish local people] said, and no one denied it."
[BLOOM, S., 2001, p. 50]
Locals
fear the Jews
Stephen Bloom notes the ultra-Orthodox community of Postville, Iowa, and its
raucous religious effect on the tranquil town:
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Pottsville was repulsed at
homosexuality "An hour must have
passed, and then, as though on cue, a great roar of voices
erupted from within the shul. The worship had ended and the men broke
into
raucous song. These liturgical melodies were booming and boisterous,
each
lasting twenty to thirty minutes. Soon, the singing was accompanied by
banging.
The men were pounding the metal tables with fists. They were stamping
the
shul's wooden floor with the heels of their shoes and boots.
The collective sound
signaled to me that they must have been drunk .. I was eavesdropping on
some sort of loud, inebriated religious
reverie ... The sounds shooting out from the
shul's windows and front door were deafening on this otherwise serene
Iowa
night." [BLOOM, S., 2001, p. 36 |
He also notes, once he is actualy among these worshipers, that they "seemed
drowned in showmanship -- who could wail loudest, bow farthest without falling
over, read the longest Hebrew passage fastest and without taking a breath."
[BLOOM, S., 2001, p. 203] They also get
drunk as part of their relgious
activity: This was an old fashioned chugging contest.
Tast
after toast followed ... [BLOOM, S., 2001, p. 206] "Rapturous song,
powerful drink, and overwhelming body heat was the Holy Communion of these
believers. Everything about the day was intense and
bodily: the dirty
mikveh
[communal bath], drinking, singing, the body odor, the pounding of fists and
feet." [BLOOM, S., 2001, p. 207]
Culture Clash

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Copyright 2000 Journal Sentinel Inc. (Wisconsin)
October 10, 2000 Tuesday ALL EDITIONS
SECTION: CUE; Pg. 02E
LENGTH: 830 words
HEADLINE: No promised land for Jews, Iowans
BYLINE: CURT SCHLEIER Special to the Journal Sentinel
BODY:
In 1987, Aaron Rubashkin, a butcher from Brooklyn and a member of the
ultra-orthodox Lubavitcher sect, opened a kosher slaughterhouse in the
unlikely outpost of Postville, Iowa.
Postville had been a community
in decline. Local manufacturing had largely evaporated, leaving few
opportunities for young people. Not surprisingly, the community welcomed
the Jews. At first.
What's not to like? They brought money, and they
brought jobs. Real estate values went up, and the entire area became more
prosperous. By 1996, the slaughter house employed 350 people, a
considerable number in a community of only 1,478.
But opposition to the Lubavitchers began to grow.
Postville Want Jews Out
By 1997, it was sufficiently
strong that a referendum was placed on the ballot to allow Postville to
annex land surrounding the community, including the land the
slaughterhouse was on. Ostensibly, it was intended to put a measure of
control over Rubashkin's operations.
"What the annexation really
meant was an opportunity to tell the Hasidic Jews to leave the God-fearing
city of Postville," Stephen G. Bloom writes in his excellent and evenly
balanced account of the travails.
Was it anti-Semitism at work? Another example of
jealousy of Jewish success, as the Hasidim suggested? Or was it, as the
locals contended, that the Lubavitchers were lousy neighbors and
dishonorable people? The truth, as always, apparently lay somewhere in the
middle.
Bloom, a largely secular Jew who frequently
frames his relationship to his faith in terms of Jewish food, came to Iowa
from San Francisco to teach journalism at the state university. At first,
Bloom, his wife and their young son loved their new home.
But by their third year there, the blush had
begun to fade.
"We were lonely. We didn't fit into the local
social order. . . . We missed people like us."
Soon Bloom begins to see "them" everywhere. Two
female American Gothic types stare at the Bloom family in a restaurant,
and as the Blooms leave ask "in an Almira Gulch tone, 'You're not from
around here.' " Bloom took this to mean "what they were driving at wasn't
where we were from, but who we were, what we were: city folks, Jews. . .
."
The Blooms are asked to host the neighborhood's
annual watermelon social, an event that typically attracts 80 people.
Perhaps a half dozen showed up. Why? The headline in the Cedar Rapids
Press one Christmas: "He Has Risen." Mazel tov.
When Bloom heard about the Postville Jews he was
drawn to them. He "realized the Hasidim in Postville were as close to
family as Iris and I could muster." So he arranged to visit Postville.
"Perhaps I'd find someone like my grandmother Rose, who used to stand in
her cluttered kitchen in New York, then Miami Beach, to mix matzo ball,
egg yolks and a dollop of schmaltz for her superb matzo ball soup."
What he found when he got there was a town torn
asunder. Certainly there was some blatant anti-Semitism. One local told
Bloom "they'll take whatever they can get. The Jews, as long as they have
their hands in someone else's pocket, then they'll stay."
Supporters
The Hasidim had some
supporters, too, though many of them seem to be people who directly
benefited from their arrival.
But the crux of the problem seemed to revolve
around three major issues. The Hasidim were very aloof.
They treated the locals as though
they were diseased. "If they mix with us they
think we'll contaminate them," someone told Bloom.
More disturbing to Bloom was that the
Lubavitchers were dishonorable in
their business dealings. They'd buy something and not pay for it or pay or
withhold payment for a long time.
"I get bills and throw them
away," one bragged to him. "The more bills I get, the faster I throw them
away. If they want to get paid that badly, they'll send me another notice
and then another. When I'm ready to pay them, I pay them."
That kind of behavior is not tolerated by the
Torah, which has specific rules not only about religious behavior, but
personal and business dealings as well.shooting

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Jews Shoot Woman
Finally, the community got
upset when there was no response from the Hasidic community when two
Lubavitcher youths committed an armed robbery during which a local
woman was shot and seriously wounded.
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I contacted a Lubavitcher rabbi and described the
book to him. He knew of the Rubashkin family, and said it was well
respected within Lubavitcher circles and known for its charity. But then
he sighed. Of course, not every one who is religious on the outside is
religious inside.
Bloom had a love-hate relationship with the
Hasidim. But ultimately he was repelled by their irreligious behavior and
in the book comes down squarely on the side of the Iowa town folk.
Bloom has produced an honest, balanced and
remarkable piece of journalism. It's an interesting, readable story, too.
------------
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jews selling SS numbers
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Iowa meatpacking plant raided in ID
theft investigation
Updated 21h 15m ago | Comments49 | Recommend9 E-mail | Save | Print |
POSTVILLE, Iowa — At least 300 people were arrested Monday on immigration
and identity theft charges at Agriprocessors, one of the USA's largest
packing plants for kosher meats.
Agents from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement entered the
Agriprocessors complex in this northeast Iowa community of 2,500 during
morning work hours, executing warrants for fraudulent use of others' Social
Security numbers in connection with their employment at the plant. The
packing plant has attracted workers from Mexico, Russia, Ukraine and
elsewhere.
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Nathaniel Popper, a journalist who has written about Agriprocessors for
The Jewish Daily Forward, based in New York, said the raid could disrupt
the supply of kosher meat.
"This could have a big impact on the supply of kosher meat in America,"
Popper said in an interview. "Over the next several days, that's going to
be the big question for people in the Jewish community who keep kosher."
