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Denver: Family detained in push by feds

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  • Denver: Family detained in push by feds

    Family detained in push by feds
    By Nancy Lofholm, Denver Post Staff Writer

    Denver Post, CO
    Nov 14 2004

    The four Armenians awaiting deportation in a Denver detention facility
    are there partly because of a 1 1/2-year-old crackdown on immigration
    scofflaws.

    A spokeswoman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement said an estimated
    350,000 to 400,000 illegal immigrants with deportation orders have
    vanished before they could be sent out of the country so immigration
    officials are being more aggressive to lower that rate and ease
    concern in Congress.

    The Sargsyan family is not included in those numbers because the
    family members showed up at the appointed time on Oct. 4 in response
    to a deportation notice. They were instantly taken into custody.

    Virginia Kice, spokeswoman for the immigration enforcement division,
    said the fact the family never tried to hide from immigration
    authorities makes no difference.


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    "The noncompliance rate among those not detained is very high, as high
    as 80 percent," Kice said. "That's a very discouraging statistic and
    one we are trying to change."

    The Sargsyans are being held in detention while their attorney
    attempts to obtain visas for them under a relatively new law that
    gives protection to victims of human trafficking. The Sargsyans
    maintain they were victimized by an American con man who married
    into the family and used that connection to defraud other Armenians
    by promising them visas that he never obtained.

    The Sargsyans initially attempted but failed to gain asylum on the
    grounds they fear being harmed or killed on their return to Armenia.
    The trafficking-victim visas they are now trying to obtain have been
    granted in fewer than several hundred cases since they were established
    in 2001.

    Normally, immigrants with applications for those visas are not detained
    and, instead, are given government aid. Kice said the Sargsyans are
    being treated differently because they already had final deportation
    orders before they applied for the trafficking victim visas.
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