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  • DENVER: Ridgway rallies around Armenians

    Ridgway rallies around Armenians
    By Nancy Lofholm, Denver Post Staff Writer ([email protected])

    The Denver Post
    Friday, August 20, 2004

    In the bureaucratic view of the Department of Homeland Security, the
    six despondent Armenians crowded together on a rose-colored couch in
    this small Western Slope town have no right to be here.

    They have no passports, no green cards and no valid visas. And they
    have no right to stay in the United States.

    But in the eyes of residents of this one-stoplight town now working
    to protect the Sargsyans from deportation, they are hardworking,
    principled, good-hearted assets to the community and to America.

    "To me, they are better citizens than most of us citizens," said Rob
    Hunter, minister at Ridgway Community Church.

    By the end of September, two members of the family - patriarch Ruben
    and youngest daughter Meri - are due to be deported to Armenia,
    where they say they face persecution and possibly death at the hands
    of the Russian mafia. They are blamed in Armenia for a scam they say
    was carried out by a former family friend.

    The remaining family members may face the same fate, but they have
    more time to appeal. Even if they win, however, a family bound tightly
    by tragedy over the past decade will be split apart.

    "It's like life stopped," said son Gevorg, a 20-year-old student at
    the University of Colorado.

    The saga that landed the Sargsyans in western Colorado and in
    immigration limbo began in 1994 when Nvart Sargsyan met an American in
    the Armenian capital of Yerevan. She was 19 and, by her own admission,
    naive.

    From there, the details of the Sargsyan's story are impossible to
    verify, but they and others have sworn to them in immigration
    proceedings as they battled U.S. efforts to deport them:

    Vaughn Huckfeldt, 53, was a professor at the American University of
    Armenia who also claimed to be a well-to-do minister with a nice home
    in Colorado. He wore a clerical collar and a large cross. He asked
    Nvart to marry him on their third date.

    Huckfeldt began telling other Armenians that he could obtain visas
    for them to go to the United States, the Sargsyans said. He collected
    more than $1,000 each from 10 to 15 families, they said, then left
    the country, taking along an 8- months-pregnant Nvart.

    Back in Armenia, people who had given Huckfeldt money were hounding
    Nvart's family, accusing them of being part of a scam and demanding
    they pay the money back. Eventually, some of them hired Russian
    mobsters to threaten the Sargsyans, who sold nearly everything they
    had to try and repay the money they say Huckfeldt took from their
    neighbors.

    Finally, the Sargsyans said, Huckfeldt provided them with visas to
    join Nvart in the U.S. They were student visas, but the family members
    were unaware that they were required to attend school here - not work.

    With the support of her family, Nvart filed for divorce, claiming that
    Huckfeldt had abused her throughout the marriage. Several people in
    town supported her claim, but Huckfeldt was never convicted of a crime.

    Huckfeldt responded by writing to immigration authorities, claiming
    the family was in the country fraudulently on student visas.

    Attempts to locate Huckfeldt through relatives, ex- wives and former
    associates were unsuccessful. An ex- wife said he is living in Latvia.

    Former Ridgway Marshal Sherm Williams said he had fielded several
    complaints over the years about Huckfeldt, ranging from unpaid
    loans to bad-check allegations. But while Huckfeldt lost an array of
    small-claims suits over the years, the former professor has not been
    convicted of a crime in town.

    Meanwhile, the Sargsyans have spent thousands on lawyers and court
    fees - money the whole family earned doing jobs few others wanted or
    could handle.

    "They are some of the hardest working, finest people I have ever
    known," said Deadra Paxton, a waitress who has been acquainted with
    the family since they came to Ridgway.

    Friends in Ouray County didn't know how dire the Sargsyans' situation
    was until family matriarch Susan recently broke down as she informed
    Ridgway businessman Pete Whiskeman she wouldn't be able to clean for
    him anymore.

    Whiskeman and friend Kelvin Kent jumped into action, and a town
    joined them. In just one day, townspeople donated $1,500 to a fund
    for a family that has never asked for handouts throughout their ordeal.

    "Unfortunately, I think what we have here is a prime example of
    overzealous and work- burdened federal judges operating under extremely
    harsh and generalized rules of homeland security," Kent said.

    As they count down the family's dwindling days together, the Sargsyans
    say they still have a hard time believing that in America there won't
    be justice. They haven't completely given up on that hope.

    "We are waiting for a miracle," said Gevorg, "like we were waiting
    for a miracle in Armenia."


    http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1413,36~53~2346433,00.html#
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