He said Agriprocessors is the largest of three major companies that supply
kosher beef. The company supplies chicken and other meats, as well.
Those arrested were being held at a fairgrounds in Waterloo, Iowa, and in
local jails. A total of 16 local, state and federal agencies, led by ICE,
joined the investigation that began last October. They include the U.S.
Marshals Service, the Iowa Department of Public Safety, the FBI, the U.S.
Department of Agriculture and the federal Drug Enforcement Agency.
According to an affidavit,
"approximately 76% of the 968 employees of
Agriprocessors
were using false or fraudulent Social Security numbers in connection with
their employment."
Chuck Larson, a truck driver for Agriprocessors, was in the plant
when the agents arrived. "There had to be 100 of them," he said of the
agents.
Larson said the agents told workers to stay in place, then separated them
by asking those with identification to stand to the right and those with
other papers to stand to the left.
"There was plenty of hollering," Larson said. "You couldn't go anywhere."
When asked who was separated, Larson said those standing in the group with
other papers were all Hispanic.
The Agriprocessors plant is northeast Iowa's largest employer. About 200
Hasidic Jews arrived in Postville in 1987, when butcher Aaron Rubashkin of
Brooklyn's Crown Heights neighborhood reopened a defunct meatpacking plant
with his two sons, Sholom and Heshy, just outside the city limits.
Business boomed at the plant, reviving the depressed economy while pitting
the newcomers against the predominantly Lutheran community.
Former Iowa governor Tom Vilsack said the Postville immigration
investigations were warranted despite concerns that officials violated
constitutional rights in past raids. He and others have alleged that
immigration officials used humiliation, opposite-sex searches and long
periods of secrecy in the Dec. 12, 2006, raids at Swift & Co. in
Marshalltown, Iowa, where 90 people were arrested on immigration charges.
Share this story:
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Jews running Meth ring
 |
300 arrested in Iowa immigration raid at largest U.S. kosher meat
plant
Federal immigration agents today raided the nation's largest kosher
slaughterhouse and meat-packing plant and arrested more than 300 people in
northeastern Iowa. Most are accused of identity theft and of being in the
country illegally.
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The Des Moines Register (a Gannett newspaper) reports that according to
search warrants unsealed today, federal authorities had received
information about alleged immigration violations for the past two years at
Agriprocessors Inc. in Postsville. One source, a former plant supervisor,
told agents the plant hired foreign nationals from Mexico, Guatemala and
Eastern Europe. Around 80% were in the United States illegally, said a
supervisor with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The source also reported that some
employees were running a methamphetamine lab in the plant and were
bringing weapons into the plant, which employs about 1,000. He said he was
fired after he told his superiors.
Authorities have released about 40 workers, with supervision, “on
humanitarian grounds” because they are primary care-givers. The National
Cattle Congress fairgrounds in nearby Waterloo is being used as detention
center. The Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier says the community heard Friday
about the impending raid, the largest in Iowa history. When the raid began
this morning, family members of plant workers headed to St. Bridget’s
Catholic Church, a few blocks away.
“The people right now are hearing and seeing the helicopters,” Sister Mary
McCauley told the Associated Press. “They are just panic-stricken and very
frightened and some of them are coming to the church as a safe haven.”
The Register has a photo gallery of today's raid.
So far, Agriprocessors has declined to comment. The company's products can
be found nationwide in Wal-Mart, Trader Joe’s, Albertson’s and Kroger,
among others.
On its Web site the company says it "strives to be second to none in
producing the finest quality beef and poultry products at a reasonable
price. We are devoted to our customers and are committed to following and
upholding the federal, state, and local laws and regulations governing our
business.
"As a producer of kosher meat products, we approach our business in the
context of a deep religious tradition. The nine rabbinic authorities that
use Agriprocessors to serve the needs to their congregations define the
requirements for kosher meat production at our plant, and train and
supervise the rabbis who conduct the religious rituals. The values
expressed in the kosher rituals and requirements are a part of the values
shared by our employees, regardless of their religious beliefs. ..."
In 1987 about 200 Hasidic Jews arrived in Postville from Brooklyn’s Crown
Heights neighborhood when butcher Aaron Rubashkin reopened a meat-packing
plant, the Register writes: Business boomed at the plant, reviving the
depressed economy while pitting the newcomers against the predominately
Lutheran community... .
(Buses filled with plant workers arrive at the National Cattle Congress in
Waterloo, Iowa, where federal agents are processing more than 300 people
arrested at Agriprocessors. Photo by Jeff Reinitz of the Courier via AP.)
Posted by Michael Winter
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Feds: Drugs made at kosher meat plant
E-mail article
Published: 05/13/2008
Federal authorities charged that a
methamphetamine laboratory was operating at the nation's largest kosher
slaughterhouse and that employees carried weapons to work.
The charges were among the most explosive details to emerge following the
massive raid Monday at Agriprocessors in Postville, Iowa.
In a 60-page application for a search warrant, federal agents revealed
details of their six-month probe of Agriprocessors. The investigation
involved 12 federal agencies, including the Drug Enforcement
Administration, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the departments of
labor and agriculture.
According to the application, a former plant supervisor told investigators
that some 80 percent of the workforce was illegal. They included rabbis
responsible for kosher supervision, who the source believed entered the
United States from Canada without proper immigration documents. The source
did not provide evidence for his suspicion about the rabbis.
The source also claimed to have confronted a human resources manager with
Social Security cards from three employees that had the same number. The
manager laughed when the matter was raised, the source said.
At least 300 people were arrested Monday during the raid, for which
federal authorities had rented an expansive fairground nearby to serve as
a processing center for detainees.
The search warrant application
said that 697 plant employees were believed to have violated federal laws.
Agriprocessors officials did not return calls from JTA seeking comment.
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POSTVILLE, IA [CHI] — Tal
Ginter
was incarcerated during the
Agriprocessors raid and
unfortunately has had to spend Shabbos behind bars. Some Shluchim from Postville
visited him Friday to bring him food and lift his spirits. We are asking that in
the spirit of Ahavas Yisroel that people should please say Tehillim as well as
do some extra deeds of goodness and kindness, so that we can speed up his
release.

sex_children
Sexual favors allegedly expected from
some Postville workers
JENNIFER JACOBS • REGISTER STAFF WRITER • 2008 COPYRIGHT, DES MOINES REGISTER
AND TRIBUNE CO. • May 19, 2008
Read Comments(59)Recommend (3)Print this page E-mail this article
Share this article: Del.icio.us Facebook Digg Reddit Newsvine What’s this?
Reports that there was an expectation of sexual favors at Agriprocessors Inc.
are beginning to emerge from workers at the Postville meat processing plant, and
advocates for immigrants in Postville today are trying to collect and validate
the stories.
Sister Mary McCauley, a Roman Catholic nun at St. Bridget's Catholic Church,
said workers have said that “there was sexual abuse, that there’s
propositioning.”
If a worker wanted, say, a promotion or a shift change, “they’d be brought into
a room with three or four men and it was like, ‘Which one do you want? Which one
are you going to serve?’” said McCauley in an interview today with Des Moines
Register editors and reporters.
“Unfortunately, they are grateful for some of their ESL classes, and they knew
what some of those words meant,” McCauley said. “If they had the courage, they
could refuse it.”
