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Armenian family released from immigration center

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  • Armenian family released from immigration center

    Wyoming News, WY
    Dec 10 2004

    Armenian family released from immigration center


    DENVER (AP) - An Armenian family held in an immigration detention
    center in Denver for nearly five weeks has been unexpectedly
    released.

    ''I'm shaking. It happened so fast. It's incredible. I feel like I'm
    in a dream,'' said Gevorg Sargsyan, moments after he, his sister
    Meri, brother Hayk and father Ruben walked out of the center
    Thursday.

    The Sargsyan family was taken into custody while their attorney was
    trying to obtain visas for them, based on their contention they were
    victims of a con man who trafficked in fraudulent visas. That battle
    is not over.

    The family has lived and worked in the western Colorado town of
    Ridgway for more than six years.

    Hayk is a senior honor student at Ridgway High School. Gevorg was on
    the dean's list at the University of Colorado, where he was studying
    chemical engineering. Meri was well known for playing piano in local
    churches. Ruben, a space-optics scientist in Armenia, had been
    working multiple jobs to provide for his family.

    His wife, Susan, and their daughter Nvart, who both work in Ouray and
    Ridgway, were not taken into custody because their immigration cases
    were being heard separately.

    Ouray County residents have raised more than $30,000 for their legal
    defense, written hundreds of letters and e-mails and asked officials
    from regional immigration officials to President Bush to take another
    look at the case and allow the family to stay.

    ''We are very glad ICE made this decision,'' said Pete Whiskeman, a
    Ridgway businessman who has helped lead the effort.

    Carl Rusnok, a Dallas-based spokesman for the immigration division,
    said the Sargsyans were released on orders from Washington on
    Thursday.

    ''They were released because they are not a threat to national
    security and not a flight risk,'' Rusnok said. ''Frankly, we can use
    the detention space for more dangerous criminals.''

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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