Q&A’s published on Lawyers.com and the Epoch Times – 3/02/2018 1. From B-2 to F-1 2. Political Asylum Closed Then Get Married 3. Will I Be Able to Get my Citizenship?

1. From B-2 to F-1

I will be entering USA in a b2 visa and this will be my second time there. I am thinking to join a community college there. I have not applied for the college yet. Should I declare in the immigration that I would be applying for college? How can I get a f1 approval and increase my chances of getting a F1.

Mr. Lee answers:
An individual entering the U. S. on a B-2 visa is not supposed to have a preconceived intent to change status to student. U.S.C.I.S. now believes that anyone who attempts to do so within 90 days of entry presumptively had the intent prior to entry and will generally deny the application.

2. Political Asylum Closed Then Get Married

I got denied on political asylum in 2015, then I was back to F1 visa to finish my degree. In 2017, I get married and try to apply for a green card, does the closed political asylum case affect my marriage green card?

I have been in the United States for four years, I have missed my family so much. May I go home after getting my marriage green card or should I apply for an advanced parole? then I can have more possibility to reenter in USA with marriage green card and advanced parole?

Mr. Lee answers:
Assuming that you were in F-1 status at the time of your political asylum case and that U.S.C.I.S. simply closed your case, the case should not have much effect unless you committed fraud or misrepresentation in your application. You should be able to return home after getting your marriage green card. Although I do not think that you would have a problem with advance parole, it might be better for you to wait until obtaining your green card since you expressed fear of returning to your home country in the asylum application.

3. Will I Be Able to Get my Citizenship?

I came to USA in March 2016 with K-1 visa. Me and my fiance got married may 2016. I got my conditional two years permanent residency 05/30/17 which will expire 05/30/19. I am supposed to reapply to remove my condition. But our relationship is not working well and we might get separated very soon. But I would like to stay in US to finish my school and get my citizenship. So I could leave this country and then come back if I want to or if I have to. So my question is, on my current visa status will I be able to stay or get my citizenship even if we got divorce? If yes, how many years it might take approximately?

Mr. Lee answers:
If you gather sufficient evidence to convince U.S.C.I.S. that you have had a bona fide marriage in which you were living together, you can apply to remove the conditional basis of your residence status at any time after you obtain your divorce and before the expiration of your two-year residence on 5/30/19. In the event that the removal of conditions is allowed, you would have to wait 5 years instead of 3 years to submit your application for citizenship. Such would be in 2022, and since the law allows you to submit 90 days ahead of time, you could put in the N-400 application at the end of February or beginning of March 2022.

 

Article “Extorting Protectors Of The Innocent On DACA; I-485 Filing When U.S.C.I.S. Says That You Cannot; H-1B Decisions To Mull Over; Other H-1B Scuttlebutt; Planning Your Litigation According To Circuit” as published in the Immigration Daily on March 1, 2018.

As published in Immigration Daily on March 1, 2018.

Extorting the protectors of the innocent (DACA) and what the future holds – In an attempt to cast himself as mentally sound and show his mastery of the nuances of politics, Donald Trump held a televised meeting with members of Congress on DACA on January 9, 2018, and promised to sign any bill that they sent to him. He then proceeded to extort those interested in saving the protected statuses of the approximate 690,000 DACA recipients in a series of mad tweets decrying any attempt to put together an acceptable bill unless it pushed through his entire anti-immigration package of border wall funding, much tougher immigration enforcement, repealing the diversity visa program, and chopping off most categories of family-based cases. With the failure of the Democratic shutdown of Congress in early February, it has become apparent that no relief bill will pass by March 5, 2018, the ending date of DACA. The Supreme Court’s decision on February 26, 2018, to deny an extraordinary stay of two District Court rulings imposing nationwide injunctions against Mr. Trump’s unilateral stoppage of DACA has given some relief as those with DACA status can continue to apply for extensions of protection and work authorization until the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals renders its decision and the Supreme Court properly takes up the subject on appeal. Where does that leave the DACA recipients? Not in a good place. After the large amount of congressional attention given to the immigration issue in January and February, there is probably little appetite to take it back up given the period of relief afforded by the Supreme Court and the wasted week allotted to immigration issues in mid-February in which the Republicans tried to box the Democrats into politically unpalatable corners and vice versa. There will only be more appetite if the Republicans suffer huge losses in the midterm elections of November and come to the conclusion that they cannot continue supporting the Trump agenda. So unfortunately, the midterms may turn out to be the crucial moment for DACA proponents to turn out the vote. Other issues on which the Republicans are vulnerable in being close to Trump are assault rifles, the Russia investigation, his constant lying, disregard of sexual harassment claims, chaos in the White House, lack of coherent foreign-policy, etc. Immigration advocates cannot only try to persuade voters on the immigration issue alone regardless of how sympathetic the circumstances of the DACA recipients.