Chaim Abrahams, an Agriprocessors representative, declined to address the
allegation of sexual favors in exchange for job-related requests.
“As with any legal matter, Agriprocessors cannot comment about any specific
allegation," Abrahams said in a written statement. "The company is performing an
independent investigation and will continue to cooperate with the government
about this matter.”
Federal agents raided Agriprocessors Inc., a kosher meat-processing plant, on
Monday in the largest single-site immigration bust in U.S. history. Arrest
warrants were issued for 697 people who work at the plant.
Federal agents detained 389 in Waterloo, charged 306 with various fraud-related
charges, and released 62. Twenty-one remain in custody pending immigration
hearings.
Since the raid, stories of how employees were mistreated has emerged, including
verbal abuse by supervisors.
Last November, the federal search warrant released after the raid said,
Immigrant and Customs Enforcement agents interviewed a former Agriprocessors
supervisor who said some employees were running a
methamphetamine lab in the plant
and were bringing weapons to work.
Another source alleged worker abuse, officials said in the warrant. In one case,
a supervisor covered the eyes of an employee with duct tape and struck him with
a meat hook.
Advocates are trying to document workers’ personal stories, McCauley said.
We are deeply troubled that among the hundreds of workers who were arrested
by federal officials on May 12, eighteen were children between ages 13 and
17.[4]
We are deeply troubled to read reports of various criminal operations taking
place at the Postville
plant, including the account of a Jewish floor supervisor who severely abused a
Guatemalan worker in the most reprehensible conditions, and allegations of
sexual
assault and verbal abuse.[5]
New Details Emerging About Alleged Sexual Abuse at Agriprocessors
Plant
POSTCARDS FROM POSTVILLE: New Details Emerging About Alleged Sexual Abuse
at Agriprocessors Plant
Advocates Say Congressional Hearings Crucial to Uncovering the Truth

|
Washington, DC — New details are emerging about a history of sexual
abuse and solicitation at the site of the largest worksite immigration
raid in U.S. history. The Des Moines Register reports that some former
employees of the Agriprocessors meatpacking plant in Postville,
IA are coming forward with
revelations about supervisor demands for sexual favors at the plant.
These new allegations come after reports of other labor, food safety,
and immigration law violations have painted Agriprocessors as the
poster child for how some employers exploit our nation’s broken
immigration system to profit on the backs of vulnerable workers. Past
violations at Agriprocessors that have received new attention
following the immigration raid last week include
child labor law violations,
grotesque physical abuses of employees by supervisors, and
numerous health and safety violations. The Des Moines Register article
is included at the bottom of this release.
|
“If these new sexual abuse allegations hold true, we have reached a new
low point in the exploitation of vulnerable human beings,” said Frank
Sharry, Executive Director of America’s Voice. “No one in America –
citizen, visitor, or undocumented worker – should silently suffer this
type of injustice and humiliation. It is not the American way. I have no
doubt that every Iowan, every American, and every Member of Congress is
outraged that this could happen in our great nation at the dawn of the
21st century. I call on Congress to step in and investigate what happened
and the Bush Administration to protect all workers from abuse.”
The allegations about sexual abuse and solicitation come from former
employees arrested in the May 12th immigration raid. These instances of
abuse are being reported by Sister Mary McCauley, a Catholic nun at St.
Bridget's Catholic Church in Postville, IA.
Leslye Orloff, Director of the Immigrant Women Program at Legal Momentum,
the oldest legal advocacy organization dedicated to advancing the rights
of women and girls, also called on Congress to address our broken
immigration system and protect immigrant women: “There have been numerous
documented cases of this type of sexual assault and harassment of
immigrant women workers throughout the country. The power disparity
between employers and supervisors and immigrant workers creates
conditions ripe for harassment and
sexual assault by male supervisors, who threaten to report women to
immigration officials if they do not comply with their demands. For
this reason Legal Momentum successfully led a national effort to obtain
U-visa crime victim immigration protection for immigrant victims of
workplace abuse as part of the Violence Against Women Act. We call upon
the Department of Homeland Security to ensure that the Postville workers
and any other worked detained at worksite actions are screened for and
informed about their rights for protection from deportation as crime
victims."

For more details on Agriprocessors, including background information on
their past history of violations, see http://www.eyeonagriprocessors.org/.
To learn more about the new allegations and how our current system is
failing to protect the rights of all workers, please contact any of the
following individuals:
<!--[if !supportLists]-->· <!--[endif]-->Leslye Orloff, Director,
Immigrant Women Program, Legal Momentum (202.210.8886 or alevat@legalmomentum.orgThis
e-mail address is being protected from spambots, you need JavaScript
enabled to view it )
<!--[if !supportLists]-->· <!--[endif]-->Frank Sharry, Executive Director,
America’s Voice (202-296-4280)
<!--[if !supportLists]-->· <!--[endif]-->Luz Hernandez, advocate on the
ground in Iowa (563.380.8154 or isramiro01@luther.eduThis e-mail address
is being protected from spambots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it )
Harnessing the power of American voices and American values to win common
sense immigration reform.
To access the video accompanying the Des Moines Register article below,
please go to: http://www.desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080520/NEWS10/805200403.
DES MOINES REGISTER: Advocates: Workers allege sexual abuse
May 20, 2008
By JENNIFER JACOBS
jejacobs@dmreg.comThis e-mail address is being protected from spambots,
you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Reports that there was an
expectation of sexual favors at
Agriprocessors
Inc. are beginning to emerge from workers at the Postville meat processing
plant, and advocates for immigrants are trying to document the stories.
Sister Mary McCauley, a Roman Catholic nun at St. Bridget's Catholic
Church in Postville, said workers have said that "there was sexual abuse,
that there's propositioning."
She said she didn't hear any of the stories firsthand but that others
passed along the information to her.
If a worker wanted, say, a promotion or a shift change, "they'd be brought
into a room with three or four men and it was like, 'Which one do you
want? Which one are you going to serve? " McCauley said Monday in an
interview with Des Moines Register editors and reporters.

"Unfortunately, they are grateful for some of their ESL classes, and they
knew what some of those words meant," she said. "If they had the courage,
they could refuse it."
Chaim Abrahams, an Agriprocessors representative, declined to address the
allegation of sexual favors in exchange for job-related requests.
"As with any legal matter, Agriprocessors cannot comment about any
specific allegation," Abrahams said in a written statement. "The company
is performing an independent investigation and will continue to cooperate
with the government about this matter."
Federal agents' raid at Agriprocessors on May 12 was the largest
single-site immigration raid in U.S. history. Arrest warrants were issued
for 697 people who work at the plant.
Agents detained 389 people in Waterloo; of those, 306 were charged with
fraud-related felonies for using fake documents to obtain a job. A total
of 62 people were temporarily released for humanitarian reasons, such as
child care, but they must appear in court soon.
In the Register interview, McCauley said workers say there is
"definitely" one person in the
area selling Social Security numbers.
That raises questions about these workers' role in committing fraud, said
Tom Chapman, an advocate for immigrants and executive director of the Iowa
Catholic Conference.
