Feds Accuse SC Poultry Plant Of Illegal Hiring

By: Franco Ordonez
Charlotte Observer


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July 16, 2009

A South Carolina unit of House of Raeford Farms has been charged as part of an ongoing federal investigation into immigration violations.

A federal grand jury on Tuesday indicted Columbia Farms, a subsidiary of the Raeford-based poultry company. The move shows a progression by federal prosecutors as they investigate workers, managers and now the company itself.

The ongoing investigation has already resulted in charges against the complex manager of the company's Greenville, S.C., plant, its human resource manager, about a dozen supervisors and more than 300 workers. A filing this week in U.S. District Court in Greenville added Columbia Farms to what's called a “second superseding indictment” that included the two managers.

Federal authorities allege Columbia Farms hired illegal workers from around 2000 until October 2008, when U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents raided the plant.

House of Raeford is one of the nation's top chicken and turkey producers with operations in the Carolinas and Louisiana.

In a February 2008 series on workplace safety in the poultry industry, the Observer reported that some company managers knowingly employed illegal immigrants. Current and former supervisors told the paper the plants prefer undocumented workers because they're less likely to question working conditions for fear of losing their jobs or being deported.

In June 2008, federal authorities began arresting supervisors at the Greenville plant, known locally as Columbia Farms. About 12 have since been arrested on immigration violations.

Elaine Crump, the plant's human resources director at the company's Greenville plant, was indicted in October. Authorities allege she instructed employees to use fraudulent employment eligibility forms. Barry Cronic, the complex manager, was indicted in April.

Both are scheduled to face trial in the fall.

http://www.charlotteobserver.com/597/story/836907.html

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