I-485 filing despite U.S.C.I.S. suggesting that such would be improper – In September, 2015, the State Department in the interests of attempting to ensure that many numbers of available immigrant visa numbers would not continue to be wasted, came up with the plan to add a second chart for each month to the visa bulletin so that individuals could begin to prepare and file their cases ahead of their visas becoming available. In this way, U.S.C.I.S. and the US consular posts could complete many more cases before the end of the government fiscal year and use up many more of the available immigrant visa numbers than in past years when unused numbers were lost forever. State then introduced Chart A and Chart B, the “Final Action Date” and “Filing Date” charts respectively. U.S.C.I.S. had a voice in stating that it had the authority to decide what chart could be used for filing cases during any particular month. Therefore the practice has evolved that U.S.C.I.S. announces within 7-15 days of State Department issuance of the bulletin which chart it will allow people to use for filing either family or employment based cases. But a strange phenomenon has occurred that U.S.C.I.S. has not addressed either in policy or in its I-485 adjustment of status form instructions – whether one can properly file where U.S.C.I.S. decides to use the “filing date” chart, but that date is less advanced in a category than the “final action date” chart, and the applicant has a priority date that is already available under the latter chart. An example is the visa bulletin for the month of March 2018 wherein the F-3 category for married sons and daughters of US citizens has final action date availability before December 15, 2005, but filing date availability only before December 1, 2005, and U.S.C.I.S. has instructed the use of the latter chart. An applicant with a priority date of December 8, 2005, would properly wonder whether he or she had the authority to file for adjustment of status during the month. It is clear that under the law pertaining to adjustment of status, applicants are allowed to file once the final action date has been reached as §245(a) of the INA permits adjustment of status filing where there is visa availability. This being the case, U.S.C.I.S. should make it clear in either policy or form instructions that filings are allowed. Failure to clarify means that many who are eligible to file during the month may continue to needlessly wait. Also if U.S.C.I.S. has a contrary view, it should immediately state the reasoning behind its interpretation.

H-1B decisions to mull over – U.S.C.I.S.’s Administrative Appeals Office in two non-precedent decisions on January 25, 2018, gave insight as to how it would look at whether the submitted labor condition application (LCA) corresponded with the H-1B petition, especially focusing on H-1B wage levels. The AAO set forth a five-part examination encompassing the following: 

  • Whether the petitioner selected the appropriate SOC code for the proffered position after comparing the petitioner’s duties to those provided in the O*Net.
  • Whether the petitioner’s experience requirements would warrant an increase in the level of pay.
  • Whether the petitioner’s minimum educational requirement as compared to the education requirement contained in Appendix D of the Department of Labor guidance would warrant an increase in wage level.
  • Whether the provided job duties as compared to O*Net are generally encompassed by the O*Net description or whether they require special skills or other requirements beyond those listed in the O*Net which would warrant an increase in pay.
  • Whether any supervisory duties warrant a higher wage level.


The AAO sustained one of the appeals (Matter of B-C-, Inc., ID #1139516 (AAO Jan. 25, 2018)), and in the one denied (Matter of G-J-S-USA, Inc., ID #1182139 (AAO Jan. 25, 2018)) pointed out that the petitioner’s stated minimum education requirement was a Masters degree in finance or related field whereas the requirement contained in Appendix D indicated that the usual education level was a bachelor’s degree. The decisions are a welcome relief in showing the direction that the agency will follow in appeals pertaining to LCA wage levels vis-à-vis job duties, especially in the focus on Appendix D. U.S.C.I.S. adjudicators in the past have seemingly believed that any advanced degree merits another point in wage level. The appendix shows that for a number of occupations, a first professional degree, PhD, or Masters should not increase the entry level wage of the position.

Other H-1B scuttlebutt to watch out for – U.S.C.I.S. signaled in a new policy memorandum on February 22, 2018, its intent to make it even more difficult to obtain approvals for outsourced H-1B workers. The memorandum, “Contracts and Itineraries Requirements for H-1B Petitions Involving Third-Party Worksites” gave background on determining the relationship of employer-employee, referenced U.S.C.I.S.’s mission to protect the interests of U. S. workers, stated that a petitioner must establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the beneficiary will be employed in a specialty occupation and for the entire length of time requested, and that the employer will maintain an employer-employee relationship for the duration of the requested period of time. It then went into graphic detail concerning the many pieces of evidence that it might require to prove such, and added that where an H-1B extension is requested for someone who was placed at one or more third-party worksites, the petitioner should establish that all of the H-1B requirements had been met for the entire prior approval period of time. In the same vein in attempting to curb outsourcing, “The Protect and Grow American Jobs Act,” placing new requirements of American worker recruitment on H-1B dependent companies and increasing the salary level for H-1B workers, passed the House Judiciary Committee in November, but will not likely affect this H-1B season because of the lack of legislative days in Congress and its other pressing concerns. The period for submitting H-1B cap cases this year will be from April 2-6, 2018, assuming that the 85,000 figure is reached within that time. Most practitioners believe that there will be fewer H-1B filings this year due to discouragement of the Trump administration, the many requests for further evidence (RFEs) to H-1B filings in 2017, numerous denials, and the expected strict scrutiny of petitions this year. The silver lining is that with the lesser expected numbers of petitions, the chances of being selected will rise. U.S.C.I.S. has already announced that it does not anticipate that premium processing will be suspended for non-H-1B petitions, and there will be a short suspension of premium processing for H-1B cap subject petitions. In 2017, premium processing for both was suspended for months. It also stated that it was not anticipating any procedural changes for the H-1B cap season.