The workers, who speak mainly Spanish, were probably not sophisticated
enough to steal or create their own fake identity documents, said Armando
Villareal, the administrator for the state Division of Latino Affairs.
"I don't think they have Apple computers in their apartments with laser
printers," Villareal said.
Meanwhile, McCauley said she's seen a new confidence in some of the
immigrant women.
Most of those released on humanitarian grounds must wear an ankle bracelet
that contains an electronic tracking device. Upon their release from
detention, they wore long pants to conceal the GPS device, McCauley said.
"Yesterday, they had their pants legs rolled up to their knees," she said.
"You could see that they were gaining some strength within themselves."
|
Meanwhile, the Iowa labor investigation of Agriprocessors is getting back on
track. In addition to countless stories of injuries, there are accusations of
child labor (one teen told of working 17-hour shifts) and
female workers being told their jobs
could become easier in exchange for
sexual
favors.



Feds cite drugs, illegal workers
at kosher plant
By Ben Harris 05/13/2008
NEW YORK (JTA) -- In laying the legal groundwork for a massive raid of the
country's largest kosher slaughterhouse, federal authorities cited claims
that illegal narcotics production took place at the factory and hundreds of
illegal immigrants were employed there, including several of the rabbis
responsible for kosher supervision.
The charges were among the most explosive details to emerge following the
raid Monday at the Agriprocessors plant in Postville, Iowa.
Agents arrested 390 workers in what Immigration and Customs Enforcement
called the largest raid of its kind in U.S. history.
The raid, which required federal authorities to rent an expansive fairground
in nearby Waterloo to house detainees, prompted the U.S. District Court for
the Northern District of Iowa to temporarily relocate judges and court
personnel to the site because the facilities in Cedar Rapids and Sioux City
were inadequate.
"There have been other operations where more people have been arrested," Tim
Counts, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesman, told JTA. "But as
far as we can determine, this is the largest single-site operation as far as
number of arrests go."
The raid follows a six-month
investigation involving more than a dozen federal agencies, including the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the
Internal Revenue Service, and the departments of labor and agriculture.
Three Israelis and four Ukrainians
were among the detainees held on charges of being in the country
illegally, Counts said. Officials are expected to bring criminal charges
against some of the detainees as well, most of whom are from Guatemala and
Mexico.
Agriprocessors said in a statement Tuesday that it "takes the immigration
laws seriously" and intended to "continue to cooperate with the government
in its investigation."
"Agriprocessors will also inquire further into the circumstances that led to
these events," the company said. "We extend our heartfelt sympathies to the
families whose lives were disrupted and wish them the best. We are deeply
committed to meeting the needs of all of our customers and are operating
again today."
In the affidavit filed as part of the 60-page application for a search
warrant, additional details were revealed of the government's investigation
of Agriprocessors, a company that has been beset by numerous allegations of
health and safety violations, mistreating workers and using controversial
slaughter practices.
According to the document, a former
supervisor at the plant -- identified only as Source #1 -- told
investigators that some 80 percent of the workforce was illegal.
The source also said he believed rabbis responsible for kosher supervision
entered the United States from Canada without proper immigration documents.
According to the affidavit, the source did not provide evidence for his
suspicions about the rabbis.
Source #1 also claimed to have
discovered active production of the drug methamphetamine at the plant and
reported incidents of weapons being carried there.
Methamphetamine, more commonly known as crystal
meth,
is Illegal in the United States. The popular nightclub drug gives users a
sense of energy and euphoria that can last for hours.
Agriprocessors employees told investigators that sometimes they were
required to work nighttime shifts of 12 hours or more.
The affidavit says that 697 plant employees are believed to have violated
federal laws.
With Agriprocessors producing more than half of the nation's kosher meat,
the raid has prompted fears of a disruption in supply. Though the plant was
back in operation Tuesday, it was unclear if Agriprocessors could meet its
normal production capacity with hundreds of its workers in federal custody.
Founded by Brooklyn butcher Aaron Rubashkin, Agriprocessors produces kosher
meat and poultry marketed under the labels Aaron's Best and Rubashkin's.
The firm gained national attention in 2000 with the publication of the book
"Postville," which described the tensions between the company and the local
community. The company has attracted a significant population of Orthodox
Jews to a rural pocket of northeast Iowa.
Agriprocessors did not respond to requests for comment from JTA. Asked if
there was slaughter taking place Tuesday, a woman who answered the phone at
the plant said, "We're trying."
The Des Moines Register reported that more than 100 cars were in the company
lot Tuesday morning, but quoted a nearby business owner who said that foot
and vehicular traffic to the plant was much lower than usual.
Rabbi Menachem Genack, the head of the Orthodox Union's kosher supervision
department -- the largest outfit certifying the kosher status of
Agriprocessors' meat -- told JTA that other companies had assured him that
they could make up for any shortfall from the Postville plant.
Genack reiterated the O.U.'s policy of leaving matters of immigration and
labor standards to the government.
"No one else has the resources to do what the federal government can do," he
said.
If the company turns out to be criminally liable, Genack said, that could be
grounds for losing its kosher certification.
Genack said he was told by the plant's supervising rabbi that two foreign
rabbis working at the plant had failed to renew their work permits when they
expired a few weeks ago. He described the issue as a "technical" violation
and insisted the two rabbis had not been detained.

Much of the information the government collected appears to have come from
former employees of Agriprocessors who were detained by police on unrelated
charges. Sources related similar stories of presenting
fraudulent documents and Social
Security numbers when seeking employment with the company.
Several said they were aware of
undocumented workers employed at the plant that were paid by supervisors in
cash.
The affidavit says the government
has probable cause to believe that an
Agriprocessors
supervisor assisted workers in acquiring fake documents in exchange for a
cut of the proceeds.
Federal investigators provided documentation for a former Agriprocessors
employee, identified in the affidavit as Source #7, for the purpose of
gaining employment at the plant.
Once hired, the source reported on rabbis who insulted the workers and threw
meat at them.
In one alleged instance, a "Hasidic Jew" duct-taped a worker's eyes and then
hit him with a meat hook, "apparently not causing serious injuries."
Agriprocessors has come under fire before for its labor practices, as well
as health and safety violations. In March, authorities fined the company
$182,000 for violations at the plant.
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals has clandestinely videotaped a
controversial slaughter practice used at the plant.
In addition, an investigation by the Forward weekly newspaper revealed
allegations that employees were underpaid and exploited. Agriprocessors
officials denied the allegations.
On Tuesday, members of the Conservative movement's Hekhsher Tzedek
Commission condemned the company, saying that keeping kosher requires more
than just adherence to ritual matters, but also sensitivity to the
environment and respect for workers and animals. The Hekhsher Tzedek
initiative is in part a response to past allegations of misconduct at
Agriprocessors.
"The actions of this company have brought shame upon the entire Jewish
community," the commission said. "Yesterday’s discovery, along with the
other violations of the ethical standards set forth by our Torah and our
tradition underscore the need for Hekhsher Tzedek. To be sure, halacha has
never limited its concern to the ritual elements of kashrut alone." |

Jews_file_bankruptcy
 |
Besides leaving their workers out in the cold, turning off the
electricity in the middle of winter, they left millions of dollars of
unpaid debts. Hopefully we won't have to bail them out but I'm sure we
will.
http://iowaindependent.com/8308/agriprocessors-roller-coaster-mounts-another-climb
The decision to focus on poultry is intended to provide liquidity to the
failing meatpacker, and it is seen as a necessary step in the wake of
employee losses that have left the plant with less than a third of its
full-capacity workforce.
