This op-ed was originally posted on AdamBColeman.com on January 27, 2025. It is republished with permission.
I live in New Jersey, where illegal immigration hides in plain sight. Itโs all around us, but most have no clue how prevalent it is.
Iโve consulted for companies and it brought me inside multiple warehouses throughout the state ran by major manufacturers: They use illegal labor.
We often think about the guys who stand outside of Home Depot or construction yards filled with men we suspect are here illegally, but the problem is incredibly bigger than that.
There are mainstream name brands who use illegal labor, and I know this because Iโve been inside their warehouses. So, how do I know these people are here illegally?
What was made clear to me is that these companies use third parties to find the people, so they are all considered โcontractorsโ and not employees of your favorite brands.
Iโve talked to people in these third party roles and theyโve stated that unless theyโre told to check someoneโs immigration status, they donโt do it. Guess what? Most donโt request to have it checked. Privately, theyโve admitted that the vast majority arenโt legal.
Many have talked about how you need a social security number to work, which is true, but all of that becomes moot if itโs someone elseโs social or a counterfeit one.
What people donโt grasp is that once you are here illegally, you must continuously commit illegal acts to remain here, such as fraud.
And just use your common sense: These are people who willingly work day to day, donโt have driverโs licenses, donโt speak English, and work for minimum wage in unconditioned warehouses. Barely anyone checks their immigration status for a reason.
Iโve lived in New Jersey for about 25 years and Iโve noticed a population shift throughout the state and a plethora of warehouses built in small towns. Low-population areas now contain warehouse enclaves, and nearly all their employees are questionably legal immigrants bused in from larger cities.
Iโve been inside these facilities from North to South Jersey: Itโs a statewide problem. There are entire towns which are almost exclusively Hispanic now that werenโt years ago. People donโt realize that New Jersey has the 5th highest Hispanic population in the country.
But it wasnโt always like this. In 2000, 13% of the stateโs population was Hispanic. Today, itโs about 21%. I have plenty of friends who are Hispanic immigrants or first-gen native-born Americans. However, even they know of people who are here who arenโt supposed to be.
Iโve personally been approached to marry someone from the Dominican Republic so they could immigrate here for $10,000. Illegal immigration is happening all around me. Corporations profit from their low wages, and they look the other way as far as checking their immigration status.
Corporations use middle-men companies or abuse the 1099 Contractor system, knowing damn well these people arenโt going to pay taxes on their own. They donโt care if they are committing fraud as long as they can pick-and-pack fast enough and do it on the cheap.
Yes, most want to come here and build a better life, but so did every person who came here legally. I am pro-immigrant. Were it not for my fatherโs legal immigration from Trinidad to meet my American mother, I wouldnโt be in America.
But whatโs happening in New Jersey is hideous and highly illegal. Wait and see, New Jersey is going to be a hot-bed for I.C.E. to attack and nationwide people are going to find out how big the problem really is here.