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Denver: Family's release brings relief

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  • Denver: Family's release brings relief

    Boulder Daily Camera, CO
    Dec 11 2004

    Family's release brings relief

    Judge: Armenian immigrants illegally entered country

    By Kim Castleberry, Camera Staff Writer
    December 11, 2004

    After spending five weeks locked away in a federal detention center,
    most people would have an endless list of things to do once they were
    released. For Gevorg Sargsyan and his family, a nice dinner at the
    Chop House was at the top of that list.

    "The first thing we did was go get a good meal," said Colin Lacy,
    Sargsyan's best friend who picked the family up Thursday afternoon
    after they were discharged from the detention center. "Everybody was
    so excited."

    Lacy attends the University of Colorado, where Sargsyan was a student
    until he and his family were arrested on Nov. 4 for entering the
    country with the wrong kind of visa. The family's lawyer and friends
    worked for weeks to get them released from the Immigration and
    Customs Enforcement detention center, but the decision came
    unexpectedly.

    "I found out about 15 minutes before they were released," said Jeff
    Joseph, the family's lawyer. "We called the ICE officer and he said
    that they couldn't really answer any of our questions."

    Joseph was told that the case had been re-evaluated and the family
    was no longer thought to be a flight risk.

    "The release does nothing to change the case," said Joseph, who is
    going forward with filing for special visas so the family can stay in
    the United States. Sargsyan, his brother, sister and father all were
    held at the detention center in Aurora. The family has lived in the
    mountain town of Ridgway for more than six years and is now back at
    home.

    The family could not be reached for comment Friday.

    Lacy, who attended Ridgway High School with Sargsyan, and other
    residents have been trying to get political support and raise money
    for the family's deportation appeal in federal court. He and Sargsyan
    talked all night on Thursday, but he said he's not sure what his
    friend's immediate plans are.

    Sargsyan was a sophomore at CU, where he was studying pre-medicine.
    The 20-year-old withdrew from school after an immigration judge ruled
    that the family had entered the country fraudulently using student
    visas.

    The circumstances behind the family's release are cloudy.

    "Nobody knows who exactly made the release or why," Lacy said. "We'll
    probably never know. All we know is it came from Washington."

    He said reporters from The New York Times interviewed the Sargsyans
    on Friday morning and the fact that the family's story was getting
    national media attention might also have factored into the decision.

    Family members say they were forced to flee Armenia because of the
    Russian mafia and if they returned mobsters would kill them because
    of alleged crimes there by a former in-law who is an American.
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