Friday’s meeting came in the wake of a motion filed in the Agriprocessors
bankruptcy case by the meatpacker’s largest creditor, First Bank Business
Capital of St. Louis, Mo.,
claiming that the company should have filed for bankruptcy in Iowa court
rather than in New York, where the current case is pending.
Attorneys for First Bank contend that Agriprocessors filed as an Iowa
business with the Iowa Secretary of State, and they filed as an
out-of-state business with the New York Secretary of State.
|
The court in New York is expected to hold hearings on the motion Monday
morning.
Documents filed with the court show three companies with a significant
secured interest in Agriprocessors. First Bank is the largest with $35
million. Chicago-based MetLife Agricultural Investments is owed $9.6
million and Minneapolis-based Farm Credit Leasing is owed $6 million.
In addition, Jacobson Staffing Company of Des Moines leads the list of 20
creditors with the largest in unsecured claims with just over $845,3000 in
unpaid bills. Weyerhauser of Chicago is a close second with just over
$806,900 in unsecured claims. Other notables on the list are Alliant
Energy ($318,255); Nyemaster, Goode, West, Hansell & O’Brien law firm
($208,636); U.S.D.A. Food Safety and Inspection ($88,179); and Chicago
attorney Thomas V. McQueen ($60,612). McQueen served as counsel for former
Agriprocessors supervisor Martin De La Rosa-Loera in a federal
immigration-related case.
The list of 20 creditors totals just under $5.6 million.
Agriprocessors
has estimated that it owes between $50 and $100
million.A 46-page creditor
listing that was filed by attorneys for Agriprocessors in conjunction with
the bankruptcy contains creditors from 30 states and the District of
Columbia. In addition, the document lists creditors from the nations of
Canada and Isreal. Creditors range from the Brick City Inn in Clermont to
the Diners Club in The Lakes, Nev. Within the bulk creditor listing, which
does not provide dollar amount owed to the creditors, both company founder
Abraham Aaron Rubashkin and former executive officer Sholom M. Rubashkin
are listed.
GAL Investments, a Postville property management company owned by Gabay
Menachem, is one of the companies on the bulk list facing financial demise
due to dependency on the Agriprocessors. Although the company has no
direct management ties to Agriprocessors, its business was providing
housing to rental customers in Postville. Since Agriprocessors was the
largest employer in the area — definitely the largest by far for Postville
— Menachem’s business depended on employees from the meatpacking plant
needing lodging.
Last week, Menachem noted that up to 90 percent of his tenants had not
paid their rents. His company, like the others in Postville that had
organized to serve or had adapted to serve needs related to the
meatpacking plant, has undergone difficult financial times since the May
12 immigration raid at the plant. The latest round of hardship, which
includes Jacobson Staffing ending assignments with nearly half the
Agriprocessors workforce, however, may be the final blow.
|
Jewish Lightening
 |
Jury says companies not responsible for fire
Associated Press
12:11 PM CST, November 15, 2008
DES MOINES, Iowa - A federal jury says that two maintenance companies are
not to blame for a fire that destroyed a
turkey-processing plant in
Postville.
The Davenport jury made its decision in a lawsuit over a
fire that destroyed the Iowa
Turkey Products plant.
The company's insurance carrier, Regent Insurance Co., sued two companies
hired to clean the plant, Packers Sanitation Services Inc. and National
Service Company of Iowa Inc.
|
Regent claimed cleaning crews failed to shut down and lock out
electrical and hydraulic power before starting their work, and the failure
caused the fire.
The plant, which employed 350
people, was never rebuilt. It was a separate operation from
Agriprocessors, another meatpacking plant in Postville.
|
Jew
coyotes_charge$5000_immigrants_stuck
 |
Former Agriprocessors workers seek emergency shelter in Decorah
By JENS MANUEL KROGSTAD, Courier Staff Writer
POSTVILLE --- Many of the remaining Agriprocessors workers from the
Pacific island country of Palau sought emergency shelter in Decorah Friday
after they did not receive paychecks and lost power to their homes.
About 60 Palauans
were not paid as scheduled because the embattled kosher meatpacking plant
could not meet payroll, said Hersey Kyota, Palauan ambassador to
the U.S.
Kyoto said he walked to the plant with workers to demand their paychecks,
only to be told by a manager that the company could not pay them.
"It's terrible," he said. "They feel mistreated and betrayed."
A handful of homes where the workers stayed lost electricity for a time
after the landlord, GAL Investments, asked for the power to be shut off to
cut its mounting losses, said Jeff Abbas, manager of KPVL, Postville's
community radio station.
After being alerted to the situation, Alliant Energy officials said
electricity will remain on for another week, Abbas said.
|
Hours after the arrest of former Agriprocessors CEO Sholom Rubashkin,
the workers piled into the station seeking assistance and answers but did
not find many.
When the ambassador first arrived, the Palauans, frustrated and angry,
confronted him over why they were ever allowed to make the trip.
"If I knew it was going to happen like this, I would have stayed home,"
said Tommy Blelai, 32.
Kyoto said he had issued a statement asking people not to travel to
Postville but said he could not force anyone to stay home.
About 200 workers arrived in
September on the promise of cheap rent and decent wages, despite
letters of warning from union leaders and residents.
The workers initially said they did not want to travel to a shelter 30
miles north in Decorah because a plant manager told them to ask for their
checks again on Tuesday.
But Abbas and other volunteers argued having all the workers in a
centralized location will facilitate relief efforts. Those include paying
for job relocation, and travel expenses for those who wish to return home.
Abbas and his group eventually prevailed after they repeatedly said to not
count on payments anytime soon. The company filed for bankruptcy on Nov.
4.
|
Five
Jews_charged
More federal charges brought in
Agriprocessors case
By TONY LEYS • tleys@dmreg.com • November 21, 2008
Read Comments(1)Recommend(2)Print this page E-mail this article Share
Del.icio.us
Buzz up! A federal grand jury has
brought fresh immigration charges against five former supervisors at
Agriprocessors, the controversial
Postville meatpacking plant.
Defendants in the case unveiled Friday afternoon include three people who
already faced charges: Former top executive
Sholom Rubashkin, former poultry-line
supervisor Hosam Amara and former human-resources official Karina Pilar Freund.
The indictment also names two new defendants: former operations manager Brent
Beebe and former poultry manager Zeev Levi.
The indictment says that the defendants knowingly hired illegal immigrants to
work at the plant, and that they encouraged and assisted such immigrants to
obtain false papers.
Rubashkin, son of the bankrupt plant’s owner, has been in jail since last
Friday, when he was arrested on a bank-fraud charge.