Planning your litigation according to the circuit court – Sometimes an attorney has the opportunity to pick the forum for immigration court, and may wish to take full advantage to better litigate his or her client’s future case if he or she knows that a critical element may depend upon that person’s state of residence. Clients are often willing to move across state lines if doing so would help their cases. Two recent cases illustrate the importance of residence. A Board of Immigration Appeals decision, Matter of Castillo Angulo, 27 I & N Dec. 194 (BIA 2018), focused on the issue of admission “in any status” to qualify for LPR cancellation of removal in establishing the required continuous presence in the US for seven years. The Board held that in this case arising in the Ninth Circuit (covering Alaska, Washington, Montana, Idaho, Oregon, California, Nevada, Arizona, and Hawaii), an alien who was “waved through” a port of entry had established an admission “in any status” within the meaning of the law, but that this interpretation only applied for cases in the Fifth (covering Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas) and Ninth Circuits and that otherwise, an alien had to prove that he or she possessed some form of lawful immigration status at the time of admission from which to count the seven years. A First Circuit case, Pereira v. Sessions, No. 16-1033 (First Circuit, 7/31/17) illustrated the stop time rule’s applicability where a notice to appear (NTA) in the immigration court did not contain the date and time of the alien’s initial hearing. Under the stop time rule, an alien’s period of continuous physical presence ends for purposes of cancellation of removal when he or she is served with an NTA. The First Circuit believed that the lack of date and time did not nullify the stop time rule. But in contrast, the rule in the Third (covering Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, and the Virgin Islands) and Ninth Circuits would hold the other way. Although the government may decry the reliance on circuit law in some cases citing Brand X (National Cable & Telecomm. Ass’n v.Brand X Internet Test Servs, 545 U. S. 967 (2005)) that the BIA may adopt different interpretations of ambiguous provisions of the immigration laws despite contrary court decisions, and that those interpretations, if reasonable, are entitled to deference, exploring differences in rulings in the circuit courts where the attorney knows what will be a critical issue may mean the difference between the client being allowed to stay or being removed.

Q&A’s published on Lawyers.com and the Epoch Times – 2/23/2018 1. I Am A Mother Having a Permanent Resident Status in The USA. I Have An Unmarried Son To Be Filed As A Relative. 2. What Was The Best/Safe Route to Take On OPT Extension or H-1B? 3. I Am 18 Years Old. I Wanted to Know That If I Get Married to My Boyfriend Will The Age Matter When I Try to Fix For Him?

1. I Am A Mother Having a Permanent Resident Status in The USA. I Have An Unmarried Son To Be Filed As A Relative.

What can we do to get him here as permanent? He is here at present as a visitor. His first sister is a USA citizen.

Mr. Lee answers:
I will assume for purposes of your question that your unmarried son is over the age of 21. As a permanent resident, you can file a petition for him under the F-2B category, and the waiting time would be approximately 7-9 years. He must stay unmarried.  If his sister files a petition for him under the F-4 category for siblings, the waiting time would be approximately 10-12 years. He is not allowed to stay in the country just because either you or his sister files a petition for him.

2. What Was The Best/Safe Route to Take On OPT Extension or H-1B?

I am in F1-OPT status from May 2016, which expired on July 2017. I filed my H-1 in Consular Processing on April 2017, which was picked in lottery and it’s still in progress. As opt expired on July 2017, I approached my college for stem extension before 45 days but my college informed me that I was in CAP GAP till sep 30 and not eligible to apply for stem extension. I do have couple of questions running on my head • Question 1: I applied H1B in counselor processing which doesn’t include change of status, why my cap-gap is initiated; I still had the valid opt? • Question 2: Can I apply for opt-ext on CAP GAP with parallel to H1-ConsularProcess? • Question 3: Do I need to go immediately for stamping after the change of status approved in H1-Consular Process? • Question 4: Will cap-gap extended in case of my H-1B RFE?

Mr. Lee answers:
Where an individual has an H-1B filed on his or her behalf which states that the petition is for consular processing and not for change of status, the cap gap extension does not apply. Your college was wrong in informing you otherwise. It would not appear to have been contrary to the rules for you to request a STEM extension under your circumstances. If the H-1B is approved and the petition was marked for consular processing, you would not receive a change of status. For the H-1B to go into effect, you would have to go outside the US for a visa interview and stamping. 

