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Freed From Immigration Custody: `I'm still in shock'

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  • Freed From Immigration Custody: `I'm still in shock'

    Saturday, January 29, 2005
    Las Vegas Review-Journal
    FREED FROM IMMIGRATION CUSTODY: `I'm still in shock'
    Federal agents quietly bring home two Henderson teens who faced deportation
    By LISA KIM BACH
    REVIEW-JOURNAL
    http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_home/2005/Jan-29-Sat-2005/news/25760571.html
    Emma Sarkisian cries as she talks on the phone Friday while sisters Mariam
    and Patricia hug at the family's Tropicana Pizza parlor in Henderson. U.S.
    immigration officials returned Emma and Mariam to Southern Nevada from a Los
    Angeles detention facility.
    Photo by Jeff Scheid.

    Goar Sarkisian kisses her niece Emma as family members celebrate the return
    of Emma and sister Mariam on Friday in Henderson.
    Photo by Jeff Scheid.

    Immigration officials handled the Friday release of two Las Vegas teenagers
    reprieved from deportation to the Republic of Armenia as a stealth
    operation.
    While attorneys for Emma Sarkisian, 18, and Mariam Sarkisian, 17, waited for
    the girls at the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services building at noon,
    detention officers secretly dropped them off behind the family's Tropicana
    Pizza parlor in Henderson, where they were left alone.
    Attorney Troy Baker said it was an attempt to avoid more publicity on a case
    that's garnered broad-based community and media attention.
    The manner of their release didn't trouble the girls, who said they've been
    desperate to come home ever since they were taken into federal custody two
    weeks ago and sent to a Los Angeles detention center to wait out the
    deportation process.
    "You have no idea what it was like," said Emma, who was surrounded by a
    welcoming family soon after she called to tell them where she was. "Every
    day, it just got harder. If I hadn't gotten out, I would have had a nervous
    breakdown."
    The two girls, born in Armenia when it was part of the former Soviet Union
    and raised in the United States, discovered in July that they were illegal
    after trying to obtain documentation for their licenses to drive.
    Until then, they were under the mistaken belief that they, like their
    father, had successfully obtained legal residency status. The girls'
    residency applications had been received and accepted by the U.S. Department
    of Justice in 1997, but were voided when Rouben Sarkisian divorced his
    American wife. The three emigrated from the Soviet Union in 1991.
    Sarkisian, who is legal and is pursuing U.S. citizenship, said immigration
    officials did not inform him of his daughters' change in status. When the
    error was discovered, the girls were placed on a fast track to deportation,
    headed for a country where they don't speak the language and have no
    resources for support. They would have left behind their father and three
    U.S.-born younger sisters.
    That process came to an abrupt halt Thursday night, after Secretary of
    Homeland Security Tom Ridge intervened at the request of U.S. Sen. Harry
    Reid, D-Nev., and deferred action on the case against the girls.
    "Senator Reid is thrilled that the girls got to go home," said Reid's
    spokeswoman Tessa Hafen. "We hope this works out for the best for them."
    Rouben Sarkisian opened the pizza parlor early Friday and staged a
    homecoming party for his girls, complete with singing, balloons, flowers and
    their favorite kinds of pizza. Emma, the younger sisters said, favors
    pineapple and ham. Mariam, they laughed, eats everything. Sarkisian bustled
    proudly among his children, repeatedly laying a hand on Emma's arm or
    touching Mariam's hair as he passed by them, partly to reassure himself that
    they were really home.
    "It's wonderful," Sarkisian said, laying his hand on his heart. "I am so
    happy."
    Mariam Sarkisian, a senior at Palo Verde High School, joyfully hugged her
    sisters and clowned around with them, doing her best imitation of "American
    Idol" stars, a routine that won her an audience among the Los Angeles
    detention officers. Emma, who was overtaken with bouts of tears as she
    watched, said her sister's zany performances helped break the ice while they
    were among strangers in Los Angeles.
    "We went from being detainees to being Emma and Mariam," Emma said. "One
    officer, who was Armenian, asked me if she was like this all the time. I had
    to tell him yes."
    Both girls said they believe they were treated fairly while imprisoned, but
    painted a dismal picture of life in a detention center. Guards woke them at
    6:30 a.m., when they were taken out of lockdown in a hotel room to the
    detention center cells. They spent 11 to 13 hours a day sitting on metal
    benches or standing around with other women and children detainees.
    "I'm still in shock," Mariam said. "It's like it was all a nightmare, and I
    just woke up."
    The worst part, Emma said, was the lack of access to any kind of
    information. They woke up each day not knowing if they would be deported.
    Often, guards would tell them they were being deported that day. Twice,
    authorities tried to place them on a plane, only to be stopped by the
    intervention of defense lawyers.
    "Nobody will tell you anything," Emma said. "We couldn't find out anything.
    You just had to try not to think about it."
    The sisters said they clung to each other, becoming so dependent that when
    Emma was taken briefly to see a doctor, Mariam nearly lost it.
    "When I came back, she was talking on the phone to nobody," Emma said.
    The comfort they derived from each other was something U.S. Magistrate Judge
    Robert Johnston sought to preserve on Thursday, when he had to rule against
    an order of release that would have freed the girls until their status is
    resolved.
    Johnston directed immigration attorneys to make sure the girls were kept
    together as much as possible and directed them to ensure the family had
    access to the girls. Rouben Sarkisian was not told for more than week where
    his daughters were detained.
    Johnston's ruling was a mental blow to both girls, and they realize that
    they would still be in detention if some of the nation's most highly placed
    government officials hadn't come to their aid.
    Both Mariam and Emma said they will express their thanks to Reid as soon as
    they're eligible to vote. And they said they were surprised and grateful to
    all the people who championed their cause.
    "I was shocked that people would come together to help me, someone they
    don't even know," Mariam said. "It's amazing."
    The girls are still technically illegal, and will have to regularly check in
    with immigration officials. But the deferment means that the father will be
    given time to obtain citizenship. Once he has that, he can sponsor both his
    daughters for legal residency.
    "I'm going to help him study," Emma said. "I don't want to ever go through
    this again."
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