Alan Lee, Esq. Q&As published on the World Journal Weekly on June 2, 2024 : 1. After filing form I-485, you are not allowed to leave the US without advance parole 2. If you are not planning to immediately go to the US, don’t file EB-1A too early 3. B visa holders should be wary about submitting adjustment of status applications within 90 days of entering the US. 4. If it has been more than 30 days since you received the email, and you have not yet received your receipt notice, you can request online 5. For personal case inquiries, it is best to contact the USCIS Contact Center

1. After filing form I-485, you are not allowed to leave the US without advance parole 

A reader asks:
I reviewed a copy of my filing papers today and I found two mistakes: 1. There were two addresses one in the United States and the other in China, both of addresses were put down as the present address. My lawyer discovered these problems before and I made the correction.  Unfortunately, the submitted paper was still incorrect. I worry it will affect my I-485 filing, and I must stay in the US for an RFE. 2. The preparer’s signature on the last page of I-485J was signed by my lawyer in 2022, while the previous pages were all dated 2023. I am going back to China next month, and I don’t know whether I should wait in China or not. At present, my lawyer has not responded to me whether it will have any impact. Please tell me, how deadly are the problems?

Alan Lee Esq. answers:
On your first mistake concerning your address on the I-485 application, USCIS will generally send all communications to both you and your attorney, and so if you do not receive a letter from USCIS, your lawyer will most likely inform you of its contents. I will also assume that USCIS believes that you are inside the United States since it did not reject the I-485 application, which can only be filed by individuals physically present in the country. On the second mistake of the I-485J signed by the lawyer in 2022, that is probably not a major problem as the signature date could have been a mistake. Otherwise, USCIS could RFE for a new form. Kindly note that after filing form I-485, you are not allowed to leave the US without advance parole unless on H-1B or L-1 visa.  If not in the 2 classes, leaving without an approved advance parole is grounds for canceling the I-485 application.

2. If you are not planning to immediately go to the US, don’t file EB-1A too early

A reader asks:
I am an associate professor in China, my job is ok, and I can apply for EB-1A, and I think I have a chance to get a green card. Even if I obtain a green card, I am unlikely to go to the United States immediately looking for a job, because my child is only 7 years old, and I plan for him to go to college in the future.  For my child, I want to apply for a green card. I would like to ask, is it too early to apply now?

Alan Lee Esq. answers:
The basis of all employment-based green card applications including EB-1A is that the individual will immigrate to use his or her talent and skill in this country. If you are not planning to immediately go to the US to find a position, then it would appear to be too early for you to apply for EB-1A status. Your concern appears to be your child going to college, and since most children here enter college around the age of 18, that is over 10 years according to your plan. An EB-1A case takes approximately 2-3 years if everything goes well, and so if you made the application now and are successful, you would have to figure out how to maintain your green card for 7-8 years before your child is of an age to enter college in the US.

3. B visa holders should be wary about submitting adjustment of status applications within 90 days of entering the US.

A reader asks:
B chart is current, but I am in mainland China. Does B1 visa holder must submit I-485 after 90 days of entering the United States? My lawyer told me that if the B chart was about to be closed, I could submit I-485 directly even it was within the 90 days period, and it should not be any problem. Will I-485 be approved only when the A chart is current?

Alan Lee answers:
Generally speaking, individuals on B visas should be wary about submitting adjustment of status applications within 90 days of entering the US. Although the 90-day rule has been largely disavowed, many immigration officers may believe the taking steps to submit I-485 applications within a short period of time of entering the States may be indicative of a misrepresentation at the time of entry that the individual had nonimmigrant intent to return to the home country. That being said, you may have misunderstood your lawyer and he or she may have considered the pros and cons and thought that in your case with Chart B of the visa bulletin (dates for filing chart) about to be closed, the better strategy would be for you to file even if within 90 days of entry. If you file for the adjustment of status before Chart B closes, you will have to wait until your priority date exceeds the date on Chart A (final action date chart) of the visa bulletin before your case can be approved.

4. If it has been more than 30 days since you received the email, and you have not yet received your receipt notice, you can request online

A reader asks:
I received an email reminder from the USCIS on January 17 that the filing fee and expedited money for my case have been deducted, but I have not yet received the receipt notice in the mail. The mailing address is the address of my house where my roommate has been. However, I have set up mail forwarding to forward emails to my wife. Now, neither side has received it. Is this normal?

Alan Lee Esq. answers:
I assume that by this time you have already received further word from USCIS, and that your question was sent within 2 weeks of you receiving the email from USCIS in January. If you have mail forwarding, the US Post Office forwards the mail to the location for forwarding. Although it does not forward certain documents from USCIS, it will generally forward a receipt. Please note that it takes time for USCIS to generate a physical receipt to send out, and it also takes the post office time to forward the mail. If it has been more than 30 days since you received the email, and you have not yet received your receipt notice, you can place an eRequest online at https://egov.uscis.gov/e-request/intro.do , then click on “did not receive notice by mail”. Go through the form, fill in all your needed information, and specify that you did not receive your receipt notice.  Hopefully, your situation will be resolved before you need to submit an eRequest, but by submitting an eRequest, you will alert USCIS that you still did not receive your notice.

5. For personal case inquiries, it is best to contact the USCIS Contact Center

A reader asked:
I am in China. About three or four years ago, I submitted I-140 at an immigration agency through a friend’s recommendation. I asked many times during this period, but the other party said that there was no result and it was still pending. I asked the other party for a receipt number, but they refused to give it. I suspected that it was never submitted. In the past few days, I asked the artificial Emma on the official website of the Immigration Bureau to check the receipt number. I changed to 4 different artificial Emmas and provided them with my name, birthday, mailing address etc. They all said that it could not be found in the system.  Is it possible to prove that it was not submitted? My friend said that since it has been submitted for so long, Emma should be able to find the receipt number through my information. Is this true?

Alan Lee Esq. answers:
Emma is not designed to locate applications or petitions for which there is no receipt. For personal case inquiries, it is best to contact the USCIS Contact Center telephonically at 1-800-375-5283 and explain your problem to the USCIS representative. I do note that contact representatives run the gamut from being very patient to impatient and that an impatient one may not be disposed to search the system to see whether a petition for you has been filed. Hopefully upon getting through, the representative will be helpful.