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blm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-01-06 11:58 AM
Original message
Please help with this most serious situation
Edited on Sun Oct-01-06 11:59 AM by blm
If you can contact Kerry's office or Teresa or Chris Heinz, please do so.

This is a serious plea from Larisa. She is limited as a journalist in how much she can make these pleas personally to political figures.


http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=364&topic_id=2274557&mesg_id=2274557
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TayTay Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-01-06 02:44 PM
Response to Original message
1. blm: Who is this person and why are they detained?
Why do they need intervention? What is the crime and the charge? Your link goes to an article about a very bad prison. Is this an appeal on the conditions at the prison or someone housed there?

Thanks!
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blm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-01-06 02:54 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. the young woman taken there is close to
Edited on Sun Oct-01-06 02:55 PM by blm
lala rawraw. She put up the article so we understand that the place where Bella is being kept, without her medication, is a hellhole for young women.
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TayTay Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-01-06 02:56 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. Who is bella and how can she be helped?
What is going on here? What is the story that brought the alert? (blm, what are you asking for right now?)
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blm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-01-06 03:03 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. lala posted this in that thread
Edited on Sun Oct-01-06 03:03 PM by blm
7. would it help to

say she is a reporter's cousin? i don't know what to do... i am just crying and don't know what to do (
>>>>>>


Apparently her cousin is being detained as an illegal and she is looking for a compassionate intervention.
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blm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-01-06 03:13 PM
Response to Reply #3
5. Found the fuller story

'Operation Return to Sender' stumbles

Jennifer Van Bergen
Published: Thursday September 28, 2006

Print This Email This
Questions are being raised about the arrest, detention, and treatment of a long-term Ukrainian legal resident alien in Florida.

Bella Maryanovsky, a thirty-year legal resident of the United States, was arrested last week on Tuesday, September 19, when she entered immigration offices for a routine update of her green card papers. It appears she was arrested under a new immigration program called “Operation Return to Sender.”

According to Michael Chertoff in a June 2006 press release, “Operation Return to Sender is another example of a new and tough interior enforcement strategy that seeks to catch and deport criminal aliens, increase worksite enforcement, and crack down hard on the criminal infrastructure that perpetuates illegal immigration.”

“The fugitives captured in this operation,” claimed Chertoff, “threatened public safety in hundreds of neighborhoods and communities around the country. This department has no tolerance for their criminal behavior.”

However, Maryanovsky, according to her family and friends, has long been an upstanding member of society. She is currently employed placing engineers in jobs nationwide with salaries ranging from $75,000 to $250,000.

Gino Sedikov, Maryanovsky’s attorney, explained in a Monday conversation that he has yet to determine the charges on which Maryanovsky is being held. She was not provided with a “notice to appear” or given any indication that her immigration file had been flagged or that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) intended to arrest her. Sedikov believes this is part of the new policy in the ICE office.

Michael Keegan, a spokesman for ICE in Washington, D.C. told RAW STORY in a phone conversation on Wednesday, “It is not our job to create the law. It is not our job to interpret the law. Our job is to enforce the law.” According to Keegan, “the posture of law enforcement agencies has completely changed since 9/11.”

The most likely reason Maryanovksy’s file was flagged is that in 1989 she was convicted – wrongfully, according to her family – of committing a crime that at the time was not a deportable offense. Laws passed in the 1990’s that applied retroactively, according to Keegan, would have made her offense a deportable one.

However, according to immigration expert Mark Levey, who has practiced immigration law in Washington, D.C. for twenty years, only crimes that were aggravated felonies at the time of commission were swept in under the retroactive rule. Thus, Levey believes that Maryanovsky’s immigration file was probably flagged incorrectly.

"Because Maryanovsky's crime precedes the 1990's laws," Levey explains, "although she is still deportable, she is nonetheless eligible for bond and for relief from removal based on her good character."

