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Vegas area teens face deportation to unfamiliar country

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  • Vegas area teens face deportation to unfamiliar country

    Reno Gazette Journal, NV
    Jan 21 2005

    Vegas area teens face deportation to unfamiliar country
    Associated Press ASSOCIATED PRESS


    LAS VEGAS - If immigration officials have their way, two sisters who
    have lived in the United States for more than a decade will be
    deported to a country so foreign they don't even speak its language.

    The Las Vegas area teenagers were taken into custody Jan. 14 by
    federal agents after authorities determined they didn't have a right
    to stay in the country.

    Emma Sarkisian, 18, and, sister Mariam, 17, remain at an undisclosed
    location in Los Angeles while awaiting a judge's decision on whether
    to deport them to Armenia, where they were born.

    U.S. Magistrate Judge Robert J. Johnston in Las Vegas granted the
    sisters a temporary stay Wednesday.

    Their lawyer, Jeremiah Wolf Stuchiner, said he intends to immediately
    file a motion to have the sisters released.

    Stuchiner called the circumstances surrounding the deportation
    proceedings `absolutely ridiculous' and said immigration officials
    have refused to release the sisters.

    The two came to the United States in 1991 on a tourist visa with
    their family. The family sought political asylum but was denied.

    After their parents divorced, their father married a U.S. citizen and
    became a legal resident.

    But the second marriage fell apart, and the father never became a
    citizen.

    In July, Stuchiner said, the father took the sisters to see
    immigration officials in Las Vegas to ask about their legal status,
    believing they were U.S. residents. But the sisters were not and
    learned they would be deported.

    When immigration officials called Armenian authorities, they were
    told that technically the sisters had been born in the former Soviet
    Union before Armenia became it's own country and should be considered
    Soviet citizens.

    After the Armenian government indicated the sisters would not be
    accepted, U.S. immigration authorities issued an order of
    supervision, requiring them to check-in with federal officials each
    month.

    Meanwhile, Stuchiner had moved forward with trying to get the
    sisters' father U.S. citizenship. Once that happened, he could then
    petition for his daughters to become residents.

    But earlier this month, Armenian officials said the sisters could be
    deported to the country, and U.S officials began preparing to fly
    them out of the country before Johnston intervened.

    If a hearing in federal court is granted, Stuchiner said he will
    argue U.S. officials should allow the father to obtain his
    citizenship and petition for the daughters to remain in the country
    on humanitarian grounds.
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