3. I Am 18 Years Old. I Wanted to Know That If I Get Married to My Boyfriend Will The Age Matter When I Try to Fix For Him?

Mr. Lee answers:
At the age of 18, you are free to marry and sponsor your boyfriend for the green card. I note that you will have to be able to show proof of ability to support or have a cosponsor who can take up the financial burden. Much more important will be a showing that the marriage is bona fide and not entered into for the primary purpose of obtaining your boyfriend’s permanent residence. 

 

Q&A’s published on Lawyers.com and the Epoch Times – 2/16/2018 1. Consulate Interview 2. Re-entry Permit 3. Do the I-94 Record and the Arrival Date for the Foreign Spouse in Form 1-130 Refer to Their Last Entrance in the US?

1. Consulate Interview

I got my interview notice in Cuidad Juarez. I am one month pregnant. Will that be a problem? Should I reschedule my interview until I give birth?  My husband is petitioning for me. 

Mr. Lee answers:
The fact that you are pregnant for one month should not be a problem as there are ways of medical testing on the medical examination that would protect the unborn fetus. Please advise the panel physician’s office before the start of examination.

2. Re-entry Permit

I’m permanent residence since April 2015. My husband is in Pakistan. I have applied for his Visa. My question is if I will take re entry permit so is it necessary for me to be here in USA at the time of his interview? 

Mr. Lee answers:
You must be able to establish domicile in the US at the time of your husband’s immigration. Being in the US would be advisable. Items that might be helpful to prove your US domicile would be job offer letters, US tax returns, US banking statements, ownership of real property, etc. Domicile is important in the immigration process as you must file an I-864 affidavit of support and that form requires that the petitioner have a US domicile.

3. Do the I-94 Record and the Arrival Date for the Foreign Spouse in Form 1-130 Refer to Their Last Entrance in the US?

I am filling out form i-130 and I am not sure if the arrival/departure record for my spouse refer to the last entrance in the US. My spouse first entered as a student in 2011 but is currently on an H1-B (last entry with H1-B). Should we use the most recent arrival record as obtained from the US Customs and Border Protection website? 

Mr. Lee answers:
The I-130 form refers to last entry to the United States, not to earlier entries.

Q&A’s published on Lawyers.com and the Epoch Times – 2/2/2018 1. How to Apply for a Work Permit While Awaiting an Asylum Decision? 2. Can I have Two H-1B Visas at The Same Time? 3. Marriage Visa vs Tourist Visa

1. How to Apply for a Work Permit While Awaiting an Asylum Decision?

I want help to apply for work permit (Form I-765 ) .

Mr. Lee answers:
If your asylum case has been pending 150 days and if you have taken no affirmative steps to delay the process, you are eligible to apply for an employment authorization by filing form I-765 application for employment authorization accompanied by proof that your asylum case has been pending for that amount of time. The application would be sent to either the Dallas or Phoenix lockbox of U.S.C.I.S. depending upon your place of residence.

2. Can I have Two H-1B Visas at The Same Time?

Employer A filed H1b petition last year and it got approved. Employer B filed H1b petition this year and if it gets approved, can I go for stamping through Employer B after stamping is done through Employer A. i.e if I have valid Visa stamp through Employer A, can I still go for Visa stamping through Employer B. Are there any chances of Visa getting rejected through employer B? 

Mr. Lee answers:
You can have two H-1B’s at one time with different employers as long as you are able to perform both jobs. In situations where an individual has an H-1B visa stamp from one employer, and quits and goes to a second employer which has an H1B approval, an H-1B visa stamp for the second employer is not necessary and the individual can travel using the first employer’s H-1B stamp and carrying the current H-1B I-797 petition approval. So given the non-necessity of having 2 distinct visas there, there is the chance that even if you are working for both employers at the same time, a consular officer may believe that it is not necessary for you to have two H-1B visas. A consular officer may also believe that annotating the name of the second employer under the present visa would be enough. Finally if the consular officer believes that there are questions concerning the second H-1B petition, he or she may deny visa issuance. In that case, hopefully nothing that you would have said in the visa interview would cast doubts upon the validity of the already issued H-1B visa.

3. Marriage Visa vs Tourist Visa

My girlfriend for 3 years lives in the Ukraine but has been to my house 2 times on her tourist visa. She has stayed 6 months the first time and 4 months the 2nd time. She is coming back in one month and we planned on getting married here. My question is, after we go to the courthouse and get all licenses and have the ceremony, what would she need to do to begin working legally here? I have a business that she can work at, but want to know the process. 

Mr. Lee answers: 
The tourist visa is not a springboard which individuals should think that they can conveniently use to obtain permanent residence status. To DHS, the thought that someone would have the idea to permanently immigrate and have this intent prior to entry on a tourist visa is anathema as constituting abuse of the visa. Since you have so definite a plan to marry, the recommended path here would be for you to file a K-1 petition for her as a fiancée on form I-129F to have her come over on the proper visa. You would then have 90 days to marry once she arrived. K-1 visa processing takes approximately 6 –9 months.

