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US consular associate in Armenia indicted on bribery & visa fraud

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  • US consular associate in Armenia indicted on bribery & visa fraud

    ArmenPress
    Feb 4 2005

    US CONSULAR ASSOCIATE IN ARMENIA INDICTED ON BRIBERY AND VISA FRAUD
    CHARGES
    YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 4, ARMENPRESS: The U.S. Embassy in Armenia
    forwarded to Armenpress a statement issued jointly by the Justice
    Department and State Department of the United States of America in
    Washington, DC, February 3, which says that the United States
    Attorney Kenneth L. Wainstein and Ambassador Frank Taylor, Assistant
    Secretary for the United States Department of State's Bureau of
    Diplomatic Security, announced that a federal Grand Jury in the
    District of Columbia returned on February 2 a thirteen-count
    indictment charging Piotr Zdzislaw Parlej, a 45-year-old United
    States citizen formerly employed as a Consular Associate in the
    United States Embassy in Yerevan, Armenia, with bribery and visa
    fraud.
    Parlej was arrested in the District of Columbia yesterday
    afternoon and is scheduled to appear today before United States
    Magistrate Judge Alan Kay. If convicted of the charges, Parlej faces
    up to between 5 and 15 years in prison, and a fine of not more than
    $250,000 on each of the counts.
    The indictment charges that from in or before April 2004, through
    on or about January 13, 2005, in Yerevan, Armenia, Parlej and various
    co-conspirators engaged in a conspiracy to commit bribery and visa
    fraud, and to obstruct and impede - "by craft, trickery, deceit, and
    dishonest means" - the United States Department of State in "its
    lawful function of reviewing and controlling the issuance to
    qualified foreign nationals of visas authorizing their entry into the
    United States." The indictment Page -2- also alleges six specific
    instances in which Parlej took cash bribes of up to $10,000 each, in
    exchange for issuing visas irrespective of whether the applicants
    were qualified to receive them.
    "The people of the United States have a right to have immigration
    rules applied fairly and properly," noted United States Attorney
    Wainstein. "A United States consular official who violates those
    rules for personal financial gain undermines the integrity of our
    visa application and review process, and erodes public trust in our
    consular officials around the world."
    Speaking for the State Department's Bureau of Diplomatic Security,
    Ambassador Taylor added, "We are committed to investigating and
    bringing to justice Department of State employees who use their
    positions of trust to break the law."
    In announcing Parlej's indictment and arrest, United States
    Attorney Wainstein and Ambassador Taylor particularly commended the
    work of Diplomatic Security Service Special Agents, U.S. Embassy
    Yerevan staff, as well as Armenia law enforcement authorities who
    assisted in the case. United States Attorney Wainstein and Ambassador
    Taylor also commended Assistant United States Attorneys Laura A.
    Ingersoll and Brenda J. Johnson, who are prosecuting the case.
    An indictment is merely a formal charge that a defendant has
    committed a violation of criminal laws. Every defendant is presumed
    innocent until and unless found guilty.
    The statement said the U.S. Embassy in Armenia and the U.S. State
    Department as a whole, are dedicated to insuring the integrity of
    visa process, and maintain zero tolerance of fraud. It also thanked
    the Armenian authorities for their cooperation in this investigation
    and in particular commended the National Security Service of Armenia
    for their invaluable assistance.
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