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Feinstein May File Bill To Help Teen Facing Deportation

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  • Feinstein May File Bill To Help Teen Facing Deportation

    FEINSTEIN MAY FILE BILL TO HELP TEEN FACING DEPORTATION
    By Vanessa Colon

    Sacramento Bee
    June 8 2008
    CA

    FRESNO - Arthur Mkoyan, a high school valedictorian who may be deported
    to Armenia this month, is counting on letters of support from across
    the state and nation to help him.

    Mkoyan, 17, of Fresno pleaded to classmates, friends and teachers
    at his hometown Bullard High School on Friday to write letters
    to Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein encouraging her to introduce
    legislation that would enable him and his parents to stay in the
    United States.

    Friday was his last day of class at the school. Mkoyan will graduate
    Tuesday at the Save Mart Center.

    The valedictorian with a 4.0 grade-point average drew attention across
    the nation after his story first appeared in the Fresno Bee. He
    plans to attend the University of California, Davis, where he has
    been accepted.

    The letters of support are important, Mkoyan said.

    "It's to convince the people who are judging the private bill," he
    said Friday. "Hopefully, they will introduce the bill by the end of
    next week so all of us can stay."

    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement ordered Mkoyan and his
    mother to leave the United States by late June and return to Armenia,
    a country Mkoyan hasn't seen since he was 2. His 12-year-old brother,
    a U.S. citizen, has no other choice but to leave with Mkoyan and his
    mother if they're deported, the family has said.

    The Mkoyan family fled the former Soviet Union and has been seeking
    asylum since 1992.

    The father, Ruben Mkoian, ran a general store and worked as a
    police officer in the then- Soviet Republic of Armenia, where he was
    threatened by former Soviet government workers as the Soviet Union
    was breaking up, his wife has said.

    Mkoian applied for asylum but was rejected. Mkoian, who spells his
    name differently than his son, appealed to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court
    of Appeals in San Francisco but lost and is at a detention center
    in Arizona.

    Feinstein, who has introduced private bills in the past, is gathering
    Mkoyan's information to introduce a bill on his behalf, according to
    Feinstein's office in Washington, D.C. Feinstein's office is still
    waiting on some information from the family, such as letters from
    the school and a church that provide a picture of the situation.

    "The most important thing for them is to get as much information
    as they can so Feinstein can make a decision," said Scott Gerber,
    a spokesman for Feinstein.

    If introduced, the bill would halt the deportation. If it passes, he
    would receive a green card. But private bills rarely pass, according
    to Feinstein's office.

    On Thursday, Mkoyan visited the local office of U.S. Rep. George
    Radanovich, R-Mariposa. The staff listened to his story and planned
    to help Feinstein's office draft a private bill, Mkoyan said.

    The congressman has sent a letter to Feinstein supporting her
    legislation on behalf of Mkoyan, Radanovich spokesman Spencer Pederson
    said Friday. The letter notes that such a bill was unlikely to pass
    in the House, but that previous legislation of this nature has been
    successful in the Senate.

    On Monday, Radanovich plans to meet with the Armenian ambassador to
    the United States to ask that, if deportation can't be prevented,
    Mkoyan be allowed to apply for a student visa to return to the United
    States, Pederson said.

    Mkoyan said he's still surprised by the overwhelming response he's
    received.

    "The help is much appreciated," he said.
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