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Adopted teen could be deported due to immigration laws

 
Sireen-reborn
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User ID: 466326
United States
07/11/2008 02:34 PM
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Adopted teen could be deported due to immigration laws
How Bass Ackward is this??!


Teen fears disputed adoption could lead to deportationStory Highlights
Guatemalan native was adopted by a Pennsylvania couple in 1994

U.S. officials question whether biological mother gave birth up for adoption voluntarily

Dispute has prevented 15-year-old from being a U.S. citizen

Teen has no way to find biological mother to prove adoption's legitimacy

Next Article in U.S. »


Read VIDEO
From Melissa Morgenweck and Zain Verjee
CNN's American Morning

ALLENTOWN, Pennsylvania (CNN) -- Allie Mulvihill may seem like your typical American teenager, but she has something weighing on her mind that most 15-year-olds do not: deportation.


Allie Mulvihill, left, appears with her adopted mother, Lori, and her sister, Olivia.

1 of 2 Allie may be forced to leave the country because U.S. immigration officials are questioning the legitimacy of the Guatemala native's adoption by her parents, Lori and Scott Mulvihill, in 1994.

When the Mulvihills brought their then 2-year-old daughter to their home in Allentown, Pennsylvania, they believed she would be granted citizenship.

But U.S. immigration officials questioned whether the woman who gave Allie up for adoption in Guatemala was really her biological mother. Allie's birth certificate was issued 10 months after she was born, which raised suspicions in U.S. officials' minds that she was made available for adoption due to a baby trafficking scheme.

The Mulvihills, however, say that it is not uncommon for birth certificates to be issued for children months after they are born in Guatemala, especially for children born to poor families, because families must pay for the certificates.

The Mulvihills also say U.S. embassy officials in Guatemala interviewed the woman claiming to be her biological mother at the time of the adoption and did not raise any concerns. The embassy officials, however, did not conduct a blood test of the woman that would have definitely proven that the woman had given birth to Allie.

The Guatemalan government also never challenged the adoption, the Mulvihills said.

But U.S. immigration officials still aren't satisfied, and the dispute over her adoption has become a roadblock on Allie's path to citizenship. Neither Allie nor her parents have a way to track down her biological mother and the adoption agency used by the Mulvihills used to adopt their daughter has gone under.

The fact that she can not get her immigration status resolved means the fear of deportation continues to loom. Watch Allie discribe her fears »

"I don't know where I'm going to end up after all this... if it doesn't work out," she said.

Fourteen years and hundreds of forms later, the Mulvihills feel like they are running in circles and are saying that enough is enough.

Scott Mulvihill simply wants this battle to be over.

"We're told to go in one direction and when we do, we're told to switch gears and go into another direction. And when we look for council from the government to give us a definite answer, we get stuck with people who are supposed to be working on marriage contracts rather than immigration contracts," he said.

And now that she is getting older, the consequences of Allie's immigration status are getting tougher. Her lack of citizenship means she cannot get her driver's license, vote, apply for a job or qualify for financial aid.

"It's been really difficult because I can't do all the things my friends can do," Allie said.

CNN contacted the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services about Allie's situation. Bill Wright, deputy press secretary of the USCIS, responded with a statement, saying "even in the most sympathetic of situations, such as this, we do not get to selectively dismiss our immigration laws. USCIS has been trying to work the Mulvihill family, and we continue to urge them to provide evidence that this minor is eligible for permanent residency."

Allie said this constant battle has left her feeling like a shadow.

"All along I've really known that I'm not like everyone else," she said.

Allie said she believes the strong support from her family, including her younger sister Olivia, will give her courage to keep fighting for her citizenship. Olivia is a biological daughter of the Mulvihills.

"It's been great growing up here. ... My parents mean everything to me," Allie said. "We have so much fun together. They treat me as if I was like the same as my sister," she said as she began to tear up.

Allie's parents are not about to give up either. Lori Mulvihill said the hardest part is seeing their child upset about not having the same opportunities as other teens her age.


"Some people may think these are minor things, but you know this child is also afraid that she's going to be made to leave the country," Lori Mulvihill said, adding "you watch your child with these fears and right now that's the hardest part."

But, for now, all the Mulvihills can do is wait.
anything after 'but' is bullshit!

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"Once you open your mind to the possibility of conspiracy, you then see conspiracy in everything." [link to deadbydecember-sireen.blogspot.com]
Dervish

User ID: 465538
United Arab Emirates
07/11/2008 02:52 PM
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Re: Adopted teen could be deported due to immigration laws
Give me your tired, your hungry, your poor...

so I can fuck with them.

Whats so bloody ironic about this, is if the girl treaded across the Rio Grande illegally she would have all those things she wanted, and then some.
I know enough to know that I know nothing
Sireen-reborn  (OP)

User ID: 466326
United States
07/11/2008 03:03 PM
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Re: Adopted teen could be deported due to immigration laws
Here you have a family that did everything within the laws of our country to bring their daughter home to the states and give her a good life...and now Immigration would rather harrass them NOW, instead of focusing where the problems really lie!
anything after 'but' is bullshit!

[link to www.myspace.com]

"Once you open your mind to the possibility of conspiracy, you then see conspiracy in everything." [link to deadbydecember-sireen.blogspot.com]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 465834
United States
07/11/2008 05:03 PM
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Re: Adopted teen could be deported due to immigration laws
that's nasty. with all the redrum the american gov't is doing, to hassle a kid...oh, when will this in-nane and unsane madness end???
LouisWinthorpeIII

User ID: 384893
United States
07/11/2008 05:05 PM
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Re: Adopted teen could be deported due to immigration laws
Letter of law vs spirit of law...

It's a funny line to walk.

Just wait until this immigration thing really heats up.

The NAU will be the easy way out.
"I don't know which was scarier...the speech...or the Congress cheering it. He evoked Lincoln. Whenever a President is going to get us into serious trouble...they always use Lincoln."
-2010





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