Signs of the time: Fake U.S. immigration
control posters found in Washington
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[June 02, 2017]
By Ian Simpson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Residents of at
least one Washington D.C. neighborhood woke up on Thursday to find the
area plastered with posters urging them to turn in illegal immigrants,
but federal authorities denied putting up the signs and denounced them
as inciting fear.
The bogus posters bearing the seal of the Department of Homeland
Security warned about criminal offenses related to harboring or helping
people in the country illegally, and gave phone numbers to report
information about them to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
(ICE).
"If you see something, say something," said the flyer, titled "Sanctuary
City Neighborhood Public Notice" and written on the ICE letterhead.
Washington is among dozens of so-called sanctuary cities that offer safe
haven to illegal immigrants, and local police are under orders not to
cooperate with federal authorities seeking to deport residents. An
attempt by the administration of President Donald Trump to cut off
federal funds to sanctuary cities has been blocked by a court.
Mayor Muriel Bowser said on Twitter that the posters were aimed at
scaring residents of the heavily Democratic city and that she had
ordered police and the Public Works Department to remove them.
"Tear it down! DC is a sanctuary city," she said.
Carissa Cutrell, an ICE spokeswoman, said the agency had not put up the
posters and called them dangerous and irresponsible.
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Fake government flyers urging Washington residents to turn in
illegal immigrants, which city and federal officials denounced as
inciting fear, are posted in Washington, U.S. June 1, 2017.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
"Any person who actively incites panic or fear of law enforcement is
doing a disservice to the community, endangering public safety and
the very people they claim to support and represent," she said in an
email.
Cutrell said she had no information about who might have put up the
posters or whether the number of telephone calls to her agency had
increased.
(Reporting by Ian Simpson in Washington and by Jonathan Allen in New
York; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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