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Las Vegas: Sisters facing deportation to remain in custody

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  • Las Vegas: Sisters facing deportation to remain in custody

    Las Vegas Sun
    Jan 27 2005


    Sisters facing deportation to remain in custody

    Judge denies request to release Vegas teens while immigration case is
    decided
    By Timothy Pratt
    <[email protected]>
    LAS VEGAS SUN

    U.S. Magistrate Judge Robert Johnston ruled this morning that he
    could not order that two Las Vegas teens be released from an
    immigration cell in Los Angeles.

    "It's a heartbreak for me," Las Vegas resident Rouben Sarkisian said
    at the George Federal Building after learning that his daughters,
    Emma and Mariam, would not be released into his custody.

    Johnston told lawyers for the Sarkisians this morning that he could
    find no legal basis to return the girls to their family in Las Vegas
    while their deportation case is decided.

    "I have to have the law, have to have some authority" to issue such
    an order, Johnston said. "As I read the law I don't have any
    authority."

    Johnston did order immigration officials to allow Rouben to visit his
    daughters in Los Angeles. He also said that Mariam must be kept
    separate from adult detainees because she is a minor, but added that
    he didn't want the sisters split up.

    Johnston will allow the family's lawyers to file additional briefs by
    Feb. 2 and will then schedule a hearing to determine if the girls
    will be deported.

    In the meantime, the family is hoping for possible intervention from
    the top levels of the federal government. On Wednesday, Senate
    Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., called Homeland Security
    Secretary Tom Ridge and asked for "personal attention" in the
    Sarkisian case.

    David Thronson, one of two directors at the Boyd School of Law's
    Immigration Law Clinic at UNLV, said Reid's phone call was an unusual
    move.

    "It is not unprecedented, but it is really rare to get a senator's
    direct attention" in an immigration case of this sort, he said.

    "We have a large, bureaucratic, unresponsive system, and there are
    cases where some kind of dramatic intervention is needed to get the
    attention of that system," Thronson said.

    Tessa Hafen, spokeswoman for Reid, said the senator "is fairly
    confident this will reach resolution," with the girls being allowed
    to stay in the country while their father, Rouben, who is a legal
    resident of the United States, takes the next step and becomes a
    citizen.

    If he becomes a citizen, he can petition for his daughters to gain
    legal status.

    Hafen said the case caught Reid's attention because "the girls are
    being punished for something that is not their fault."

    The developments in the nearly 2-week-old case came as the girls
    spoke to the Sun from their Los Angeles cell and said their morale
    was flagging.

    Emma, who is 18, said she had been told Wednesday by a supervisor at
    the cell that a stay ordered by Johnston on Jan. 19 had been lifted,
    and that they would soon be deported to Armenia -- the birthplace of
    the girls, but a country now unknown to them after growing up in the
    United States.

    But no decision has been reached on the stay. Immigration officials
    did not return a call seeking comment on the alleged announcement
    made to the girls.

    "I just hope the senator will help us out, because if I'm in here
    another week, I'll go crazy," Emma said.

    This morning's ruling means she will remain in custody for at least
    another week.

    She said her younger sister, Mariam, who is 17, "is starting to
    break." Then Emma began crying.

    The girls are able to call family, friends and members of the media
    by using calling cards they buy at the immigration holding cell.

    Mariam said she "stares at the wall" all day, and that she misses her
    2-month-old pit bull, Titi. She said she doesn't speak to her three
    younger sisters -- all of whom were born in the United States -- when
    she and Emma call Las Vegas.

    "If I do, I'm going to cry," she said.

    The case turns on a series of events stretching back more than a
    decade.

    Rouben and Anoush Sarkisian -- the parents of the girls -- arrived in
    the United States in 1991 with Emma and Mariam. They had three more
    daughters. They were divorced and Rouben gained his legal status
    after marrying a U.S. citizen. That marriage later broke apart.

    Anoush never gained legal status, according to immigration officials.

    In 1993, a deportation order was issued for the two girls.

    During the 1990s each parent attempted to gain legal status for their
    two oldest daughters, but both attempts failed when the earlier order
    was discovered. An appeal dragged the process out, according to
    Virginia Kice, spokeswoman for the federal agency, Immigration and
    Customs Enforcement.

    But Rouben has said in recent days that he thought otherwise and
    attempted to obtain proof of the girls' status in July, only to be
    told of the deportation order. It took until some time shortly before
    Jan. 14 for immigration authorities to obtain travel permits for the
    girls from the Armenian Consulate in Los Angeles, at which point the
    girls were detained.

    But the family's lawyers won a stay against their departure and are
    seeking humanitarian consideration in allowing the girls to stay in
    the country while their father obtains citizenship.

    For Kice, the case, though complex, has an obvious conclusion, since
    the girls "had their day in court ... and failed to obtain any
    (legal) benefit."

    She said the sympathy these girls have apparently gained not only in
    Congress -- Rep. Shelley Berkley, D-Las Vegas, has also shown
    support, writing a letter to immigration authorities earlier this
    week -- but also in the public, is not the issue.

    "I understand that there are people being deported every day that are
    good people. But this is not a popularity contest ... We are a nation
    of laws and we have to obey the laws," she said.

    Immigration officials have argued against releasing the teens
    because, in light of the fact that their mother is an illegal
    immmigrant who has disappeared into the United States, the girls
    could do the same.

    But Thronson said the case "should shine a light on a broken system."

    He said there were more than 6,000 minors detained by immigration
    authorities last year, many of whom were deported.

    "These are children being separated from their families -- families
    that are separated as a result of the system even though family unity
    is ostensibly its goal," he said.

    "If it's true they've exhausted all their legal rights then we have
    to think -- should our system somehow be able to accommodate the
    facts of a case like this ... the fact of family?"
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