Authorities have said Amara disappeared after a May immigration raid at the
plant, in which nearly 400 illegal immigrants were arrested. Prosecutors said
they believe he fled to Israel.
http://jta.org/news/article/2008/11/24/1001183/jewish-community-of-postville-struggles-to-survive-after-raid
Morale in the Jewish community has been especially hard hit because of a
widespread sense among Postville Jews that they have been given a raw deal. Not
by the Rubashkins, whose business practices some outside critics blame for the
current crisis, but by the media, which many Jews in Postville see as unduly
biased against the company, and by the federal government, which is seen as
having moved more aggressively against Agriprocessors than against other
companies accused of hiring undocumented workers.
That sense of grievance was compounded Nov. 20 when U.S. Magistrate Judge Jon
Scoles refused to release Rubashkin on bail, concluding that he posed a “serious
risk of flight.” Rubashkin faces substantial jail time for his alleged role in a
scheme to defraud the company's bank, as well as a host of charges related to
his role in helping procure false documentation for the plant's illegal work
force.
In his ruling, Scoles cited a number of factors that made
Rubashkin
a flight risk, including the fact that Jews are granted automatic citizenship in
Israel and that two former
Agriprocessors supervisors
already are believed to have fled there. He also noted that a travel bag
filled with cash, silver coins, Rubashkin's birth certificate and his childrens'
passports were found in his home.
His attorneys countered that Rubashkin's financial situation was deteriorating
and that he was saving the money to meet his family's needs. They also argued
that Rubashkin was tied deeply to the community and his 10 children, eight of
whom still reside in Postville, including a mentally challenged son who is said
to be particularly reliant on his father.
“Any judge can now say that they will not allow a Jew out just because he is a
Jew, because a Jew has the right to run to Israel,” Raices said. “So you know
what? Everyone’s hurting themselves out there by not bringing an outcry about
that. That is blatant anti-Semitism. And he’s just the first one that’s
suffering from that.”
“This past Wednesday was a very black day for Judaism, not just for Sholom
Mordechai Rubashkin,” she added. “It was a black day for Jews in America.”
Goldsmith declined to go as far, but he did offer that Rubashkin was the victim
of “over-prosecution” and that the judge’s decision was “perplexing.”
Grand jury returns indictment against meatpacker
Posted Online: Nov. 21, 2008, 11:15 pm
Comment on this story | Print this story | Email this story
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) _ A federal grand jury has returned a 12-county
indictment against a kosher slaughterhouse that alleges managers were
intricately involved in efforts to employ illegal immigrants.
The indictment details allegations of a top manager providing cash for
workers to obtain false documents and lower level supervisors helping
employees get new paperwork.
The superseding indictment includes three
new defendants — Brent Beebe,
Hosam
Amara
and Zeev
Levi — who haven't previously faced federal charges in connection with the
Agriprocessors
plant in Postville. The indictment was issued Thursday and unsealed
Friday.
Former CEO
Sholom
Rubashkin
and human resources worker
Karina Freund, who were
already facing federal charges, also were named in the indictment.
It lists charges including
conspiracy to harbor undocumented immigrants for profit, harboring and
aiding and abetting undocumented immigrants for profit, conspiracy to
commit document fraud, aiding and abetting document fraud, aiding and
abetting aggravated identity theft and bank fraud.
Two human resource managers at Agriprocessors, the kosher meatpacking
plant in Postville that was the site of a massive May 12 immigration raid,
were indicted today by a grand jury.
Karina Freund, 29, of Fayette, and
Laura
Althouse,
38, of Postville, are now scheduled for arraignment Sept. 24.
Federal immigration agents raided the northeast Iowa plant in May and
arrested 389 workers. Arrests of Agriprocessors managers have come in the
following months, as have state charges alleging labor and safety
violations.
Court records show that Beebe was arrested at noon Friday at the
Agriprocessors plant. The U.S. attorneys office asked for the public's
help in apprehending Amara and Levi.
Calls to attorneys for Rubashkin and Freund were not immediately returned.
Beebe was arrainged on Friday afternoon in Cedar Rapids and released after
surrendering his passport and being equipped with an electronic monitoring
device. A call to his attorney was not immediately returned.
Rubashkin faces the greatest number of charges under the indictment, which
pulls together a handful of cases pending against Agriprocessors
employees.
A federal judge ruled this week that Rubashkin should remain in federal
custody after prosecutors argued he's a flight risk. He was arrested last
week on a bank fraud charge, and had been arrested earlier on immigration
charges.
Freund, the human resources worker, was arrested in September and charged
with harboring illegal immigrants. She faces a new charge of conspiracy to
harbor undocumented immigrants.
The charges are the latest blow for a company that was once the nation's
largest provider of kosher meat. Earlier this month, the Postville plant
sought bankruptcy protection and it has been forced to halt production.
The indictment from the U.S. Attorney's office portrays Agriprocessors and
its top management as deeply involved in a document scheme designed to
skirt employment verification laws.
The documents added new details to previous allegegations, such
as a description of
Rubashkin meeting with
Beebe, the plant's operations manager, at a barn on the plant property.
The indictment alleges they discussed loaning money to several workers who
could not afford new documents.
Beebe received $4,500 cash in $100 bills from Rubashkin, according to
court documents, which he then gave to beef department supervisor Juan
Carlos Guerrero-Espinoza to distribute to workers.
The workers allegedly then purchased new documents and submitted them to
the company's human resources department. Rubashkin then allegedly asked
Agriprocessors human resources staff to work on a Sunday to complete new
application paperwork for several workers. Beebe was allegedly present and
helped process the paperwork.
That was May 11, prosecutors said, one day before immigration agents
raided the plant.
The indictment also described a discussion between poultry managers Hosam
Amara and Zeev Levi and poultry supervisor Martin De La Rosa-Loera. The
managers told De La Rosa-Loera to help six employees obtain and submit new
paperwork after they were fired because of improper documents.
De La Rosa-Loera followed the instructions, according to the indictment,
and told the workers to purchase new documents as soon as possible. The
workers did as they were told, and gave the new documents to De La Rosa-Loera
who then gave them to Levi to submit to human resources.
De La Rosa-Loera previously pleaded guilty in August under an agreement
with prosecutors to aiding and abetting the harboring of undocumented
immigrants. He was arrested in July.
Beef department supervisor Juan Carlos Guerrero-Espinoza also pleaded
guilty in August to one count of conspiracy to hire illegal immigrants and
one count of aiding and abetting the hiring of illegal immigrants.
|
Agriprocessors charged with over 9,000 child labor law
violations
By Lynda Waddington 9/9/08 11:59 AM
The Iowa Attorney General’s Office has filed a criminal complaint and affidavit
today in Allamakee County District Court listing more than 9,000 alleged
violations of Iowa child labor laws at Agriprocessors in Postville.
Those named in the court documents are:
![postvi68.jpg]() |
Abraham Aaron
Rubashkin — principal owner and president of Agriprocessors, Inc.
Sholom M. Rubashkin — Son of
Aaron, manager of the slaughtering and meat packing plant at Postville and a
company officer.
Elizabeth Billmeyer — human
resources manager of Agriprocessors, Inc. and a resident of Postville.
Laura Althouse — management
employee in the human resources department at Agriprocessors in Postville.
Karina Freund — management
employee in the human resources department at Agriprocessors in Postville |

.
