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U.N. Employee Charged With Helping Foreigners Enter U.S. Illegally


AP


August 6, 2007


NEW YORK — A United Nations employee was arrested Monday on charges that he and two others used U.N. letterhead to gain permission for foreigners to enter the country illegally, prosecutors announced.

Vyacheslav Manokhin, a U.N. employee based in Manhattan, was accused of helping numerous non-U.S. citizens enter the country illegally by providing fraudulent documents so they could obtain visas to attend conferences that either did not exist or which they did not attend.

The charges in the scheme, which prosecutors said lasted from April 2005 until the present, were outlined in a criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Manhattan.

Manokhin, 45, a citizen of the Russian Federation who lives in Connecticut, was scheduled to appear in court later Monday.

He was charged with conspiracy to commit fraud with regard to immigration documents, a charge which can result in a maximum punishment of five years in prison.

According to court documents, Manokhin used his U.N. position to make it appear as though the U.N. supported the visa applications so that foreign nationals could enter the United States to attend conferences organized by non-government organizations or the United Nations itself.

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August 2007 News




Senator Tom Coburn

Subcommittee on Federal Financial Management, Government Information, and International Security

340 Dirksen Senate Office Building     Washington, DC 20510

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