 

Q&A’s published on Lawyers.com and the Epoch Times – 1/26/2018 1. How to Petition My Son? 2. Asylum Case 3. When Can I file My Naturalization Paper? 4. How Can I Apply for Non-immigrant Work Visa for My Friend?

1. How to Petition My Son?

I’m a green card came here in the U.S. with my 6 years old son but forgot to declare my 1 year old son still in the Philippines. How to petition him?

Mr. Lee answers:
The question is why you forgot to mention your one-year-old son. If it has nothing to do with the basis for your immigration, you could petition for him under form I-130 Petition for Alien Relative. The waiting time would be approximately 2+ years. You can also try the more complicated but shorter way of applying for him under the follow to join category which involves work with the Department of State and US Embassy as long as you were not sponsored as the spouse or parent of a U.S. citizen.

2. Asylum Case

I am Mauritanian nationality I live in Columbus Ohio for 16 months and I have an asylum case at level of immigration and since then I have no response to my box but I have to a work permit that was me for 6 months and I want to know how to restart my box to get an interview and get a result in my box 

Mr. Lee answers:
At this time, U.S.C.I S. is experiencing long delays and backlogs in scheduling asylum cases. You must be patient. In the meantime, you can continue extending your employment authorization. You should also inform the agency if you move.

3. When Can I file My Naturalization Paper?

I’m a green card holder.  Can I file a US citizenship after 3 yrs of continuous stay in the US?

Mr. Lee answers:
Most green cardholders can only file for citizenship after five years. Those who are married to US citizens have the ability to do so after three provided the applicant has held the green card for three years, the US citizen has been a citizen for three years, and the couple has been living together constantly during the three-year period. The law allows such married individuals to file within the 90 day period before the three years if the only unmet condition is the first – not having the green card for the full three years.

4. How Can I Apply for Non-immigrant Work Visa for My Friend?

I live in USA and I have a green card. I want to apply for my friend and his family for non-immigrant work visa which I think can lead to green card. 

Mr. Lee answers:
An individual generally cannot apply for a nonimmigrant work visa for a friend. Usually a work visa involves some type of company sponsorship or the setting up of companies by nonimmigrants from countries having treaties of navigation and commerce with the US, and compliance of the rules for treaty trader (E-1) or treaty investor (E-2) visa.

 

Q&A’s published on Lawyers.com and the Epoch Times – 1/19/2018 1. I Have F-1 Visa. If My Asylum Application Denied, Can I Get OPT? 2. Will A Lawyer Be Able to Help Me With The Process of a Change of Status If I Am Married With an Expired Not Stamped Visa? 3. Do I Qualify As Qualifying Relationship for Hardship? My Boyfriend of 24 Years Is Being Held by ICE.

1. I Have F-1 Visa. If My Asylum Application Denied, Can I Get OPT?

OPT approval needs non-immigrant intent, because it’s a non-immigrant visa. Applying for asylum shows immigrant intent. Can denied asylum affect my chance to get OPT? 

Mr. Lee answers:
If you are still in F-1 status at the time that the asylum application is denied, the denial should not affect your nonimmigrant status and ability to obtain OPT. U.S.C.I.S. questions on immigrant intent are focused on persons who have filed for immigrant visa petitions or immigrant visas or adjustments of status to permanent residence.

2. Will A Lawyer Be Able to Help Me With The Process of a Change of Status If I Am Married With an Expired Not Stamped Visa?

When I entered the states back in 2000 my visa was not stamped and the form I 94 cannot be traced, I went over to an immigration office and I was told that when we file eventually I will Have to Juarez, is there a way that it can be done without me leaving the states? 

Mr. Lee answers:

The normal practice where an individual entered the country legally and has no documentation of entry would be to file an I-102 application to replace an I-94 card. The chances of an entry being located are more where individuals came in by air or by sea. Land border crossings may prove more difficult to prove where a person claims a legal entry. If you are not able to obtain proof of entry, you are not adjustable to permanent residence even if you marry a US citizen unless you have the benefit of §245 (i), under which individuals would have had to have a labor certification application or immigrant visa filed on their behalf by April 30, 2001 and be physically in the country on December 21, 2000.  If you have neither siyuation, you may still be able to obtain permanent residence outside the US by having the I-130 petition approved, filing and seeing the results of an I-601A waiver application while still in the US, and if approved, going outside for a consular interview which would in all likelihood result in an immigrant visa. The I-601A waiver waives the 10 year bar for being illegal in the US for at least one year and is based upon establishing extreme hardship to a US citizen spouse or parent.