A total of 9,311 child labor violations, involving 32 minors under the age of
18, are included in the court documents. Seven of the 32 minors were under the
age of 16. The alleged violations range from September 2007 to May 12 of this
year — the date of the massive federal immigration raid on the plant. All
violations are simple misdemeanors, each punishable by up to 30 days in jail
and/or a fine of $65 to $625.
An initial appearance has been scheduled before Iowa District Court Judge John
Bauercamper for Sept. 17 in Allamakee County.
From the documents filed with the court:
“During the period of Sept. 9, 2007, through May 12, 2008, the persons as listed
as employee-victims in the attached Complaint were employed and permitted to
work at Agriprocessors’ slaughtering and meat packing establishment. All were
under eighteen years of age on each of the dates listed. Throughout their
employment these children were exposed to dangerous and/or poisonous chemicals,
including, but not limited to, dry ice and chlorine solutions. Several of these
employee-victims were also under sixteen years of age during the dates for which
they are identified as such in the Complaint. Throughout their employment, these
children, while under sixteen years of age, were employed in the operation of or
tending of power-driven machinery, including, but not limited to, conveyor
belts, meat grinders, circular saws, power washers, and power shears.”
The court documents also enumerate more than 1,500 violations relating to hours
worked, including employee-victims under 16 who worked more than eight hours on
specified days, and more than 40 hours in specified weeks. According to the
affadavit, records indicate that there were instances of children under the age
of 16 working before 7 a.m. and after 7 p.m. and, while school was in session,
working more than four hours in a day and more than 28 hours in a week.
The Iowa Attorney General found that “all of the named individual defendants
possessed shared knowledge that Agriprocessors employed undocumented aliens” and
“that many of those workers were minors.”
Chaim
Abrahams, plant manager at Agriprocessors, vehemently refutes the
charges.
![postvi69.jpg]()
The breakdown of the charges are as follows:
3,857 violations of Iowa Code, section 92.8(9) — (“No person under 18 years of
age shall be employed or permitted to work with or without compensation at any
of the following occupations or business establishments: … Occupations in or
about slaughtering and meat packing establishments and rendering plants.”
3,857 violations of Iowa Code, section 92.8(19) — “No person under 18 years of
age shall be employed or permitted to work with or without compensation at any
of the following occupations or business establishments: … Occupations involving
exposure to lead fumes or its compounds, or to dangerous or poisonous dyes or
chemicals.”
790 violations of Iowa Code, section 92.6(6) — “Persons 14 and 15 years of age
may not be employed in: … Operation or tending of hoisting apparatus or of any
power-driven machinery, other than office machines and machines in retail, food
service, and gasoline service establishments which are specified in section 92.”
677 violations of Iowa Code, section 92.7 — “A person under 16 years of age
shall not be employed with or without compensation, except as provided in
sections 92.2 and 92.3, before the hour of 7 a.m. or after 7 p.m., except during
the period from June 1 through Labor Day when the hours may be extended to nine
p.m. If such person is employed for a period of five hours or more each day, an
intermission of not less than 30 minutes shall be given. Such a person shall
not be employed for more than eight hours in one day, exclusive of intermission,
and shall not be employed for more than 40 hours in one week. The hours of work
of persons under 16 years of age employed outside school hours shall not exceed
four in one day or 28 in one week while school is in session.”
Agriprocessors,
five Postville plant managers indicted by grand jury
Charges include conspiracy, harboring illegal aliens, aggravated identity
theft, and fraud
By Lynda Waddington 11/21/08 4:26 PM
Hosam Amara, left, and Zeev Levi are former members of the management team
at Agriprocessors. Both men are believed to have fled the jurisdiction
following the massive May 12 immigration raid at the plant and are wanted by
federal authorities. They are two of the five members of management indicted
by grand jury.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern
District of Iowa unsealed new charges against
Agriprocessors
and five members of the meatpacking company’s management team today. The
charges, ranging from immigration-related offenses to bank fraud, are
included in a 12-count indictment.
Members of management named in the indictment are former Agriprocessors
Chief Executive Sholom M. Rubashkin, 49; plant Operations Manager Brent
Beebe, 51; former plant Poultry Manager Hosam Amara, 44; former plant
Poultry Manager Zeev Levi; and former plant human resources employee Karina
Freund, 29.
Charges from the indictment are as follows:
Agriprocessors, Inc. — conspiracy to harbor undocumented aliens for profit,
harboring undocumented aliens for profit, conspiracy to commit document
fraud, aiding and abetting document fraud, six counts of aiding and abetting
aggravated identity theft, and two counts of bank fraud
Rubashkin — conspiracy to harbor undocumented aliens for profit, harboring
undocumented aliens for profit, conspiracy to commit document fraud, aiding
and abetting document fraud, six counts of aiding and abetting aggravated
identity theft, and two counts of bank fraud
Beebe — conspiracy to harbor undocumented aliens for profit, harboring
undocumented aliens for profit, conspiracy to commit document fraud, aiding
and abetting document fraud, and six counts of aiding and abetting
aggravated identity theft
Amara — conspiracy to harbor undocumented aliens for profit, harboring
undocumented aliens for profit, conspiracy to commit document fraud, and
aiding and abetting document fraud
Levi — conspiracy to harbor undocumented aliens for profit, harboring
undocumented aliens for profit, conspiracy to commit document fraud, and
aiding and abetting document fraud
Freund — conspiracy to harbor undocumented aliens for profit and harboring
undocumented aliens for profit (The harboring charge is restated from a
prior indictment, but the conspiracy to harbor charge is new.)
Beebe was arrested without incident at approximately noon at the
Agriprocessors plant in Postville by Immigration and Customs Enforcement
agents and the U.S. Marshals Service. He is slated to appear this afternoon
in federal court in Cedar Rapids for an initial appearance and arraignment.
Rubashkin, who learned yesterday that he would remain in federal custody
until trial on a different charge, is already being held in the Dubuque
County Jail. Freund was released on conditions including electronic
monitoring.
Jews_fleeTo_Israel
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Federal authorities
continue to search for Amara and Levi, both believed to have fled the
jurisdiction shortly after the massive May 12 immigration raid
at the kosher meatpacking plant. Iowa Independent was the first news
outlet to report that Amara was believed to have fled. Those with
information regarding Amara’s or Levi’s whereabouts are encouraged to
contact ICE at (866) 347-2423.
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st1\:*{behavior:url(#ieooui) }
--> <!--[endif]--> Arraignments for Agriprocessors, Rubashkin and Freund
have been scheduled for Nov. 26. In addition, Rubashkin and Freund already
had a trial on other charges related to Agriprocessors slated for Jan. 20,
2009.
The Indictment
The week prior to the immigration raid, according to court documents, then
Agriprocessors CEO Rubashkin
loaned $4,500 to employees known to have fraudulent identification
documents. Allegedly, Beebe then gave the money to the undocumented
employees so that they could purchase new fraudulent alien resident cards.
An Agriprocessors foreman, yet unnamed in court documents, arranged the
purchase of the documents and Rubashkin allegedly asked human resources
employees at the plant to work on Sunday, May 11, to complete all the new
paperwork for several employees. The indictment states that Beebe was
present that afternoon and assisted with the paperwork.
The indictment handed down yesterday by the grand jury relies heavily on
the testimony provided by former Agriprocessors employees Martin De La
Rosa, Juan Carlos Guerrero-Espinoza and Laura Althouse – all of which have
been in federal court on their own immigration-related charges – to make
the conspiracy, harboring and document fraud charges.
