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SEATTLE (AP) - Immigrant advocacy groups have filed nearly a dozen complaints and lawsuits against U.S. Customs and Border Protection across the country, claiming federal agents and officers mistreated and discriminated against illegal immigrants and U.S. citizens alike.

The groups alleged Wednesday that officers at Dulles International Airport outside Washington, D.C., were complicit in sending a 4-year-old American girl to Guatemala without giving her parents a chance to retrieve her. Officers also detained a naturalized citizen who had been working with farmworkers in New York, kept women in cold detention cells in Texas and lied on an arrest report that led to an illegal immigrant's detention in Washington state, the advocacy groups said.

The complaints are the latest in a series of legal actions taken against U.S. Customs and Border Protection and U.S. Border Patrol from immigrant advocacy groups, who have long sought to reform the agency's conduct on the southern and northern border. The cases involve federal administrative complaints against the agency and lawsuits filed in federal court.

Some seek monetary damages.

"By filing these cases, we're aiming to send a message to CBP that it's not above the law," said Trina Realmuto of the Boston-based National Immigration Project.

A U.S. Customs and Border Protection statement said the agency can't comment on pending litigation, but adds that it stresses honor and integrity from its officers and agents.

"We do not tolerate misconduct or abuse within our ranks and we fully cooperate with all investigations of alleged unlawful conduct, on or off duty, by any of our CBP employees and contractors," the statement said.

One of the cases is that of Emily Ruiz, who at four years old was sent to Guatemala after her flight to Kennedy Airport was diverted to Dulles. The girl was traveling with her grandfather, who was denied entry because of an immigration infraction two decades earlier.

The agency said the girl's parents, who are illegal immigrants, opted to have their daughter returned to Guatemala rather than pick her up, possibly because they were concerned they would confront questions about their own residency status.

The family's attorney said the parents weren't given the chance to reunite with their daughter. It took five months for the girl to return to her home in New York. The 2011 case attracted media attention.

Another case outlined is of Lucy Rogers, a naturalized U.S. citizen who works with farmworkers in New York. Rogers said Border Patrol agents pulled her over in late 2011 without reasonable suspicion, only saying he was conducting a "citizenship checkup."

The two farmworkers traveling with her couldn't provide identification, so the agent took all three into custody. She was arrested on suspicion of trafficking people, questioned and held for several hours at the station. She alleges her car navigation device was seized for seven months.

The group also filed four complaints on behalf of illegal immigrants who were detained in Texas holding cells. They allege the cells are kept at cold temperatures, don't have enough beds or bathrooms and aren't sometimes given cups to drink tap water. They allege some of the immigrants were in the holding cells for as long as six days.

In another case in Texas, an American woman crossing the border in Brownsville in late 2012 was forcibly thrown on the ground and injured by an agent during a search. The woman, Laura Mireles, was treated by paramedics for her injuries and released without being charged, the complaint alleges.

In Washington state, Gustavo Vargas Ramirez is suing the agency because he alleges a Border Patrol agent lied on his report to justify his arrest.

In that case, an Anacortes, Wash., police officer pulled the man over for a traffic infraction in 2011. The police officer called Border Patrol during the stop and an agent instructed the officer to put Vargas Ramirez on the phone. The man declined to answer any questions over the phone unless an attorney was present. The agent then instructed the police officer to arrest Vargas Ramirez because there weren't any records he was a legal resident, the complaint said.

Attorneys for Vargas Ramirez said the Border Patrol agent then said he was at the scene of the arrest and that he was called to provide language interpretation, even though the officer and Vargas Ramirez communicated without trouble. The complaint alleges that the police report filed by the officer who pulled Vargas Ramirez contradicts the Border Patrol report.

"Whether someone is a citizen or non-citizen, doesn't give the Border Patrol any legal justification to unlawfully arrest someone or beat them up. The constitution and laws govern all folks, not just those with legal immigration status," said Matt Adams of the Seattle-based Northwest Immigrant Rights Project. He is representing Vargas Ramirez.

Representatives of the National Border Patrol Council did not immediately return a message Thursday seeking comment.

Previously, union vice president Shawn Moran had said "interest" group activism against the Border Patrol is taking a toll on the morale of agents and that Border Patrol agents don't target specific types of people, except those violating the nation's immigration laws.


(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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  • Abuse
    Constitutionalist wrote...
    Lets make a deal. (1)
    I am all for pursuing justice, and making sure wrongdoing gets punished and do not excuse acts performed by the government/law enforcement that are indeed illegal. However, I think it is a bit rich of "Immigrant" advocacy groups (which stands for illegal immigrant advocacy groups) to be asking for monetary compensation. But lets be fair and equal on all sides of the spectrum and reach a reasonable deal. Lets go ahead and give money for monetary damages to these groups if these cases are in fact valid on a few conditions.
  • Abuse
    Constitutionalist wrote...
    Lets make a deal (2)
    First, all expenses incurred because of illegal immigrants need to paid for and are to be equally distributed back to the taxpayers. This includes but is not limited to, costs for criminal acts that have led to a loss of property and or caused harm to individuals. All costs for medical/welfare given to illegal immigrants. All costs due to having to maintain a border patrol police force. Second, an assurance that no more illegal immigrants will cross the border without facing severe punishment and will receive no legal compensation for anything, period.
  • Abuse
    Constitutionalist wrote...
    Lets make a deal (3)
    If "Immigrant" advocacy groups will agree to those terms, 1. to cover cost incurred because of illegal immigrants and 2. an understanding that there will be no more illegal immigrants, and if there are they will receive severe punishments and revoke all claims to monetary compensation. If they agree to those terms, then we will likewise be fair and pay them for monetary compensation where it is due. Somehow I don't think they will agree to that, but then that wouldn't be fair and equal now would it.
  • Abuse
    SurpriseMe wrote...
    wrong focus
    so they must treat legal immigrants fair. I guess that means the focus should be teaching these people how to cross the border the right way. Shouldnt they be focused on politicians to change the current legal immigration process. Sounds like that would help more. This lawsuit will only make the attorneys and the advocates richer.
  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    More liberal nonsense
    with the governments help.
  • Abuse
    wrote...
    they are not immigrants
    ktar...these are not immigrant groups...they are illegal immigrant groups.....lawbreakers , lawless people......they deserve nothing
  • Abuse
    Wrote wrote...
    Illegals
    or those who have no identification or should not be entering or attempting to enter the USA now want money? Money that they would otherwise have gotten were they successful in skirting the immigration laws and sneaking in maybe?
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