Clients Praise Westwood Lawyer, Daily News Transcript

By Jeb Bobseine, Daily News Staff

 

In 2003, Karen Babayan was stopping international soccer stars like France's Zinedine Zidane from scoring goals.  Five years later, the Armenian-born Babayan coaches at the New England Sports Academy on University Avenue and lives nearby with his family.  That new life, Babayan says, is possible because local lawyer Samia Chandraker took his immigration case.

Chandraker, a Scotland native, opened her first office in Cambridge 11 years ago - after studying at Harvard Law School - before moving to the Westwood area in 2000.  Her clients include New England Sports Academy, Computer Arithmetic, as well as physicians, academics, scientists and others.

One client, Henry Shterenberg, says he couldn't manage without her expertise.  Shterenberg opened the New England Sports Academy in 2003 to offer youth athletic instruction.  Coaches from all over the world make up the staff, said Shterenberg, a refugee from the former Soviet Union. Many are former high-level athletes who he said are extraordinary assets to the United States.  "They're the best in their field," Shterenberg said.  Chandraker helps foreign citizens enter the U.S., get their green card and citizenship papers, he said.

"She's done a phenomenal job. She's never failed."

In 2007, Chandraker took on Babayan's application for a green card. She made his case as an alien of "extraordinary ability," as he played professional soccer in Europe, and for the Armenian national team.  Unlike a professor or researcher seeking permanent status - aliens in the medical field make up half of Chandraker's practice - there is less tangible supporting data for an athlete like Babayan, she explained.  As a result, she loaded the case with statistics, colleague testimonials, and explanations of the nuances of European soccer.

She called the case an "incredible challenge."

Instead of documents and publications, Chandraker said she relied on newspaper articles describing Babayan's athletic prowess; photographs with famous players, including French superstar Zidane; even a National Geographic article arguing for the importance of soccer as a way to "change dialogue between nations."  Babayan, who received his green card in five months, was pleased with the outcome, as well as Chandraker's work.

It took such a short time, he said. "She's very, very smart ... a nice person ... (and she) knows everything," he said. 

Gayane Ghazaryan, another Academy instructor, echoed Babayan.  Ghazaryan has taught dance and gymnastics at the Sports Academy for two years.  Before that she choreographed performances for a dance troupe she started in her native Armenia.  Ghazaryan is waiting for her green card. Chandraker helped prepare her application.

Her case is a bit tougher than Babayan's because it is hard to quantify ones excellence in dance, according to Chandraker. It has fewer international structures and no overarching organizing body, as soccer does, she said.

One of the ways she made the case was to test the market for Ghazaryan's skills by placing ads, through the Sports Academy, to see if any similarly qualified U.S. workers were available.

None were.

Ghazaryan's case highlights one of Chandraker's self-proclaimed strengths. "Transparency of communication" makes her law office different from others, Chandraker wrote in a press release.  To achieve this she, or her associate Meghna Shah, provides detailed one-page monthly case status reports for each client showing how the case is progressing and what the next step will be.

There are these traditional stereotypes in the legal profession, she said. People think of lawyers as arrogant, too busy and inaccessible.  Even with her office handling around 100 cases each year, the hope is her clients don't feel that way, she added. 

"She's a great tool for us to improve people's lives," Shterenberg said. She not only helps the coaches whose cases she handles, but the hundreds of kids they are then able to teach, he added.

Jeb Bobseine can be reached at jeb@walpoletimes.com or 508-668-0243, ext. 13.