Pubdate: Thu, 14 Feb 2002
Source: Joplin Globe, The (MO)
Copyright: 2002 The Joplin Globe
Contact:  http://www.joplinglobe.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/859
Author: Nammi Bhagvandoss, Globe Staff
Note: Staff writer Andy Ostmeyer contributed to this report.

COMMOTION STARTLES NEIGHBORHOOD

Writer CARTHAGE, Mo. - Residents in the 1300 block of Maple Avenue were as 
shocked as anyone Wednesday morning to discover that a large-scale federal 
and state drug and firearms raid may have netted one of their neighbors.

Angela Nally, 1315 Maple Ave., awoke to find police cars blocking both ends 
of the street where she has lived for years.

"They got out one of those - what do you call them? - battering rams," she 
said. "I heard them say, 'Is there anyone in there?' I heard a crash."

Another neighbor, Toby Pauley, was awakened by the commotion at 1323 Maple Ave.

"I heard someone say, 'Open up or I'm coming in!'" said Pauley, who lives 
at 1327 Maple Ave. "I got downstairs, and there were a whole lot of police 
cars. I am not really sure what happened."

Another neighbor said she went to her front door, noticed a lot of cars 
early in the morning and assumed a yard sale was under way. She asked not 
to be identified.

Pauley and others on both sides of the street said they didn't know the 
people renting the house. They said they had not seen any unusual activity 
recently.

"We were all unaware that something was going on in that house," Nally 
said. "We had not noticed anything, and we are all pretty observant."

Police had not cordoned off the area with crime tape, but neighbors said 
FBI agents and others remained at the house for several hours.

Residents said they were concerned about the alleged illegal activity, 
especially because Mark Twain Elementary School is a half-block away, and 
another neighbor runs a day-care operation across the street from the house 
that was raided.

"This is a quiet neighborhood," said City Councilman Don Stearnes, 1301 
Maple Ave., who said he was not informed beforehand about the raid. "There 
was no idea we had those persons in the neighborhood. Everybody in the 
neighborhood watches out for everybody."

Gail Smith, who lives near McCune-Brooks Hospital, said she heard 
helicopters and saw floodlights during the early morning raid.

Smith said that when she went to town, all the streets were full of cars, 
and she saw U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service buses.

Shawn Dough said he noticed helicopters flying everywhere, and he drove 
near the Carthage Police Department to find out what was happening.

"They're persecuting the Mexicans is what they told me," Dough said, 
referring to comments by some of his Hispanic neighbors. "If they have 
legal papers, they have every right to be here."

Roberta Sade, owner of the Oldies and Oddities Mall on the Carthage square, 
said: "The first thing I heard is that they came in and got all the 
immigrants, and someone else said they're practicing civil defense. They 
had all kinds of ideas and stories."

Sade said people in town were not used to so many helicopters.

"Someone else said maybe it has something to do with terrorists," she said.

Vanessa Arollo, 15, who helps out in her uncle's Angelitos Restaurant, said 
it was quiet Wednesday afternoon.

"Usually, by this time, a lot of Hispanics come here to cash checks or 
something, and they haven't come by," Arollo said.

She said Hispanics also come to buy blankets and candy, and to ask 
questions if they need English translations for job applications or letters 
they receive in the mail.

Staff writer Andy Ostmeyer contributed to this report.
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