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Armenian Clan In Ridgway Wins Rare Visas

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  • Armenian Clan In Ridgway Wins Rare Visas

    ARMENIAN CLAN IN RIDGWAY WINS RARE VISAS
    By Nancy Lofholm

    Denver Post, CO
    Feb 7 2007

    Denver Post file photo The Sargsyan family, Armenian natives living
    in... (The Denver Post)

    "1"Ridgway - Members of an Armenian family who fought deportation
    for the past 2 1/2 years with the aid of their Ridgway neighbors have
    won rare visas and are on the path to citizenship.

    "We are euphoric," said Pete Whiskeman, a Ridgway businessman who
    spearheaded the $150,000 fundraising effort to help the family in
    this single-stoplight town of 4,000.

    That money - along with an outpouring of community support - paid
    the legal bills and drew political attention to the plight of the
    five members of the Sargsyan family.

    "I can't even tell you in words," Nvart Idinyan Sargsyan said
    Tuesday. "This is so incredible to finally be on the right side."

    The family ran afoul of immigration laws and had been threatened with
    deportation since the eldest daughter's then-husband brought them to
    the Ridgway area on student visas in 1999. Vaughn Huckfeldt, who the
    family said had presented himself as a wealthy American minister in
    their hometown of Yerevan, had allegedly bilked other Armenians by
    promising to obtain visas for them, the family said.

    The family was threatened by those who lost money after Huckfeldt
    married Nvart, left Armenia and failed to deliver the visas, the
    Sargsyans said.

    The Sargsyans - parents, Susan and Ruben; daughter Meri; and sons Hayk
    and Gevorg - quickly became valued members of the Ridgway community
    after they arrived with a single dollar bill and the few possessions
    they could carry. When Nvart divorced Huckfeldt in 2000, he turned
    the family in for having improper visas.

    The family was then victimized by an immigration attorney who has
    since been disbarred.

    As the family prepared for deportation in 2004, Whiskeman learned of
    their plight. He began a fund drive that ranged from dollar donations
    at a bake sale to $15,000 given by an anonymous out-of-state donor.

    Ridgway students wrote letters to politicians, and more than 60
    community members braved a winter storm in late 2004 to travel to
    Aurora and rally support when the family was jailed at the Immigration
    and Customs Enforcement detention center.

    The family suffered numerous other setbacks in the fight for legal
    residency, including the death of Nvart's second husband, Max Noland,
    in a construction accident.

    Nvart moved to the Fort Collins area last year but said she still
    considers Ouray County her home. Hayk and Gevorg are attending the
    University of Colorado. Meri works for a Ridgway bank, and her parents
    still work odd jobs around the community and are hoping to open an
    Armenian restaurant.

    Nvart plans to apply for citizenship when she is eligible in three
    years. The other family members will be eligible to apply for permanent
    residency in a year and for citizenship in five years.

    The Sargsyans' visas, granted on the basis of giving them relief from
    "human trafficking," have been issued in only 629 cases since 2001.

    Jeff Joseph, the immigration attorney who helped obtain the Sargsyans'
    visas, said he has never handled another immigration case where the
    federal government threw up so many roadblocks.

    "It's been a long battle," he said.

    http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_5172257

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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