Why was Maryanovsky arrested now, almost twenty years after her conviction? Keegan contends, “It’s because we’re such a good agency,” implying that ICE does a better job than its predecessor, Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS).

According to Sedikov, thousands of immigrants are sitting in jails and detentions centers without any hope of what is called "relief from removal" – that is, cancellation of a charge that would otherwise result in deportation.

The present immigration system, reformulated under the Department of Homeland Security after the passage of the Homeland Security Act of 2002, was divided into two parts: an enforcement agency (Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or “ICE,” ironically referred to by immigration attorneys as the “ICEmen”) and a separate service agency for getting a green card.

ICE is further divided into an investigative unit, a deportation/removal unit, and a detection/arrest unit. Because of these divisions, “the wheels of justice move slowly,” says Sedikov. A detainee’s file is supposed to follow them from unit to unit, but sometimes – as in Maryanovsky’s case – the file is lost. The detainee may then wait in detention for months until the file is found. Even when a file is accounted for, detainees may still spend weeks in jail, since detention centers are overfull.

In the meantime, explains Sedikov, if the detainee is not held near an immigration court there is no mechanism by which they can be brought before an immigration judge to challenge their detention. The individual must simply wait until the right official in the right department of ICE decides it is time to bring them to court. Immigration courts do not have sheriffs who can bring detainees in, so judges will not entertain an attorney’s request for a bond hearing unless the detainee is accessible. Thus, an individual put into detention falls into a sort of black hole. According to Sedikov, “ICE has no duty to respect requests.”

Sedikov claims he has left 70 messages on the Maryanovsky case in five days, and has received no return call from ICE officials. His current aim is to have her transferred to a location that would allow her to be brought before a judge.

Maryanovsky claims that she is currently being held in a jail cell with an accused murderer. Last week she was in a cell with five other people and only two beds, so she slept on a “urine-laden cement floor.”

To make matters more disheartening, Maryanovsky takes medication for heart arrhythmia and high blood pressure. She confided to her family and friends that prison personnel mockingly refused to give her medication, telling her, “When you have a heart attack, then we’ll help you.”

One friend, Lauren, who wished to keep her last name private, said that she has visited Maryanovsky twice, and her ankles and extremities are swelling. “ can go into heart failure,” Lauren told RAW STORY. According to family members, her blood pressure hit 220/110, and the family obtained a doctor’s letter to present to immigration authorities, but she was still apparently not being given her medication.

Maryanovsky is scheduled soon to be transferred to Krome Detention Center, outside Miami, according to Sedikov. Two years ago, Krome garnered much press attention when an 81-year old Haitian Baptist minister, Joseph Dantica, died while being detained there after seeking asylum. He fell ill during his hearing, after, like Maryanovsky, requesting medication for high blood pressure. Officials contend that he died of pancreatitis and deny responsibility for his death.

Ray Del Papa of the South Florida Peace and Justice Network – a coalition that includes representatives from such groups as the Quakers, Pax Christi, Buddhist Peace Fellowship, Jewish Arab Defense Association, Haiti Solidarity, and many others – told RAW STORY that he sees an incongruity in the arrest and detention of such persons as Maryanovsky or Dantica while known terrorists, such as Luis Possada Carriles, Orlando Bosch, and Virgilio Paz Romero, are allowed to remain free in the U.S., despite their criminal records.

Sedikov claims that the arresting officer told him, “We got orders to arrest everybody.”

That officer, Keith Bradley, refused to confirm or deny anything about the case to RAW STORY, saying “I still have a mortgage and bills to pay.”

Some have speculated that Maryanovsky’s sudden arrest and detention may have a political motive. Levey disagrees, as does RAW STORY managing news editor Larisa Alexandrovna, who was raised together with Maryanovsky since their arrival in the United States. But Alexandrovna, who did not contribute to the writing or editing of this piece, says she believes readers should “view this as a typical day.”

