Carl Shusterman Helps a Teenaged Orphan Become a Green Card Holder
You Tube Video: Canadian Orphan Gains Permission to Join Family in the U.S. (7-23-08)
Guy Taylor’s father died before Guy’s birth. His mother died of a drug overdose in the summer of 1998, leaving Guy an orphan at the age of 16. Not only an orphan, but without a single relative in his native country.
Although Guy was born in Canada, he grew up and attended school not only in Vancouver, but in Southern California where his cousins, his aunt and uncle, and his grandparents resided.
Upon the death of his mother, he called his grandmother, a US citizen, who immediately boarded a flight to Vancouver and gained legal guardianship over Guy through a Canadian court. The Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) granted Guy a temporary “humanitarian parole”.
In the meantime, we pursued every legal means to gain lawful permanent residence or US Citizenship on Guy’s behalf.
Guy, at 16, was a few months too old for adoption by his grandparents to confer any immigration benefits on him. When Guy’s mother was born (in Canada), his grandmother was too young to pass U.S. citizenship to her daughter, much less to Guy. There was a possibility of Guy immigrating as a special immigrant if he were declared a dependent of the juvenile court. However, a Referee refused Guy’s request, ruling that he was ineligible since he had not been abused or abandoned.
We decided to call a press conference to bring Guy’s plight to the attention of the public. Mike Downey, a columnist for the Los Angeles Times, wrote two moving articles about Guy. The second article came to the attention of a prominent U.S. Senator (who introduced it into the Congressional Record).
On January 24, 2000, Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) introduced S.2000, a bill to grant permanent residence to Guy Taylor, in the U.S. Senate. Both the Senate and House of Representatives passed the bill, and when it was signed by President Clinton on November 22, 2000, Guy gained lawful permanent residence in the United States.
Guy’s first step was to enlist in the U.S. Army, in order to, in Guy’s own words, “to serve our country”.