Iranian Christian convert freed after 267 days in immigration detention as church rallies behind him
An Iranian Christian convert known only as "Reza" walked free this week after 267 days in immigration detention, his release secured by a habeas petition filed in federal court.
His pastor, Ara Torosian of the Farsi-speaking congregation Cornerstone West Los Angeles, confirmed the news and said the church sent money to fly Reza from El Paso to Los Angeles.
Torosian told Christianity Today the two planned to share an Iranian meal on Wednesday in Los Angeles. He said he told Reza he was proud of him.
"God did amazing things," Torosian said. The congregation, which he described as not typically emotional, erupted in worship and celebration.
Nine months for a man whose wife already won asylum
The details of this case are worth sitting with. Border Patrol agents detained Reza and his wife, Marjan, on a Los Angeles sidewalk near their home in June of last year. Both are Christians and asylum seekers from Iran. Both were part of Cornerstone West Los Angeles for about a year before their arrest. Torosian captured the arrest on video. During the detention, Marjan had a panic attack and convulsed on the ground.
Marjan was released after 120 days and was granted asylum. A judge determined she had a legitimate claim to protection in the United States. Reza was not so fortunate. His case landed before a different judge, and in November he was granted "CAT withholding" rather than asylum. That designation acknowledged he faced a credible threat of torture in Iran but left him subject to deportation to a third country. He could appeal, but meanwhile, he stayed locked up in New Mexico.
Two different judges. Two different outcomes. One couple.
The system's blind spots
There is a reasonable, necessary conversation to have about border security and immigration enforcement. Conservatives have led that conversation for years, and rightly so. A nation that cannot control its borders is not a nation. But enforcement without discernment is not strength. It is bureaucracy on autopilot.
Torosian said the government lawyer prosecuting the case against Reza did not seem to understand the threats faced by Christian converts from Iran. He said Iranian authorities searched Reza's parents' home for Christian material. Converting from Islam to Christianity in Iran is not a lifestyle choice that carries social stigma. It carries a prison sentence, or worse. The Department of Homeland Security itself has warned of Iranian "sleeper cells" in the US, which underscores the nature of the regime these converts fled.
The irony is thick. The same government sounding alarms about the Iranian regime's global reach held a man for nine months who fled that regime because it wanted to punish him for his faith. His wife's judge saw the threat clearly enough to grant asylum. His judge did not.
According to World Relief's Lauren Rasmussen, two Iranian Christians from a church in Texas are also currently in detention, with one facing deportation orders but appealing. These are not isolated cases.
A church that did what churches do
This past Sunday, Torosian was two points into a six-point sermon when he stopped. He ended the service early and called his congregation to pray. Marjan was among those who prayed. The next morning, Torosian heard from Reza's lawyers that the habeas petition had worked.
"Usually my church is not an emotional church," Torosian said. That changed. He planned to cancel his upcoming Sunday sermon entirely in favor of worship and a celebration of Nowruz, the Persian New Year.
Torosian described Reza as "being a light in that prison" during his 267 days in detention. Whatever one thinks about the legal process that kept him there, the man's pastor saw something in those months that looked less like a threat to public safety and more like a witness.
Enforcement needs wisdom, not just power
Conservatives should not flinch from this story. Supporting strong immigration enforcement and questioning whether that enforcement is being applied wisely are not contradictory positions. They are complementary ones. The entire point of serious border policy is to distinguish between those who threaten the country and those who do not. When the system holds a Christian convert from a hostile regime for 267 days while his wife, arrested on the same sidewalk on the same day, is granted asylum, something in the machinery is misfiring.
Reza's case resolved because his lawyers filed a habeas petition in federal court. That is the system working, eventually. But the question worth asking is why it took nine months and a federal court filing to reach a conclusion that Marjan's judge reached in four.
The church flew Reza home. His pastor bought him lunch. His congregation worshiped. The government moved on to the next case.
That gap between the people who cared and the process that didn't tells you everything.