3. Do I Qualify As Qualifying Relationship for Hardship? My Boyfriend of 24 Years Is Being Held by ICE.

My boyfriend of 24 years is being held by ICE for aggravated felony in 2009 he came legally in 1991 with his father we met in 1992 and started living together in 1994 had our son in 1996 and daughter in 2001. I have proof of our 24 year relationship. 

Mr. Lee answers:
Whether you can help out your boyfriend will likely depend upon the answer to a number of questions with the first being whether you hold permanent resident or US citizen status, and if so, whether you are willing to be married with him or he with you. Other questions are whether he entered the country legally, and the type of aggravated felony for which he is being held. There is a possibility that certain types of aggravated felonies can be waived when a person is seeking permanent residence in the US. I strongly suggest that you have a consultation with an immigration lawyer to go over your and your boyfriend’s entire situation and see what options may be available.

Article “President Trump – In How Many Ways Does He Hurt This Country? – DACA And More” as published in the Immigration Daily on January 16, 2018.

As published in Immigration Daily on January 16, 2018.

I sit here on Martin Luther King Day wondering what to write and what good it will do. This past week has shown the President of the United States to be an out and out racist. Anyone with an ounce of brain matter knew that he was an inveterate liar second or first to Mr. Putin, but everyone hoped against hope that he was not a racist. That hope was blasted by Mr. Trump’s private White House immigration meeting on a Dreamer (“DACA”) compromise negotiation that included a bipartisan group of lawmakers. As reported by The Wall Street Journal, he asked why the U. S. would want to admit people from Africa, the source of many visa lottery applicants, and said “Why do we want all these people from these shithole countries here? We should have people from places like Norway” according to 2 people; and he also expressed dismay with granting legal status in particular to people from Haiti, saying “What do we want Haitians here for?” according to another person. The juxtaposition of his wishes to have people from Norway, an overwhelmingly white country, and his disdain for people of color as coming from shithole countries of Africa proves the case of racism coupled with his support of the neo-Nazis in Charlottesville, weak response to the disaster in Puerto Rico characterizing the American Latino islanders a burden and cavalierly lobbing paper towels like footballs to its desperate people, painting Mexicans as rapists and drug carriers, ending temporary protected status (TPS) programs for Haitians, El Salvadorans, Nicaraguans, and soon Hondurans, attempting mass deportations of people of color and hoping their U. S. family members follow, and saying previously that the Haitians in the U. S. “all have AIDS” and Nigerian immigrants would never “go back to their huts” in Africa once they had seen the United States. Although Mr. Trump attempted weakly to deny that he said “shithole countries” with backing from his sycophantic immigration hardline senators David Purdue (R-GA) and Tom Cotton (R-AR) after a day of no denial by the White House, the words cannot be walked back, and more truthful senators like Lindsey Graham (R-SC), Dick Durbin (D-IL), and Jeff Flake (R-AZ) stated the truth of what he said.

Where does that leave us? Unfortunately for the country, in a terrible place. It does no good to admonish Mr. Trump and tell him that he is wrecking the country when all he seems to care about is taking care of the wealthy and making the country not “great again” but “white again.” The Dreamers have received a short reprieve from a California federal judge’s ruling in the past week that DACA recipients must retain their work permits and protection from deportation while their lawsuit challenging the decision to end the program progresses. U.S.C.I.S.’s website on January 13, 2018, stated the procedure under which the agency would resume accepting requests to renew a grant of deferred action and that the DACA policy would be operated on the terms in place before it was rescinded on September 5, 2017. In the meantime, Mr. Trump tweeted the next day that DACA is probably dead and blamed the Democratic lawmakers for it. What should Democratic legislators do at this time? The answer is to meet force with force. Today they have leverage to shut down the government on January 19th as Republicans need Democratic support to keep the government running. Kicking the can down the road to March, the Trump administration deadline for DACA, is an exercise in futility as the Republicans even now attempt to undermine the present negotiators with a second set of mainly hardline negotiators.

For everyone else not blinded by his false promises, the country under Trump is becoming a slow-motion avalanche to disaster in which the inequality of income between top and bottom under his recent tax bill will expand greatly risking momentous social upheaval; the monies borrowed for funding the federal budget will be crippling especially in light of the anticipated giveaways to the military, recent tax bill deficit, monies for infrastructure spending, payments for weather disasters, and no curbing of the Social Security program; the deportation and threat of deportation that are causing many to hide leaving a huge hole in the profits of U. S. companies which will not be able to sell goods and services, especially large purchases of homes, cars, and large appliances, to the 11 million undocumented in this country; the real estate market that will begin to tank with urban blight in many cities because of overbuilding, the tax bill ending state and local tax deductions and capping mortgage deductions, and lack of immigrants buying and leaving the cities; the many jobs in hurting industries that are now and will continue to go wanting simply because they are very hard and Americans born here have been trained by TV to see themselves as stars rather than hard laborers; the 4.1% low rate of unemployment meaning that Americans can basically pick and choose from open jobs; the inflation that will come roaring back as the government begins running the printing presses wildly to cover the deficit spending; and the cost of goods that will skyrocket making any wage gains by the middle class passé as items like hamburger meat sell for $10 a pound and a loaf of bread for $12. On top of that, Mr. Trump has made the U. S. and American companies unpalatable to the African continent, which translates into less U. S. business with a continent rich in natural resources and providing no counterweight to China, which has made Africa a focal point of its foreign-policy. The U. S. State Department diplomatic corps will not be able to assist as it has been tremendously weakened by the slashing and other leaving of personnel and the constant undermining of Secretary of State Tillerson by Mr. Trump so that many doubt that he speaks for the Administration.