“Sure, I find it odd that in Southern Florida – where immigration targets are usually Cuban, South American, and Haitian – suddenly a Ukrainian Jew is arrested, held without charge, and her file goes missing,” says Alexandrovna. “But I also find it odd that thousands of people are being swept up in these raids, we don’t know their actual citizenship status, they are disappeared and held in detention facilities, and no one notices. It is all odd,” added Alexandrovna in a Wednesday evening email.

Jennifer Van Bergen is a free-lance journalist who holds a law degree. Her book The Twilight of Democracy: The Bush Plan for America has been called a “primer for citizenship.” She can be reached at jvbxyz@earthlink.net.
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TayTay Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-01-06 03:27 PM
Response to Reply #5
6. Is this the type of case they pulled habeas corpus right for?
It sure sounds like it. Did anyone contact Nelson's office which has jurisdiction on this in Florida. Sen. Kerry was able to get an emergency appeal through the Senate that stayed deportation proceedings for a person from Mass who was on the brink of being sent back to his home country and almost certain arrest and interrogation.

Any word on this?
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blm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-01-06 03:47 PM
Response to Reply #6
7. I have no clue. If Kerry has experience with this, then his office
may know exactly how this needs to be handled.

I wish I'd become a lawyer instead of working in music industry - what a waste.
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TayTay Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-01-06 04:07 PM
Response to Reply #7
8. Thihs is what happened when a Boston Teacher was threatened
and Sens. Kennedy & Kerry took action. (From Senator Kerry's Senate.gov website)

03/03/2005

Kerry, Bipartisan Coalition Win 11th Hour Push to Save Boston Teacher from Deportation

Kerry: “When we work together, our government can work for people.”

Washington, D.C. - Culminating late tonight in the United States Senate, John Kerry led a successful, bipartisan 11th hour push to stay the deportation of a beloved Boston teacher. By introducing the Kerry bill in the Senate, sending a letter to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Chertoff and by reaching across party lines to work with Sen. Cornyn of Texas, beloved teacher Obain Attouoman will be allowed to stay in Boston until 2007. This long fight for a stay in Attouoman's deportation case was marked today by an emotional outpouring when several of Attouoman’s students traveled from Boston to Washington to meet with Kerry and Members of Congress.
“This is the right way to end a day spent by so many people fighting to keep Obain Attouoman at home in Boston. Democracy works best when we work across party lines, and I'm pleased to say that tonight Senator Cornyn has joined us in making it possible for a beloved teacher to stay with his students at least until 2007. It took real cooperation and genuine bipartisanship to overcome the Washington stalemate and make a difference, not only in the life of a teacher, but in the lives of the students who cherish their time with him. Tonight's victory sends a message that when we work together, our government can work for people,” Senator Kerry said.

“It’s a simple matter of doing what’s right for students and working to fix our broken immigration system,” Kerry added. "I'm grateful to the students of Fenway High School, Sen. Kennedy, Reps. Markey and Capuano, and Mayor Menino, as well as to Secretary Chertoff and Sen. Cornyn for a remarkable bipartisan team effort."

The Kerry private bill was submitted this afternoon and sparked a phone call from Secretary Chertoff and cooperation with Senator John Cornyn to do a report on Attouoman’s case. Senator Cornyn is the Chairman of the Subcommittee on Immigration, Border Security and Citizenship.

TIME LINE (For copies of the Cornyn report, Kerry letters, or any other supporting documents, please do not hesitate to contact us.)

* February 9 - John Kerry calls Bruce Chadbourne, regional director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement urging him to allow Obain Attouoman to stay in the U.S. permanently.

* March 1 - John Kerry, Senator Kennedy and Senator Levin write Department of Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, urging him to allow Obain Attouoman to stay in the U.S. permanently.

* March 1 - Led by Fenway High School students, the NAACP, Mayor Menino, and Rep. Capuano, Massachusetts sends a message that Obain Attouoman must stay with his students in Boston.

