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  1. #1
    Senior Member swatchick's Avatar
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    Feds Probe Marriages

    http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/ ... 1923.story

    'I do' becomes 'no you don't' in feds' probe of marriages
    Sarah Langbein | Sentinel Staff Writer
    August 30, 2007

    Vladimir Danilov's wife never stepped inside his home, even after they married.

    After all, the 40-year-old Danilov was living there with a girlfriend half his age.

    Malkhaz Kapanadze's bride would have needed to board a plane to see him. He was living in Brooklyn with his other wife and their child.

    These Volusia County marriages -- and many others, investigators say -- were more like business transactions than stories of happily ever after.

    They were at the heart of a federal investigation into a Central Florida couple accused of arranging marriages between U.S. citizens and immigrants who wanted the fast -- and fraudulent -- path to citizenship.

    Ten thousand dollars bought a spouse and a shotgun wedding, records show. The citizenship suitors were discovered at Narcotics Anonymous meetings. Prostitutes and day laborers were bought off for $1,000 up front and $300 a month until a green card came for the strangers they wedded.

    At least five men, from Israel, Uzbekistan and Georgia, have been prosecuted for illegal entry into the country based on the marriage scams. They've been sentenced to time served and given unsupervised probation, provided they leave the United States.

    The couple suspected of arranging the scams, Larry and Natalia Humm, are now divorced. Larry Humm, a former Volusia County deputy sheriff, has struck a deal with federal authorities to cooperate in the prosecution of others -- including his wife, according to court filings earlier this month.

    Larry Humm remains free, while Natalia Humm, his Russian-born ex, is behind bars. Neither could be reached for comment.

    Security worries

    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has established specific task forces that target this type of activity. Barbara Gonzalez, a spokeswoman for the agency's Southern office, said these marriages "pose a severe threat" to public safety and security.

    A five-year probe in California resulted in "Operation Newlywed Game," in which more than 50 people were indicted on suspicion of arranging sham marriages for Chinese and Vietnamese nationals. It is thought to be the largest marriage-fraud bust in the United States.

    "At the end of the day, they're trying to circumvent the law," Gonzalez said.

    It also happens to be the fastest way to get a green card, said Carl Shusterman, a Los Angeles immigration attorney who used to work for the Immigration and Naturalization Service. The process can take up to 20 years in other cases, he said.

    It's unclear from court documents how this alleged scheme began, but it appears the Humms made their money from word-of-mouth advertising -- both here and abroad.

    Soon-to-be couples were introduced in Natalia Humm's Daytona Beach office, Power of Attorney Inc., according to court records. There was no courting, no wooing and typically little time to make each other's acquaintance. They'd travel to the Volusia County Courthouse to obtain their marriage certificates and return to the office for a sparsely attended wedding ceremony, in which Natalia Humm officiated in her role as a notary public, court records show.

    After the I-dos, the newlyweds posed for pictures that they would later use as proof to immigration officials of their commitment. The women were instructed to take their husbands' last names for purposes of Social Security cards and change their drivers license addresses to those of their spouses.

    To further make the marriage look real, they were told to leave clothing and personal belongings at each other's homes and to set up a joint bank account, according to federal court documents.

    Money was exchanged the day of the ceremony. Typically, the bride would receive $1,000. A recruiter would usually be paid a $500 finder's fee. Sometimes the money came in a brown envelope. In one case, a bride was given a 1999 Dodge Intrepid in return for her continued participation in the scam, according to court records.

    For every month forward, the foreigners would pay their citizen spouses $300, a marriage rent of sorts. The payments would end once a green card was issued.

    In the meantime, the husband and wife rarely saw each other, unless it was for a meeting with government officials, documents show.

    An end to the ruse

    When immigration officials arrived at the home of Danilov's wife on Sept. 14, 2006, it had been a while since she had spoken to her supposed husband. The special agents knew that, but they didn't let on.

