Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Las Vegas: Motion made to free sisters

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Las Vegas: Motion made to free sisters

    Las Vegas Sun, NV
    Jan 21 2005


    Motion made to free sisters

    Legal team tries to win release for Armenian family
    By Timothy Pratt

    The legal team representing the Sarkisians, an Armenian family whose
    teenage daughters are threatened with being deported to their
    birthplace, has filed an emergency motion to release the girls from a
    Los Angeles immigration detention cell.

    "What's the point of detaining them? They're young girls who should
    be with their family," said attorney Jeremiah Wolf Stuchiner this
    morning.

    "They're not a flight risk and detaining them is just costing
    taxpayers money," he said.

    The case involves Emma Sarkisian, 18, and her sister, Mariam
    Sarkisian, 17. They are threatened with deportation because their
    immigration status was never straightened out although they have
    lived here 14 years, during which time their father, Rouben, has
    become a U.S. resident, the step below citizenship -- according to
    the family and their attorney.

    The Sarkisian family also includes three younger girls who were born
    on U.S. soil and therefore are citizens.

    The family has been broken up since last week after immigration
    authorities arrested the daughters last Friday and sent them to Los
    Angeles, where flights to Russia leave once daily.

    Stuchiner was able to obtain a stay from the federal magistrate in
    Las Vegas, arguing that immigration authorities should wait four
    months while Rouben prepares himself to become a citizen.

    Once Rouben is a citizen, he can petition for his daughters, and they
    can become residents, Stuchiner said.

    The attorney said the federal magistrate can decide on the emergency
    motion at any time.

    Meanwhile, family friend Marina Protopopova said members of the
    Sarkisian family are driving today to Los Angeles to seek support
    from the Armenian community there.

    As of this morning there was also no court date to decide on the
    larger issue of whether the daughters should be allowed to stay in
    the United States until their father becomes a citizen, Stuchiner
    said.

    "I'm arguing that it is the federal court's discretion and
    humanitarian interest to let them stay," Stuchiner said.
Working...
X