* TODAY at 8:00 a.m. - John Kerry writes White House Chief of Staff Andy Card, urging him to review the matter with DHS and allow Obain Attouoman to stay in the U.S. permanently.

* TODAY at 11:00 a.m. - John Kerry meets with Fenway High students in his Washington office

* TODAY at 1:00 p.m. - John Kerry introduces private bill in the Senate to allow Obain Attouoman to stay in the U.S. permanently. Without Immigration Subcommittee Chairman John Cornyn (R-Texas) requesting a report, the deportation will continue as scheduled.

* TODAY at 4:45 p.m. - Department of Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff calls John Kerry, saying he had read the letter Kerry sent, considered it, and will extend Mr. Attouoman's deportation by one week, to Friday, March 11.

* TODAY at 6:30 p.m. - John Kerry speaks with Senator Cornyn and asks him to consider requesting the report tonight.

* TODAY at 7:15 p.m. - Senator Cornyn tells John Kerry he will request the report to accompany Kerry's private bill, allowing Mr. Attouoman to stay in the U.S. through early 2007.

###


From the Boston Globe March 11, 2005 How this got done

TEACHER'S FANS WIN A DELAY IN HIS DEPORTATION
Author(s): Scott Goldstein GLoBE CORRESPONDENT Date: March 4, 2005 Page: B1 Section: Metro/Region
Student outcry over the threatened deportation of Obain Attouoman appeared to pay off yesterday, when the popular Fenway High School teacher won permission to stay in the United States until at least 2007.

"I feel overwhelmed at what's happening," said the 43-year-old math teacher, a US resident since 1992, who was helped in his bid to avoid being returned to his native Ivory Coast by students who mounted a fierce campaign to keep him stateside. "I really cannot believe it yet," he said. "I feel like I'm dreaming. . . . It's just an incredible feeling to have children express such a high sense of responsibility."

His supporters included a delegation of six students and two adults who met yesterday in Washington with US Senator John F. Kerry and staffers of other members of Congress.

One of those students Apocalipsis Rosario, 16, a Fenway High School sophomore said the idea to go to Washington came together in recent weeks.

"I am so overwhelmed and happy that he'll be able to stay," she said. "Now, we actually have time so that we can make it so that he stays here forever. I'm just so excited because in 2007 I'll be graduating, but I want him to settle down and not have the fear of deportation."

The reprieve was triggered by a request by Kerry to Senator John Cornyn, a Texas Republican who chairs a key immigration subcommittee, for a background report on Attouoman from the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement. That automatically delays deportation proceedings until the end of the current session of Congress, Kerry's office said.

Kerry also has filed a bill intended to allow Attouoman to stay here permanently. It is similar to a bill filed last year by US Representative Edward J. Markey, aimed at granting Attouoman permanent US residency.

Yesterday's late-inning maneuvers ended a day of furious lobbying by Kerry, US Senator Edward M. Kennedy, and Governor Mitt Romney. At one point, it appeared that Attouoman, who teaches special education students, had won a delay of just a week.

Attouoman's lawyer, Susan Cohen, who has been working on the case pro bono, said she was on her way to his house with champagne.

"I was starting to worry that I might not see Obain again after tomorrow," Cohen said. "But we just didn't let up our efforts."

Last night, Russ Knocke, a spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security, said that Attouoman was scheduled to be deported to Ivory Coast on March 11, an extension of an earlier deadline of today. Knocke had not heard about the longer postponement but confirmed that a request from Cornyn would bring about a delay.

The first hopeful news for Attouoman yesterday came after Romney sent a letter to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff."I have heard from scores of Mr. Attouoman's students who are concerned that the loss of their teacher in the middle of this school year will not only impact their education, but also will take from our community a man who has been willing to mentor young men who lack a prominent role model in their lives," Romney said in the letter.

Attouoman has been fighting to stay in the United States since he missed an immigration hearing in 2001, after misreading the handwritten date on the official letter. A judge ordered him deported; Attouoman lost an appeal.