While Mr. Trump may have recently passed his medical, no information was available on the tests administered, much less whether any were given pertaining to his mental state. His temperamental attitude, constantly repeated phrases, and continual vacillation on decision-making are tremendously worrisome to many professionals in mental health, and especially as he has his finger on the nuclear football and has made outlandish threats against North Korea for its missile launches.

In this writer’s opinion, there will soon be a tipping point for America in which the momentum will be too great to stop the rolling catastrophe. The 2018 midterm elections offer the nation a chance to tell the Republicans that they should separate themselves from Mr. Trump as it appears that the party is in thrall to him and the red state base that he brings. Is that the solution? No, but at least it’s a start.

Q&A’s published on Lawyers.com and the Epoch Times – 1/12/2018 1. Renewal of Driver’s License 2. H-1 Cap Exemption Without Change of Status 3. During My Asylum Case is Pending, Can I Work With EAD and Keep My F-2 Visa? 4. C1/D Visa

1. Renewal of Driver’s License

My driving license has expired 6 days back. I am on a work VISA and my company has applied for an extension of my VISA. The petition is still under review and I have received a receipt notice of action. But the DMV will not accept the I797C receipt notice to renew my license even though I am legally allowed to stay in the United States for no later than 240 days or till the time my petition is approved or denied. How can I get a temporary drivers license? 

Mr. Lee answers:
Your petitioning organization may consider putting in an application for premium processing on form I-907 if the petition is eligible for expedited processing. The cost is $1225, but U.S.C.I.S. promises to reach your case for adjudication within 15 calendar days of receiving the request.

2. H-1 Cap Exemption Without Change of Status

Currently I am on H-4 on maternity leave. My company is filing for H1 cap exemption without change of status since I am still in maternity leave. I have 2 queries as below: 1) Can the H1 cap exemption be filed without change of status? 2) If the petition is approved do I need to exit US and come back with the stamping. 

Mr. Lee answers:
An H-1B cap exempt petition can be filed without a change of status. However, when the petition is approved, the beneficiary must go outside the US for consular processing and return in order to be legal under H-1B status. In order to be under H-1B status without exiting, the change of status must be requested when the petition is filed.

3. During My Asylum Case is Pending, Can I Work With EAD and Keep My F-2 Visa?

I am visa F-2 holder. My wife has just started PhD program. I applied for religion asylum and recently got my EAD. I want to keep my F-2 status because if my asylum case would be denied, I can stay in the US legally with F-2 visa. The university consultant told me if I work with my EAD I will not be F-2. However an attorney told me you are F-2 whether use your EAD or not. It is confusing. 

Mr. Lee answers:
An F-2 holder is not allowed to work, even under an EAD. So if you work under the EAD, you would violate your F-2 status. If you wish to maintain your nonimmigrant status, you should not work.  There does not actually appear to be much controversy over the policy.  

4. C1/D Visa

My daughter’s father works for Royal Caribbean international as engineer with a C1/D visa . He also has a B1/B2 visa. He is signing off his ship on Dec 29 in Jamaica on his C1/D visa . Can he fly directly to the USA on his B1/B2 visa to stay in the US for 3 weeks with his family until he is schedule to join the ship January 16 in Fort Lauderdale? He is a Romanian Citizen.

Mr. Lee answers:
A C1/D visa presents the situation where the individual is in transit in the US (C-1) to join the ship (D). That does not appear to be your daughter’s father’s intent when he enters the US. As he has a B-1/B-2 visa, he can explain his situation to the immigration inspector at the airport when he arrives. I believe that he would be admissible under the B1/B2 visa for the purpose that you described.

 

Q&A’s published on the World Journal Weekly – 1/7/2018 1. Am I Eligible to File for Naturalization Where I Have a Tax Payment Agreement with IRS? 2. What Do My H-4 Wife and 2 Children Do In The Situation Where My First Employer Filed Her Extension Papers Late, And I Am Now With a New Employer on the Pending Transfer? 3. Can My Husband Go To Another U. S. Consulate For F-2 Visa Processing? 4. Does My Husband Have to Return to the Consulate in Jamaica to Turn in His H-2B Temporary Worker Visa If He Already Filed His Application to Adjust Status in the United States?

