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Exchange students learn Bossier Parish judicial system

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  • Exchange students learn Bossier Parish judicial system

    Shreveport Times, LA
    Nov. 5, 2004

    Exchange students learn Bossier Parish judicial system

    By Loresha Wilson
    [email protected]

    By Loresha Wilson
    [email protected]

    Fatima Ibrahimova asked how inmates get married while incarcerated. She
    wanted to know if law enforcement officers are ever arrested and if
    anyone has escaped from the Bossier Parish Jail.
    Heghine Kosakyan questioned whether men and women share the same cell
    blocks and if an inmate's living condition is based on the nature of
    the crime committed.
    Ibrahimova and Kosakyan, both 17, are foreign exchange students who,
    through the Aspect Foundation, received scholarships from the U.S.
    State Department to study democracy and the criminal justice system in
    the United States. They, along with two other scholars, live in
    different areas of Indiana, but for the next couple of days will spend
    time in the Shreveport/Bossier City area visiting a local outreach
    mission, delivering goods to a homeless shelter and volunteering at a
    nursing home.
    On Thursday, the group spent a half day touring the Bossier Parish
    sheriff's office and learning the daily operations of the office. Ed
    Baswell, sheriff's spokesman, showed the students around the courthouse
    and it's maximum security jail and they also visited the Bossier Parish
    Penal Farm and the parish's 600-bed medium security facility in Plain
    Dealing, where they stood in the control room and watched about 80
    female inmates who share two cell blocks. The women eat together,
    shower together and sleep together, which was strange to the students.
    `This is a little different than where I am from,' Kosakyan, of
    Armenia, said. `In my country there are people who are in jail and
    can't watch TV. There are only four to five people to a cell and they
    have their private bathrooms. Here they have no privacy.'
    The group also met an investigator with the district attorney's office
    and set in on a couple of court procedures.
    Hasmik Sukiasyan, also of Armenia, was curious if the electric chair is
    used for execution in Bossier Parish, then asked how often the inmates
    eat.
    The girls were four of 300 students awarded scholarships for the
    program out of 54,000 applicants, said Jayme Tunis, Indiana regional
    development director for the Aspect Foundation. They were chosen for
    their academic, civil, and leadership abilities, and are most likely to
    become future leaders of free nations once under communist control. The
    students spend 10 months in America learning about democracy, community
    service, government, cultural diversity and more, Tunis said. Upon
    returning to their native countries, they will serve on a panel for
    three years discussing their experiences here.
    `They have superior IQs,' Tunis said. `These girls are studying to be
    future leaders of their countries. It is hoped that the ideals and
    doctrines they experience here in America will enable them to implement
    the same in their own countries.'
    Ibrahimova, of Azerbaijan, plans to study international law. She speaks
    six different languages, but says she'll return to her native country
    to attend college.
    `I want to be an attorney,' she said. `Right now I'm learning
    everything I can in case I come back to the United States. I read a lot
    of books about the criminal justice system here, and things are pretty
    much like what I have read. It's great.'
    Kosakyan and Jasmin Grund of Germany also plan to study law. Sukiasyan,
    16, wants to be a doctor.
    Ibrahimova said, `I didn't expect the people here to answer all the
    questions I had, but they did.'
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