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Las Vegas: Sarkisian family's quest continues

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  • Las Vegas: Sarkisian family's quest continues

    Sarkisian family's quest continues
    By Timothy Pratt

    Las Vegas Sun
    May 16 2005

    LAS VEGAS SUN

    Sitting at a Formica table in that most American of institutions,
    the pizza parlor, Ukrainian-born Rouben Sarkisian made a fist-pounding
    point about the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

    "This is everywhere real," he said.

    "It hasn't changed since 1776 ... and this is a real democratic
    republic."

    The point, perhaps obvious for most, was a revelation for Sarkisian
    -- who learned while studying for the federal citizenship exam he
    recently took and passed -- that the United States is the way it is
    now because of events 229 years ago.

    Sarkisian is the father of Emma and Mariam, perhaps the most famous
    teenage sisters living illegally in the United States and almost
    certainly the only ones in recent history saved from deportation by
    a last-minute phone call from a high-ranking senator to the secretary
    of homeland security.

    His passing the test was key to the future of his daughters, since
    becoming a citizen is the only way he can then petition for them to
    do the same, which would guarantee their future in the United States.

    But the case -- already full of headline-grabbing twists and turns
    -- is still not over because passing the test, which included such
    questions as "What were the original 13 colonies?" is not the same
    as being accepted as a citizen.

    As Peter Ashman, head of the local chapter of American Immigration
    Lawyers Association, put it, "He's a step closer, but he's not
    there yet."

    That step was taken in the half-hour exam April 20, after months of
    late-night studying between pizzas at the Tropicana Pizza in Green
    Valley that Rouben runs.

    He said he was very nervous, since many people had told him the test
    would be difficult for someone whose years of 12-hour work days
    had left little time for studying English, let alone U.S. history
    and politics.

    But he passed, which felt, he said, "like an angel came down."

    That means he knew the answers to questions such as, "How many senators
    are there in the Congress?" and "What is the Bill of Rights?"

    Now he awaits a letter from federal immigration officials notifying
    him of being approved in his application to become a citizen, at
    which point he would be scheduled to take an oath of citizenship at
    the George Federal Building.

    If he reaches that step, he would be one of an average of about 300 new
    citizens a month in the Las Vegas area, according to Marie Sebrechts,
    spokeswoman for the Bureau of Customs and Immigration Services.

    And then he could petition for his daughters to acquire legal status.

    As with everything in this case, however, there's a catch, and more
    last-minute events may be in store.

    The catch comes from the conditions left in place after Sen. Harry
    Reid, D-Nev., called Tom Ridge on Jan. 26 and asked the official --
    whose office oversees immigration -- to give the case "personal
    attention."

    The sisters had been detained in Las Vegas Jan. 14 and sent to a Los
    Angeles holding cell pending deportation to Armenia, their birthplace.

    The story of the Sarkisian sisters began more than a decade earlier,
    however, when their parents brought them to this country. The couple
    had three more daughters here, then got divorced. Rouben married
    a U.S. citizen and obtained status as a resident, the step below
    citizenship.

    He thought he had obtained status for Emma and Mariam as well over
    the years but found out otherwise when on Jan. 14 he took them to the
    Las Vegas office of the Bureau of Customs and Immigration Services
    for papers he thought would allow Emma to obtain a driver's license.

    Instead, the sisters were sent to Los Angeles and scheduled to be
    sent back to Armenia, a country where they don't speak the language
    and have no family.

    The media caught wind of the case. The public opposed the move and
    let Nevada's congressional delegation know it. Reid made the call
    to Ridge after nearly two weeks of constant headlines and dozens of
    calls and letters to his office.

    But federal authorities released Emma and Mariam under what's called
    a "deferred action." This means they still have no legal status in
    the country and must report to authorities periodically. Their first
    appointment is scheduled for late July.

    So now the family is nervous about what happens if Rouben hears
    nothing about his application until then, and they wonder why it's
    taking so long to hear from immigration authorities.

    Ashman said he has seen some cases take a year or more to be
    resolved. One reason for the hold-up could be that the FBI background
    check required of all applicants may not have been completed, he said.

    The Rev. Phil Carolin, executive director of the Citizenship Project,
    a nonprofit organization that helps immigrants become citizens, said
    that most people who seek help at his agency receive their acceptance
    letter, which includes the swearing-in date, within two to six weeks
    of having passed the test.

    Kathia Pereira, an immigration lawyer who works pro bono for the
    project, said that federal law says immigration authorities must
    respond in 120 days or less, but are taking longer since Sept. 11,
    mostly because of the FBI check.

    Sebrechts said that about 15 percent of all applicants who pass the
    test then have the same line checked off that was checked off for
    Rouben's case on a form called "Naturalization Interview Results."

    The line says simply, "A decision cannot yet be made about your
    application."

    Carolin said those who have that line checked off in his agency wait
    an average of six months to hear from authorities.

    At the same time, however, Virginia Kice, spokeswoman for Immigration
    and Customs Enforcement, said Emma and Mariam's stay in the United
    States is not necessarily in jeopardy just because the father's
    application for citizenship is still up in the air.

    "The period of their deferred action is indefinite ... (and) no
    enforcement action is imminent," she said.

    The appointment for the sisters in July "is to check up on the status
    of their case and see if anything has changed."

    Meanwhile, Rouben continues working in his pizza parlor and says that
    he "remember(s) everything" he learned while studying for his exam.

    "This is a real democratic republic," he repeats.

    "I am so happy my babies live in this country."
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