He was held in Suffolk County Jail on a deportation warrant for several months and released in March 2004, one day after a rally drew hundreds of supporters.

Attouoman has said he would be in danger in his homeland because of his political affiliations in the early 1990s.

Attouoman's students delivered a letter of support to Romney's office Wednesday morning, prompting the governor to write to Chertoff. The teacher's supporters rallied outside the John F. Kennedy Federal Building twice in the past month, most recently Wednesday afternoon.

"This is the right way to end a day spent by so many people fighting to keep Obain Attouoman at home in Boston," Kerry said in a statement. "It took . . . genuine bipartisanship to overcome the Washington stalemate and make a difference, not only in the life of a teacher, but in the lives of the students who cherish their time with him."
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sandnsea Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-01-06 07:39 PM
Response to Reply #8
10. Yes, it's kind of like your article
They're supposedly tightening up on immigration and Larisa's relative got caught up in that. IIRC, the law changed so that immigrants aren't released OR anymore, because a percentage don't show up in court. So this Bella person is stuck in immigration limbo. Larisa has written that this is true across the board, legal and illegal immigrants are just stuck in prisons because there aren't enough immigration judges. It's not nothing to do with any of these particular detainees being defined as potential terrorists. It's just our 'new and improved' ICE.

However, once any of these immigrants ARE accused of being detainees, THEN the lack of habeas in the new bill kicks in. So people who have even come here because of persecution in their own countries, and have no other country to claim legal rights under, could conceivably be stuck in one of these holes indefinitely.

I don't know how we get serious about knowing who is in the country if we won't put the money into processing these cases quickly. This should have been a paperwork matter, processed on the spot. They sure shouldn't be holding people for months and months.
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beachmom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-01-06 09:02 PM
Response to Reply #10
11. That is beyond awful! Completely different from Germany,
where I must confess that I was illegal for one month. I went there on one visa, but apparently it ran out. So my husband talks to the immigration lady, explaining we were headed back to the States in a few weeks, and she said -- "okay". She gave me a piece of paper to present at the airport, and I went home. No big deal. I knew then and there that if I were in the U.S. I would have been put in jail. But, you see, in Germany, they are more humane. And, also, in 2006 they don't torture in Germany, unlike OUR country.

This story is terrible, and yet nobody knows about this stuff. MSM couldn't give a rat's ass about people rotting in jails, often for small transgressions of immigration law.
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sandnsea Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-01-06 10:50 PM
Response to Reply #11
12. Hold on to your hat
We do this to kids too. This article is from 2001, but I would bet it's gotten worse, not better.

"WCRWC has found that fewer than half of the 4,675 children detained by the INS last year had legal representation. "In every state of the union, kids are deemed not competent to stand on their own. But here we have kids who don't speak English running their own damn court hearings," said Jim Bamberger, a lawyer with non-LSC-funded Columbia Legal Services, which represents children in some cases and has also been enlisting private attorneys to represent children."

http://www.brennancenter.org/programs/lse/pages/view_elerts.php?elert_id=&s_date=&e_date=&category_id=30&end_date=&page=37&search_text=

Here's another article about how a kid committing a crime or some such could end up deported to a country where they've never lived and don't know anybody. That's what happened to Bella I think.

http://immigration.about.com/library/weekly/aa122900a.htm
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TayTay Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-01-06 04:09 PM
Response to Reply #7
9. I think a Florida Senator or the Gov has to appeal to Cornyn
as was done in the case above. Who else in Florida knows about this and can bring pressure to bear? Who did this person work for and interact with? Are Co-Workers willing to come forward? Who can help apply pressure for the FL Senators to act?
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blm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Oct-02-06 08:37 AM
Response to Reply #9
13. Maybe the staff member in Kerry's office who handled this can contact a
staffer from Nelson's office, and advise them on hos they pushed it through.
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