Convicted NH woman might be sent back to Rwanda

By LYNNE TUOHY | –

 

*
<http://news.yahoo.com/photos/april-12-2012-file-photo-beatrice-munyenyezi-l
eaves-photo-212632635.html> Description: In this April 12, 2012 file photo,
Beatrice Munyenyezi leaves the federal courthouse in Concord, N.H., after a
mistrial in a case on whether she lied about her role in the 1994 Rwanda
genocide to obtain U.S. citizenship. On Thursday Feb. 21, 2013 a jury
convicted Munyenyezi of lying about Rwanda genocide to get U.S. citizenship.
U.S. District Judge Steven McAuliffe stripped her of her citizenship and
ordered her detained until her sentencing, scheduled for June 3. Her lawyers
said they will appeal. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)View PhotoIn this April 12, 2012
file photo, …

CONCORD, N.H. 

A woman convicted of lying about her role in the 1994 Rwanda genocide to
obtain U.S. citizenship could be sent back to her native country. A federal
judge stripped Rwanda native Beatrice Munyenyezi of her U.S. citizenship
after a jury convicted her on Thursday of two counts of masking her role in
the genocide to gain refugee status and ultimately citizenship. Munyenyezi,
43, is back behind bars, where she spent 22 months between her indictment in
2010 and the jury deadlocking in her first trial last year. She was released
to home confinement in Manchester the month after that mistrial. She faces
up to 10 years in prison when sentenced in June and could face deportation
back to Rwanda, an impoverished African country, if her appeals fail. Her
lawyers say deportation to Rwanda amounts to a death sentence for her.

"She's going to get sent back to Rwanda now, and they'll kill her," defense
attorney David Ruoff said after the verdict. "(U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement) will send her back in a heartbeat."

Ruoff said he and attorney Mark Howard plan to appeal her conviction to the
1st Circuit Court of Appeals. He said he doubts that, even if she gets out
of prison before the appeal is decided, she would be deported before the
court rules.



Munyenyezi brought her three daughters to the United States in 1998 and
focused on providing a life and home for them. She landed a $13-an-hour job
at Manchester's Housing Authority, enrolled her children in Catholic school
and was on her way to financing a comfortable American lifestyle through
mortgages, loans and credit cards before filing for bankruptcy protection in
2008. Jurors deliberated for less than five hours Thursday before convicting
Munyenyezi on two counts of fraudulently obtaining her U.S. citizenship
status. The first count alleged she denied any role in the genocide or
affiliation with any political party at the time. The second count alleged
she was ineligible for citizenship because she entered the United States
unlawfully by making the same false statements on her refugee and green card
applications. Federal prosecutors during the second trial changed their
witnesses and strategy, focusing less on violent acts she was accused of
committing and more on showing she lied when she denied affiliation in any
political party. Instead of relying on a handful of Rwandan prisoners
serving life sentences for murders and rapes during the genocide,
prosecutors brought in Butare residents who placed Munyenyezi at a roadblock
where Tutsis were identified by the ethnicities listed on their Rwandan ID
cards and ordered killed. Other witnesses testified they saw her in the garb
worn by leaders of the extremist Hutu political party, the MRND. Upon
hearing the guilty verdicts, Munyenyezi put her head down on the defense
table and wept loudly. Her 18-year-old daughter sobbed as she left the
courtroom; her two other daughters were not in court. The only comment made
by Assistant U.S. Attorney John Capin outside court Thursday was: "She's
guilty."The same team of prosecutors in Munyenyezi's case secured a
conviction against her sister last summer in Boston on charges of
fraudulently obtaining a visa to enter the United States by lying about her
own Hutu political party affiliations.
 
The sister also was convicted of perjury and obstruction of justice related
to her immigration court testimony. She was sentenced to 21 months in
federal prison in Connecticut. Munyenyezi's husband and his mother were
convicted by the International Criminal Tribunal on Rwanda and sentenced to
life in prison in June 2011 for genocide, crimes against humanity and war
crimes of violence. They were deemed to be high-ranking members of the Hutu
militia party that orchestrated savage attacks on members of the rival
Tutsis. The mother was a cabinet minister in the Hutu-dominated Rwandan
government when the genocide began in early April 1994.
--------------------------
Associated Press

 

           Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni and Dr. Kiiza Besigye Uganda is in anarchy"
           Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni na Dk. Kiiza Besigye Uganda ni katika machafuko"

 

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