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Man Faces Sentencing For Abducting Son

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  • Man Faces Sentencing For Abducting Son

    MAN FACES SENTENCING FOR ABDUCTING SON
    BY: FRED SHUSTER

    City News Service
    August 6, 2012 Monday 3:11 AM PST
    CA

    Prosecutors recommend that the second of two Syrian- Armenian brothers
    who took their juvenile sons out of the country for two years without
    the consent of their mothers be sentenced today to 27 months behind
    bars.

    John Silah, 51, a citizen of Syria, was extradited to the United
    States earlier this year and pleaded guilty in Los Angeles federal
    court to one count of international parental kidnapping, according to
    the U.S. Attorney's Office. His brother, George, was sentenced to 27
    months in federal prison in May after pleading guilty to two counts
    of kidnapping.

    According to federal prosecutors, John Silah and his 50-year-old
    brother left the United States in July 2008, accompanied by his
    then-9-year-old son and George Silah's two sons -- then aged 8 and
    12 -- in violation of custody orders awarded to the boys' mothers,
    who lived in the San Fernando Valley.

    The Silah brothers' flight overseas "appears to have been necessitated
    by fraudulent activities in Los Angeles which had caught up with them,"
    Assistant U.S. Attorney Justin R. Rhoades wrote in sentencing papers.

    In the months after the abduction, the anguished mothers appeared
    on TV's "Dr. Phil" begging for the boys' return or at least word of
    their safety. The Los Angeles City Council offered a $25,000 reward
    for information leading to their return.

    Both men were apprehended in November 2010 in the Netherlands and
    subsequently extradited to the United States.

    In a letter filed with the court, the boy's mother, Christine
    Stackhouse, writes that the two years her son was away from home had a
    "profound" negative impact on her son's health and her own. She also
    said she was left financially devastated from efforts to find the boy.

    Her son, she writes, was sick several times during the trip but was
    not treated by a doctor, at one point became infested with lice,
    and returned home with a non-malignant growth on his head that had
    to be surgically removed.

    In addition, the boy is currently being treated for post-traumatic
    stress disorder and is "obsessive about making sure all the doors
    and windows are locked when he enters the house," writes Stackhouse.

    For her part, Stackhouse said, she was treated for clinical depression,
    anxiety and sleeplessness during the years of "not knowing if my son
    was alive or dead -- if he was suffering or missing me."

    At George Silah's sentencing hearing, U.S. District Judge Otis D.

    Wright II said the act of taking the boys out of the country without
    notice was designed to "inflict as much psychic harm as possible"
    on the former spouses.

    Rhoades said that the Silah brothers had defrauded others in a
    business deal in Los Angeles and had embarked on a "calculated" and
    "well-planned" effort to flee from those who had lost money before they
    "caught on."

    When they fled, the Silah brothers were divorced from the boys'
    mothers and had only partial legal custody of their sons, who lived
    in the San Fernando Valley with their mothers.

    Over the next two years, the group traveled through Mexico, Central
    America and Europe. When they were found and detained, the mothers
    flew to the Netherlands, where they were reunited with their sons.

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