Wrist Slap for Top Alien
Smuggler?
Confessed Criminals
Still Championed by Press
To comment go to BÕManÕs Revolt.
The expanded, 87-count indictment of the man that Mother Jones magazine once called
ÒAmericaÕs top alien smugglerÓ and his top two lieutenants looked like a
fearsome storm cloud on the horizon for Stan Eury and
his ongoing criminal enterprise. Continuing
the metaphor, the plea agreement reached between Eury and the federal prosecutors on June 23 looks like
nothing so much as a culminating gust of wind or two and a few drops of
rain. ÒThe defendant, CRAIG
STANFORD EURY, JR.,Ó it says, Òwill enter a voluntary plea of guilty to section
ii of object one of Count One and object four of Count Eleven of the
Superseding Indictment herein.Ó
To get some idea of what that means we must turn
to the superseding indictment,
itself,
for their ÒConspiracy to defraud the United States.Ó Section ii of object one appears at the
top of page 13 and it describes merely an objective, ÒTo defraud the United
States by impeding, impairing and obstructing the lawful government function of
USCIS [U.S. Customs and Immigration Service] to administer, regulate and
enforce violations, regulations and laws relating to the hiring, employment and
presence of aliens in the United States.Ó
Count eleven begins at the bottom of page 44 and
nothing under it is specifically called Òobject four.Ó Rather, we find numbered
points and we must assume that what is being referred to is no. 4, a Òfurther
part of the scheme and artifice to defraudÓ in which the co-defendants
Òdirected that NCGA [North Carolina Growers Association] pay an $80.00
recruiting fee to CSI without revealing that [the three co-defendants] directly
benefitted [sic] from these payments in violation of their duty of good faith
to NCGA and its members.Ó
That is to say, Eury
et al. set up their own shell company in Mexico named Consular Services, Inc.
[CSI] that billed the non-profit farmers organization that Eury
heads up for bogus services, and Eury is apparently
admitting to that.
The plea agreement speaks of a maximum
imprisonment of five years Òas to each countÓ and what appears to be a rather
hefty maximum fine until one realizes how truly lucrative EuryÕs
alien smuggling scheme has been through the years. Presumably, the judge could order Eury to be locked up for 10 years, or more, depending upon
what Òeach countÓ means, but he is under absolutely no pressure to do so, quite
the contrary, in fact. You see,
just as the mainstream press completely blacked out the news of the expanded
indictment and almost blacked out the news of the initial indictment, they have
reported nothing about the guilty plea.
In fact, the one major newspaper to break the news of the initial
indictment, The Washington Post, with
a story submitted by a North Carolina freelancer, has now taken that article
down from its web site and it can only be found on the obscure web page of the National Guestworker Alliance. *
Worse yet, for agreeing to give what seems to be
unneeded testimony against his co-conspirators, the fair-haired boy of the U.S. Department of
Labor, Wicker,
has apparently been allowed to go free to continue to render services that—outrage
of outrages—the Raleigh News and
Observer told us with a June 27 article are still vitally needed. That brazen article prompted me to send
the following email on June 29 to the journalist who penned it, Mary Katherine Wildeman:
Hi
Mary Katherine,
I
thought I had seen it all, but I was completely flabbergasted to see you quote
Stan Eury and Lee Wicker in your recent
article as
though they were reliable authorities on the pressing need for more of the H-2A
workers that they have flooded North Carolina and the country with through the
years. Were you not aware that theirs is a thoroughly criminal operation
and that they are awaiting sentencing for their
activities? I suppose that that is possible because your newspaper, in a
display of the grossest journalistic irresponsibility, has managed to report
absolutely nothing about either the federal case against them for visa fraud,
money laundering, and old-fashioned swindling, or their guilty pleas. Had
you bothered to have done the most cursory Net search you would have found that
yours truly has had to fill the news breach with "Has Obama Gone Bulworth
on Alien Smuggling?",
"H2-A
Kingpin Stumbles on H-2B," "AP
Gives Alien Smugglers 'Infomercial'", "Video of Labor Goon Slugging Labor
Organizer,"
"Feds Pile
New Charges on Top Alien Smuggler," "The Great Suppression of 2014," and "USDOL Embraces Major Alien
Smuggler."
If
you were unaware of any of Eury and Wicker's criminal
activities, then it looks like the people at your place of work have hung you
out to dry. If you knew about them and went ahead and quoted them anyway
without fulfilling the most basic journalistic responsibility of cluing your
readers in to their crimes, then you have probably found the ideal job for a
person of such questionable ethics.
To
the best of my knowledge no one in the mainstream press has yet reported on the
guilty pleas of Eury, Wicker, and Ken White, so it
looks like I'm going to have to do it. You have now made yourself part of
the story.
Not surprisingly, Ms. Wildeman
has not replied.
I might have been a touch off base to say that
Wicker has entered a guilty plea, but, in effect, except to him, he might as
well have, and the case of the minor actor White still seems to be
pending. What stands is the gross
journalistic malpractice of Wildeman and her
newspaper, and that of all of the other news organs around the country. We are witnessing corruption of the
highest order, and like so much of the rottenness in the country, our national
news media are right in the heart of it.
I hope I am wrong, but the way things look to me
now, in spite of the findings of a multi-year, multi-agency investigation, the
NCGA will be allowed to continue to flood the country with illegal immigrants,
and corrupt authorities in the federal government and particularly in the
government of the state of North Carolina will continue to let them do it. Strangely, all the while, putative
anti-immigration organizations and politicians seem to be silent about EuryÕs massive criminal operation as well.
David Martin
July 2, 2015
* We donÕt know if it is in response to this
article or because there was only a temporary glitch at the time I wrote it,
but as of September 29, 2015, the Washington Post article is back up at the original site. The
Post, though, has had no follow-up of any kind, in spite of all that has
since transpired in the case, including the news on September 24, 2015, that Eury was given only a 13-month sentence.
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