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Youngstown Businessman Gets A Repreive From Deportation

Amer Othman Adi in his downtown Youngstown business
Congressman Tim Ryan's office

Youngstown entrepreneur and downtown business owner Amer Othman Adi is not leaving the country this weekend. Immigration authorities had ordered him deported because of questions about the legality of his entry into the U.S. 39 years ago.  But, a groundswell of local support for Adi backed them off, for now.

The government says Adi married a U.S. citizen when he came to America, got a green card, then the couple divorced; it maintains the marriage was a sham. Although he offered evidence for years that the nearly three year marriage was real, he was finally ordered to leave. 

But now, area Congressman Tim Ryan says immigration officials are agreeing to stay deportation and review the case. He says grassroots pressure was key to the change and he saw first-hand why.

“It was really the most amazing experience. I was with him for a couple of hours in the back of his store. Here was a Palestinian man being greeted all morning long by black people, white people, brown people, gay people, straight people, Catholic, Baptist, Democrat, Republican, all coming in supporting this man and his family.”

Ryan says the decision in Washington to not carry out the deportation until taking another look at the facts -- and considering the human dimensions of the case--  is a breakthrough.

youngstown_stay_ryan_cc_tpr.mp3
Congressman Tim Ryan on stay decision

“You know, he really didn’t do anything wrong.  And that just needs to be born out through a judicial process.  Which he’s never had.  The man has never had his day in court.  Which I think, at the end of the day, was the big argument that stuck.  You can’t just deport someone who has not been given an opportunity to give their side of the story.”

The Congressman says the Judiciary Committee may get involved at some points in setting up a process for handling the Adi case.