Previous court documents have
indicated that 96 fraudulent alien resident cards and application
paperwork were seized from the
Agriprocessors
human resources office on the day of the raid. Approximately 90 of
the cards had numbers that were assigned to other people.
The bank fraud charges
listed in the indictment stem from an incident on Feb. 29 in which
Rubashkin, on behalf of the company, made a false certification to a
lending bank that Agriprocessors was operating in a law-abiding manner,
despite his having prior knowledge that numerous undocumented workers were
employed at the plant. In addition, the indictment discusses Rubashkin’s
alleged actions in September 2008 to divert customer payments away from a
lender’s account, in order to enhance the Agriprocessors bottom line and
pull additional funds from an existing line of credit tied to the customer
payments.
“Beginning on a date unknown to the grand jury and continuing through
about October 2008, in the Northern District of Iowa and elsewhere,
defendants Agriprocessors and Sholom Rubashkin knowingly executed, and
attempted to execute, a scheme to obtain funds under the control of First
Bank and FBBC by means of fraudulent pretenses, representations and
promises.
“… Rubashkin, on behalf of defendant Agriprocessors, and contrary to the
terms of the loan agreement,
diverted customer payments on accounts receivable. Defendant
Rubashkin then hid from FBBC the fact that the customer payments had been
received by, among other things, causing defendant Agriprocessors’ books
to inaccurately reflect that no such payments had been received. By doing
this, defendant Rubashkin cased defendant Agriprocessors’ books to
inaccurately reflect that customers owed inflated amounts of money on
their accounts. … Eventually, and in order to hide this portion of the
scheme, defendant Rubashkin caused checks of Agriprocessors and third
party entites he controlled to be drafted payable to defendant
Agriprocessors and then presented to FBBC in such a way that they
fraudulently appeared to be from a customer.”
The Penalties
The company faces numerous fines in conjunction with the charges.
On five charges — the conspiracy
to harbor, the harboring, the conspiracy to commit document fraud, the
aiding and abetting document fraud, and aiding and abetting document fraud
-– the company faces a fine of the greater of $500,000 or twice the
pecuniary gain from the offense. Since the company was charged with six
counts of aiding and abetting aggravated identity theft, the company faces
the fine on each count. In addition, the company faces a fine of the
greater of $1 million or twice the loss caused in relation to the bank
fraud charges.
The individuals also face hefty fines for their alleged wrongdoings. The
individuals, unlike the company, however, also face prison time.
The possible maximum penalty on charges of conspiracy to harbor is 10
years in prison, a $250,000 fine and three years of supervised release.
Charges of harboring and aiding and abetting document fraud carry the same
possible maximum sentence. Conspiracy to commit document fraud carries a
possible maximum five years in prison, a $250,000 fine and three years of
supervised release. Aiding and abetting aggravated identity theft carries
a mandatory consecutive two years imprisonment, a $250,000 fine and one
year of supervised release.
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Nearly $10 million more in bad news for Agriprocessors
Civil penalties against company rack up while former HR employee takes
guilty plea
By Lynda Waddington 10/29/08 1:09 PM
The woes surrounding Agriprocessors deepened exponentially this morning on news
that the State of Iowa is assessing nearly $10 million in civil penalties for
wage law violations and that a former human resources worker pleaded guilty on
immigration and identity theft-related charges.
“Once again, Agriprocessors has demonstrated a complete disregard for Iowa law,”
Dave Neil, Iowa labor commissioner, said in a prepared statement this morning.
“This continued course of violations is a black mark on Iowa’s business
community.”
Jews_Sold_Uniforms
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$9,643,000 penalty for illegally
deducting a charge for frocks ($100 per instance, 96,436 separate
instances) — affecting 2,001 employees for a total of $192,597.36 in lost
wages.
$339,700 assessment for illegally deducting “sales tax/miscellaneous”
costs 3,397 times — affecting 1,073 employees for a total of $72,189.09 in
lost wages.
$264,786.45 in back wages
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Agriprocessors management will have 30 days to file written notice that
they contest the $9.98 million penalty assessment by the state. Included
in the assessment are:
Additionally, the state is charging that Agriprocessors failed to pay 42
employees their last paychecks on May 16 and May 23, following the massive
immigration raid at the plant on May 12. Information released by the state
indicates that “due to the overlapping nature of pay periods, seven
individuals were shorted two paychecks.” The kosher meatpacker was
assessed a $4,900 penalty for this violation.
Laura Althouse, 38 and a
former human resources department worker at Agriprocessors, pleaded guilty
in federal court this morning to one count of conspiracy to harbor
undocumented aliens and one count of aggravated identity theft.
Court documents indicate that Althouse conspired with others to harbor
undocumented workers at Agriprocessors in Postville, and that she did so
for commercial advantage and private financial gain. Information from the
court also showed that Althouse “possessed and used, without lawful
authority,” a resident alien numer that was assigned to another person in
committing the harboring offense.
Althouse currently remains free on bond, but her sentencing is pending.
She faces a mandatory minimum of two years in prison and a possible
maximum of 12 years in prison, a $500,000 fine and 4 years of supervised
release.
Another Agriprocessors human resources worker,
Karina Freund, has pleaded
not guilty to immigration-related charges and remains released on bond.
Both women have been named, along with other members of plant management,
in a criminal complaint alleging more than 9,000 violations of Iowa child
labor laws.
Two former middle management supervisors at the plant have also pleaded
guilty to other immigration-related charges.
The various state and national investigations into practices as
Agriprocessors appear to be taking a toll on the plant. Sources in
Postville told Iowa Independent that the beef line at the plant has been
shut down for three days, and that the roughly 250 cattle being kept in a
holding pen were loaded on to trucks this morning. A call directly to the
Postville facility to confirm the report resulted in no comment.
Out-of-state spokespersons have not immediately responded to Iowa
Independent’s request.
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bIG METHLAB ON PREMISES
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Feds: Drugs made at kosher meat plant
By · May 13, 2008
Federal authorities charged
that a methamphetamine laboratory was operating at the nation’s largest
kosher slaughterhouse and that employees carried weapons to work.
The charges were among the most explosive details to emerge following
the massive raid Monday at Agriprocessors in Postville, Iowa.
In a 60-page application for a search warrant, federal agents revealed
details of their six-month probe of Agriprocessors. The investigation
involved 12 federal agencies, including the Drug Enforcement
Administration, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the departments of
labor and agriculture.
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According to the application, a former plant supervisor told
investigators that some 80 percent of the workforce was illegal. They
included rabbis responsible for kosher supervision, who the source
believed entered the United States from Canada without proper immigration
documents. The source did not provide evidence for his suspicion about the
rabbis.
The source also claimed to have confronted a human resources manager
with Social Security cards from three employees that had the same number.
The manager laughed when the matter was raised, the source said.
At least 300 people were arrested Monday during the raid, for which
federal authorities had rented an expansive fairground nearby to serve as
a processing center for detainees.
The search warrant application said that 697 plant employees were
believed to have violated federal laws.
Agriprocessors officials did not return calls from JTA seeking comment.
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