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Lawmakers
push for mail-order bride restrictions
Posted:
7:32 pm Mon, January 4, 2010
By
Associated Press
ANNAPOLIS
— Maryland lawmakers are pushing for tighter regulations on the mail-order
bride industry.
A
bill sponsored by three dozen House delegates would require the agencies that
pair clients with brides to conduct a criminal background check on prospective
clients.
Del.
Jeannie Haddaway-Riccio, R-Talbot, said the bill would close the loopholes in
current federal law and alert would-be foreign brides, who often come from
poorer countries, of the criminal history of their suitors.
The
federal International Marriage Broker Regulation Act of 2005 requires marriage
agencies to disclose to potential brides the criminal record of interested
clients before they communicate or meet.
Natasha
Spivack, who owns the mail-order bride agency Encounters International, said
the federal law requires clients to only self-report their criminal histories.
Her agency doesn’t do its own search.
Haddaway-Riccio
said such a voluntary system is vulnerable to abuse, and mandatory background
checks are needed to help the foreign brides have a better idea of who they
might marry.
“That
way she can at least make an informed decision,” she said.
The
proposed bill also requires that agencies provide human rights and immigration
information to potential brides in their native tongue.
Women’s
rights groups have been critical of the federal government’s efforts at
enforcing laws regulating the mail-order bride industry. A 2008 report from the
Government Accountability Office, Congress’ investigative arm, found that
overseas brides weren’t getting all the information about their prospective
suitors as required under federal law.
Haddaway-Riccio
pointed to the 2004 jury verdict against Encounters, which was based in
Bethesda at the time but has relocated to the District, as a reason why more
oversight of the mail-order bride industry is needed.
In
the case, the jury ordered Encounters to pay $433,500 to Nataliya Fox, a
mail-order bride from Ukraine who was beaten and threatened by her Virginia
husband. Court records chronicled the abuse committed by Fox’s then-husband
during their marriage, including him biting her finger and holding a gun to her
head.
Spivack
said few of her clients have criminal records and many of them are government
officials. She said the real loophole in federal law is that it allows
foreign-born brides to more easily obtain green cards by falsely accusing their
husbands of abuse. “I would prefer the legislation to concentrate on citizens,
men who are without any protection at this point against false accusations,”
Spivack said.
Courtesy: http://mddailyrecord.com/2010/01/04/lawmakers-push-for-mail-order-bride-restrictions