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Denver: Armenians out of state custody

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  • Denver: Armenians out of state custody

    Grand Junction Sentinel, CO
    Dec 12 2004

    Armenians out of state custody

    By DANIE HARRELSON
    The Daily Sentinel


    Ouray County residents on Saturday welcomed home the family it lost
    last month and still could lose to deportation. Armenian transplants
    Ruben Sargsyan and his children, Meri, Gevorg and Hayk, spent the
    last five weeks locked up in a Denver immigration detention center.
    They were unexpectedly released Thursday.

    `They community is elated to see them back,' said family friend and
    Ouray resident Kelvin Kent.

    The small western Colorado communities of Ouray and Ridgway, home to
    the Sargsyans for six years, cheered and embraced their newly-freed
    friends and neighbors Saturday afternoon at the town park in Ridgway.

    The two towns have rallied to make sure the family stays put. Only
    800 and 500 strong, residents raised $16,000 at a dinner last month
    to cover exploding legal bills. They've been working the phones to
    let everyone from Denver to Washington, D.C., know of the Sargsyans'
    plight.

    Immigration agents took the family into custody in early November
    while their attorney was trying to obtain visas for them. The
    Sargsyans contend they fell victim to an American con man who duped
    others into paying him to obtain fraudulent visas to the United
    States.

    Ruben Sargsyan and his children may no longer be locked up, but they
    are not home free.

    `The government's position is still exactly the same,' said Lloyd
    `Max' Noland, who married Ruben's eldest daughter, Nvart Indinyan,
    about five years ago. `The government's contention is that these
    people were a flight risk, so what they are saying is they want to
    keep them in jail so they won't leave the country so they can deport
    them.'

    Immigrations agents did not take Nvart, and her mother, Susan, into
    custody because their cases were heard separately.

    Noland said the family is trying to determine who ordered their
    release.

    `We're curious to see who finally saw the light,' he said.

    Hayk, a star soccer player and senior honor student, attends Ridgway
    High School. Gevorg studies chemical engineering at the University of
    Colorado and was on the dean's list.

    Noland said school district officials assured him Saturday they would
    work with Hayk to ensure his five-week absence does not delay his
    high school graduation in the spring. CU administrators offered
    Noland similar assurances that Gevorg's absence would not count
    against his academic record and he could return to campus when he was
    ready.

    `The most amazing thing is that this small mountain community in
    southern Colorado is making the government listen,' Noland said. `I
    haven't seen anything like this. We would have been nothing without
    the community behind us.'

    The Sargsyans remain cautious about their release because it does not
    affect their ongoing case.

    Each of the four family members must check in with immigration
    officials in Denver twice a week by phone and once a month in person.

    `There is extreme elation now, but we're going to continue the
    fight,' Kent said. `They're just good, clean wholesome people.
    `They're the type of people America wants and needs.'
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