    The woman said she and her husband were going through some "rough times" and that they were living apart, court records show. She told them Danilov was at work and she had talked to him earlier that day.

    Problem was, Danilov had been in jail since the night before on an outstanding warrant for grand theft.

    When she was confronted with that information, the woman confessed.

    She told them of the fake marriage and monthly payments, and she showed them a single sheet of notebook paper with information she was supposed to memorize, according to court documents.

    Written across the top was Danilov's name. It was a list of basic biographical information -- birth date, son's name and birthplace -- and likes and dislikes -- his favorite color is white and he hates seafood.

    "I recognize my mistake," Danilov said in federal court last year at his arraignment. "I get married to a U.S. citizen to be legally in the U.S."

    Eleven days later, federal search warrants were executed on the Humms' office and home. Natalia Humm told authorities about "her involvement in marriage fraud and the fact that she knew that what she was doing was against the law," according to court documents.

    Investigators estimate the couple had ties to more than 25 but fewer than 99 fraudulent marriages, according to Larry Humm's plea agreement. In one case, the couple divorced before a green card was issued because they feared getting into legal trouble.

    It didn't help. The husband, Israeli citizen Erez Alul, was prosecuted and sentenced to three years' unsupervised probation -- provided he left the country and didn't return.
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  2. #2
    Senior Member USPatriot's Avatar
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    Our tax money hard at work,investigating marriage shams, arresting people who have broken our laws,send them to court,get a conviction,put them on probation and instead of automatic deportation they are released and told to self deport ???????

    Give Me A Break !
    "A Government big enough to give you everything you want,is strong enough to take everything you have"* Thomas Jefferson

  3. #3
    Senior Member swatchick's Avatar
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    Cubans are very well known for being involved in the marriage scams. I know a person who was constantly harassed by them to get into one of these marriages. They wanted thousands of dollars for it. I recall reading that a Cuban man and Dominican woman got married and they had an interview where they take them separately and question them. The man had a heart attack and died in that immigration interview room. I guess it was too much for his heart to take. In the end the woman still got her greencard. I found it somewhat suspicious as Cubans dislike Dominicans as well as certain other Hispanics.
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    What is the point in a citizen marrying an illegal alien? It is not binding. Just this morning on C-span a lady called in who married an illegal alien from mexico and had 4 children and he was deported. I do not understand.

  5. #5
    Senior Member swatchick's Avatar
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    There are people who marry illegals to make money. Some of them charge as much as $10,000 to marry them for a green card. What is sad is many people in the military are doing it as well. If they are here legally with a green card and join the military they get their citizenship within a year. They marry illegals and go to war. Many of the ones who were in Iraq were killed and the spouse is out of luck as they only applied for them and they have to leave.
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  6. #6
    Senior Member Captainron's Avatar
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    We've got to credit the government with at least doing something about this problem--and others. I would hope, however, that they could collect some fines to help offset the costs of these investigations. Prison sentences are very expensive, which is why in regards to other immigration violations I have questioned sentencing company owners to prison. I would rather see a big fine, so that the public is not burdened--perhaps proportionate to the number of employees involved so that no question of fairness arises.
    "Men of low degree are vanity, Men of high degree are a lie. " David
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    Quote Originally Posted by USPatriot
    Our tax money hard at work,investigating marriage shams, arresting people who have broken our laws,send them to court,get a conviction,put them on probation and instead of automatic deportation they are released and told to self deport ???????

    Give Me A Break !
    How do we change it so that a deportation order means the INS actually physically deports someone?

  8. #8
    Senior Member swatchick's Avatar
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    Not to mention listen to people's complaints about those marriages.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  9. #9
    GOSCOOTIN's Avatar
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    When an illegal joins the military and gets killed, the wife is usually given her citizenship. She does not get deported.
    I don't have a problem with this. He gave his life for our country.
    I'd rather die living then live dying!

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