US Roofer says ICE arrested three of his relatives in a workplace raid - They were among dozens of employees of Mount Baker Roofing in Bellingham, Washington, detained this week and taken to a processing center in Tacoma.

Roofer says ICE arrested three of his relatives in a workplace raid
NBC News (archive.ph)
By Deon J. Hampton and Carmen Sesin
2025-04-04 23:58:05GMT

A worker at a roofing company in Bellingham, Washington, that was raided by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) said Friday that masked agents in tactical gear swarmed the property with guns drawn, detaining three of his family members and dozens of co-workers.

The worker, a U.S. citizen who requested anonymity because many of his relatives are in the country without proper documentation, said his 21-year-old brother from Michoacan, Mexico, and two of their cousins were apprehended in the Wednesday raid.

He arrived at work at his usual time, around 7 a.m., he said, and "many trucks started arriving."

“I started yelling ‘Run, immigration is here!’” he said. “Workers ran towards a wooded area nearby, but ICE officers were already there waiting for them.”

He described the last time he saw his sibling.

“My brother touched my back before he started running, and I guess that was his way of saying goodbye to me,” the man said.

More than three dozen employees of Mount Baker Roofing were arrested and taken to Northwest ICE Processing Facility in Tacoma, the agency said in a statement.

Federal agents executed a search warrant at the roofing company as part of a criminal investigation into the “unlawful employment of aliens without legal work authorization in violation of federal law,” an ICE spokesperson said.

The workers who were arrested had misrepresented their immigration status and submitted fraudulent documents or information to gain employment, the spokesperson said, adding that federal agents often investigate worksite violations and the exploitation of workers.

The owner of the company, Mark Kuske, said he employs about 85 people and he had no reason to believe any of them were in the U.S. without proper authorization.

He said he follows all federal and state hiring rules and regulations.

Although the Trump administration initially said its mass deportation effort would focus on migrants who had committed violent crimes, it later shifted its policy to include families and children without criminal backgrounds, NBC News previously reported.

The worker whose brother and cousins were detained called the unexpected operation “scary” and said law enforcement officers wore tactical gear and masks and carried long rifles. Helicopters and drones could be heard above.

“It was an ugly scene,” he said, adding that the agents had photographs and information about the arrestees, who they addressed by name.

The man said his brother had crossed the border into the United States three years ago after members of a drug cartel tried to kidnap him.

“I feel terrible. I don’t even feel like going to work," he said. "It hurts me to go back and see all my co-workers’ belongings still there.

“I keep thinking about the way officers grabbed them. I feel so bad for my brother because he always depended on me.”

Geovana Perez, who said she is the aunt of another detainee, told NBC News affiliate KING 5 in Seattle, that "we feel very sad that a lot of families are getting destroyed.”

“We’re just really sad," she said in Spanish through a translator. "It’s sad for every family that’s going through this.”

Dozens of people held a rally Wednesday after the raid to show their support for the men who were arrested.

“It’s wrong to take our community apart, drag out fathers, sons, brothers, family members of all kinds who are paying taxes,” Pauline Black told the station. “They’re part of our community. It’s just wrong.”

The roofing worker said that even though he is a U.S. citizen, he is considering returning to Mexico.

“It’s very scary,” he said. “We look out the window of our house when we see unfamiliar cars drive by. It’s hard to live this way.”
 
Most of us are stochastic parrots reacting to the noose. And 99.99999% of the country has not heard of Mark Kuske.

I archived a couple of the webpages. But are you going to do a Luigi spaghetti?

thank you for the archiving, I don't understand most of the rest of what you said

I don't think hanging a parrot would work they could just fly away
 
Oh no, I might be able to communicate to the roofers that they need to stop putting shit on top of the curbs we haven't put drops in yet without reaching out for a translator if they keep this up. What a tragedy!
 
I live here and I would a thousand times rather the mexicans stay and this man goes to prison


but I'll compromise with you guys, the mexicans get deported but can you please do something about him

he is the actual problem



this is pure scam and grift and it's a huge part of why the PNW is so grim
Por que no loss dos? We have the money to do both since we're slowing down on funding everyone that hates us.
 
Let's say the cops set up a DUI checkpoint and arrested 30 people. Would Congress write a letter asking the police what the fuck they think they're doing? Those people you arrested are parents and have families. They have jobs in the community. They rely on their ability to drive to get to work and bring their poor children to soccer practice. Many of them have no violent crimes on their records. They were placed in handcuffs and thrown in the back of a cop car by an armed police officer for crying out loud!

No. It doesn't work that way.
 
I'm so fucking tired of this shit. We live in an absolute survalence state, where the fuck are the mass deportations? You can't tell me they don't know where all the illegal chinks and jeets are.
Self-deportations are much cheaper, And people are doing it. They're even paying smugglers to take them back across the border. :story:


Hopefully the administration will keep ramping up the penalties for not leaving. Noem has threatened to send people to prison in El Salvador, and plenty of other central american countries may be willing to cram beaners into their prisons for some hard US money.
 
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Self-deportations are much cheaper, And people are doing it. They're even paying smugglers to take them back across the border. :story:


Hopefully the administration will keep ramping up the penalties for not leaving. Noem has threatened to send people to prison in El Salvador, and plenty of other central american countries may be willing to cram beaners into their prisons for some hard US money.
You're missing the entire point. There's literally millions of illegals in the country and there's a 0% chance the government doesn't know where they are. Where the fuck are the mass deportations? Like I give a fuck about 3 roofers.
 
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