1. Am I Eligible to File for Naturalization Where I Have a Tax Payment Agreement with IRS?

I did not pay my U. S. taxes from 2012-2015, was audited, and I have entered into a tax payment agreement with the Internal Revenue Service. I am current on my payment obligations under the agreement. Am I allowed to file for naturalization at this time?

Dear reader,
The N-400 form for naturalization not only asks whether a person owes any overdue taxes, but if the person has ever not filed a tax return since becoming a lawful permanent resident. I assume that you would be answering at least yes to the second question. The answer may well depend upon your motive for not having paid the taxes for those years. If intentional and you knew that the taxes were owed, you may have committed tax evasion, which is a crime. Admission of such even without a conviction may cause a denial of a naturalization application based upon lack of good moral character. As an immigration lawyer, I do not profess to have knowledge of criminal law, and can only quote from a website that states “Criminal tax evasion involves not only not paying your taxes, but also demonstrating a willful attempt to avoid paying and taking specific actions to avoid generating financial paperwork. These specific actions include tricks such as putting your assets in another person’s name, or receiving pay under the table to avoid getting a W-2.”  For naturalization purposes, an individual must maintain good moral character for the period of time for which good moral character is required. Where an individual is applying for citizenship on the basis of 3 years (marriage to a U. S. citizen for 3 years, the U. S. citizen having citizenship for 3 years, and living together constantly during the 3 years), the period of good moral character is 3 years. Otherwise the period of time required is 5 years.

2. What Do My H-4 Wife and 2 Children Do In The Situation Where My First Employer Filed Her Extension Papers Late, And I Am Now With a New Employer on the Pending Transfer?

I was with the employer A, my original H-1B sponsoring company, with expiration date of April 21, 2017. Employer A filed for my extension in April, but his lawyer did not put in my wife and the kids, and only filed for her extension when I asked about it in July 2017. In the meantime, I got another job offer from employer B, who put in H-1B transfer papers for me and the process is still pending. In the meantime, nothing else was done for my wife. What should happen now? Can I remedy the situation?

Dear reader,

In your situation where your dependents already have an H-4 extension pending and you have a new H-1B transfer process with another employer, I believe that the best move at present would be for your spouse or lawyer who filed the H-4 extension to speak with the National Customer Service Center of U.S.C.I.S. (1-800-375-5283) and ask to have the pending H-4 reattached to your pending H-1B. If that does not work, you may think about filing new H-4 extension papers for your family with an explanation of the circumstances of the late filing and of the pending H-4 extension with the prior H-1B petition.

3. Can My Husband Go To Another U. S. Consulate For F-2 Visa Processing?

I am a student in the United States, and went home to China to get married in January 2017. Afterwards, my husband began to apply for F-2 dependent status to join me in the United States. He said that he would only be staying with me for a short period of time before returning to his work. After interview, the consul office gave him a paper instead of a visa and said they needed to do background checks. In April, he was called for another interview, asked a few questions, and told that more checks remain to be done. It is now been 8 months after the 2nd interview without word although we keep trying to check with the consul office. Now my husband is being transferred by his company to South Korea. Can he now apply for the F-2 visa in that country? We were informed that such could not be done. 

Dear reader,
Whether your husband can apply successfully for the F-2 visa in South Korea instead of China may depends upon the view of the interviewing officer. Under the current system of nonimmigrant visas where the DS-160 application form is available to all consular officers anywhere in the world, a consular officer may believe that he or she has enough information to make the adjudication. On the other hand, the consular officer in South Korea may believe that he or she is not sufficiently familiar with local conditions in China and may further believe that the consulate in China is more knowledgeable and the decision should be made by them. The bottom line is that your husband can make the application, but should be prepared for a response that he should seek the visa in his home country.

4. Does My Husband Have to Return to the Consulate in Jamaica to Turn in His H-2B Temporary Worker Visa If He Already Filed His Application to Adjust Status in the United States?

I met my husband when we were both working at a lobster restaurant in Massachusetts. I was a waitress and he was working in the kitchen under the restaurant’s H-2B visa program for summertime help. We became serious and married at the end of the season in September. The restaurant kept telling him that he had to go back home to turn in his visa at the American consulate. After we got married, we filed for my husband’s adjustment of status application to permanent residence. We now have the receipt, and my husband will go for his fingerprints appointment in 2 weeks. But we’re still worried as to whether he should have to go back home to return the visa. What should we do?

Dear reader,
It is understandable why the restaurant has the attitude that its temporary workers should go back home. It may be worried that it will receive a black mark for any worker who overstays when it again tries to participate in the program for the next year. Legally speaking, however, an individual applying for adjustment of status to permanent residence is not obligated to leave the US to turn in a nonimmigrant visa of the H-2B variety. Your husband can stay and adjust status as long as he is otherwise eligible for the privilege, e.g, has not committed crimes, does not have any problems with mental disorder, drug addiction, alcoholism, is not a member the Communist Party or any terrorist organizations, etc.