http://www.fairus.org/html/2-12-02.htm
Tyson Foods was accused in a 36-count indictment of helping smuggle illegal aliens into the U.S. and employing them at various chicken-processing plants across the Southeast. The indictment capped a 2-½ year undercover investigation by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) into the company.
The indictment says that Tyson managers would contact local smugglers and contract out for shipments of workers. The managers would get fake documents for the illegal aliens; as part of getting fake Social Security cards they would submit stolen Social Security numbers to the INS’s Basic Pilot Program for verification of employability to see which ones were rejected. The managers would also arrange payment via corporate checks given to the illegal aliens who would turn the money over to the smuggler.
Tyson Foods was accused in a 36-count indictment of helping smuggle illegal aliens into the U.S. and employing them at various chicken-processing plants across the Southeast. The indictment capped a 2-½ year undercover investigation by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) into the company.
The indictment says that Tyson managers would contact local smugglers and contract out for shipments of workers. The managers would get fake documents for the illegal aliens; as part of getting fake Social Security cards they would submit stolen Social Security numbers to the INS’s Basic Pilot Program for verification of employability to see which ones were rejected. The managers would also arrange payment via corporate checks given to the illegal aliens who would turn the money over to the smuggler.