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Youngstown Businessman Jailed, Ordered Deported Two Weeks After Getting a Reprieve

photo of celebration of Al Adi
TIM RUDELL
/
WKSU

In a surprise reversal, U.S. immigration officials took a Youngstown businessman into custody today, less than two weeks after granting him a temporary stay. WKSU’s M.L. Schultze reports on the arrest, which was condemned by a Northeast Ohio congressman and a prominent supporter of President Trump.

Fifty-seven-year-old Amer Adi Othman – known by most in the Youngstown community as Al Adi – was taken into custody without explanation at what he and his family had expected would be a routine check-in with Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Cleveland.

Congressman Tim Ryan, who accompanied Adi to the hearing, said the businessman had been preparing to leave the country two weeks ago.

“He had flights, he had his passport, he had an itinerary, all of which he submitted to the immigration service. And he would leave. If they said he couldn’t stay and he had to go, he would go. But instead, they make a spectacle out of it.” 

Ryan said there's no justification for the arrest or for the U.S. shouldering  the cost of forced deportation in this case. And Ryan's attorney, David Leopold, says ICE refused to let Adi's wife pay for a new plane ticket so he could leave the country -- with her -- voluntarily.

Leopold says he's agreed and disagreed with immigration decisions over the years, but this one was unprecedented.

leopold_terrified_for_our_country.mp3
Leopold calls the decision terrifying for the country

“I may not have agreed with what a judge said or what an ICE agent decided, or what an immigration judge found. But I always understood it. Today I walked out of ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Office in Cleveland not only baffled, but terrified for our country.  

Also accompanying Adi was Mahoning County Republican Party Vice Chair Tracey Winbush, a Trump supporter. In a Tweet, she said she was appalled and added, “If this is how we treat people May God have mercy on our Souls.”

'If this is how we treat people, May God have mercy on our Souls.'

ICE said in a statement that Adi’s case had undergone “exhaustive judicial review.”

The question is whether his first marriage nearly 40 years ago was a sham he used to get a green card. Leopold insists the only issue reviewed was a technical one, not the body of evidence, which includes a second affidavit from Adi's first wife saying she was coerced into declaring the marriage had been a sham.

Adi and his second wife, Fidaa, have four daughters. He owns Downtown Circle Convenience store and is seen as a force for downtown Youngstown development. Leopold says his wife, a U.S. citizen, will leave the country with him. 

M.L. Schultze is a freelance journalist. She spent 25 years at The Repository in Canton where she was managing editor for nearly a decade, then served as WKSU's news director and digital editor until her retirement.