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1 posted on 11/20/2005 9:05:59 AM PST by Calpernia
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2 posted on 11/20/2005 9:07:01 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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Owners of several Mesa motels, including the Hiway Host Motel on Main Street, were arrested in a human-smuggling sting.

Julio Jimenez Tribune

Mesa motel sting nets 13 for smuggling
By Katie McDevitt, Tribune
November 11, 2005
Six motels on Mesa’s Main Street operated as safe houses for human smuggling, federal officials said Thursday following a nine-month undercover investigation. Thirteen motel owners and former owners were charged with conspiring to harbor illegal immigrants and could face a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Five properties will be seized by the government, while the Roadrunner Motel, which has since been sold to new owners not involved with smuggling, will be left alone.

The suspects are accused of renting rooms to undercover officers posing as smugglers. Investigators said some motel operators charged the undercover agents higher room rates than ordinary customers and coached them on ways to conceal their smuggling activities.

Roshankumar Bharatbhai Bhakta, a suspect from the Westernaire Motel, told an undercover agent that over time he would "take out all the white people" if the agent brought more immigrants to the business, court records show.

"You don’t have to be in the Valley long to see that smugglers are people who will kill and rape the hostages they hold," said Paul Charlton, U.S. Attorney for Arizona, whose office will prosecute the cases. "It is not merely a matter of profit. (The motel operators) are assisting people who harm others."

Officials said "loads" of illegal immigrants were taken into custody during the investigation and are being held as witnesses or on suspicion of illegal border crossing. Officials declined to give numbers and could not say if any smugglers, also known as "coyotes," were picked up during the sting.

Eight of the motel owners charged were U.S. citizens, while five were British citizens, authorities said. The families from different hotels were not related even though many of them share the last name "Patel."

The indictments describe how some of the motel operators advised the undercover officers to register under false names and park their vehicles inconspicuously to throw off law enforcement. Many encouraged undercover agents to turn off the lights, hide the people and spread them out among multiple rooms.

Gitaben Babulal Patel, a suspect from the Kiva Lodge Motel, told an undercover agent that she could sell immigrants sodas for $5 and phone cards to call Mexico, according to the indictment.

"The situations they were forced to live in were subhuman," said Roberto Medina, Immigration and Customs Enforcement special agent in Phoenix. "My understanding is some of the special agents were becoming ill from the situation."

The probe began in February after ICE received several leads from people about possible human smuggling activity at the establishments. Border Patrol agents with U.S. Customs and Border Protection assisted ICE in the ensuing investigation, and Mesa police assisted while the search warrants were served on Tuesday.

One suspect, Roshankumar Bharatbhai Bhakta, 20, who is known as "Rush," was not in the country at the time of his indictment, and authorities are calling him a fugitive.

Neighbors and businesses near the hotels were not surprised by the accusations. However, none of them said they saw large groups of immigrants being shuffled into hotel rooms.

"I don’t like it, but I had suspected this had been going on because people had been saying there were coyotes in there," said Gene Ham, owner of Mesa Royale mobile home park next door to Kiva Lodge Motel.

In the past six months, the Majestic Guest Inn had 51 police calls for service, the most of any of the motels. Many of the calls were reports of prostitution, subjects disturbing the peace and other suspicious activity. The Hiway Host Motel was also investigated for prostitution, as well as drugs and car thefts.

"I didn’t know about the hotels, but I’m not surprised," said Peggy Hughes, who lives behind the Hiway Host Motel. "We see crime all the time, and we’ve just about had it."

Authorities called the most recent sting one operation among many investigations in the Valley. Undercover officials approached other motels in Mesa during the operation, but the other motels declined offers to house immigrants.

In 2001, officials seized a multimillion dollar bus terminal in the West Valley and a hotel in Yuma for similar activities.

"We want to hurt the operations and business people where it really hurts — their pocketbooks," Medina said.

5 posted on 11/20/2005 11:29:55 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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