Q&A’s published on Lawyers.com and the Epoch Times – 3/30/2018 1. Do I Have to Go to My Country to Get My Residence? 2. How Can I Change My Records at USCIS? 3. I Am in B-1/B-2 Visa Status, How Can I Change to The Other Visa?

1. Do I Have to Go to My Country to Get My Residence?

I been here for 16 yrs no criminal record I came here illegal.

Mr. Lee answers:
Generally speaking, an individual who is here for 16 years without more would have to go to his or her home country to obtain permanent residence. There are exceptions, such as those who are granted political asylum or who have the benefit of section 245(i), under which individuals who had a labor certification or immigrant visa petition filed by April 30, 2001, and are able to prove physical residence on December 21, 2000, are allowed to adjust status upon the payment of a fine amount of $1000 if they have a basis to immigrate. Persons here 10 years with good moral character may be allowed to stay through cancellation of removal, but would have to prove exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to a U. S. citizen or permanent resident spouse, parent, or child under the age of 21 and unmarried. That application is done before an immigration court and not U.S.C.I.S., which usually means that failure results in an order of removal. I note that a return to the home country where an individual has a basis to immigrate usually involves a 10 year bar against return, and the applicant would have to obtain a waiver of the bar to safely return. Such would involve the filing of an I-601 waiver of excludability after being rejected for the immigrant visa, or an advance filing of a provisional I-601A prior to consular processing for those who are eligible for it. The standard of both I-601 and I-601A waivers is the establishment of extreme hardship to the qualifying family member who must be a US citizen or LPR spouse or parent. As I-601A allows the individual’s application to be processed while waiting in the U.S., but an I-601A only waives the ground of being illegal in the U.S., not fraud or crimes, etc.

2. How Can I Change My Records at USCIS?

I want to add my wife and children to my status of permanent resident before applying for citizenship? I didn’t list them when applying for green card.

Mr. Lee answers:
The question is why you did not add them at the time that you were applying for the green card. If it had something to do with the way that you immigrated and would contradict the category under which you were eligible, such adding on might result in the revocation of your permanent residence. If not relevant to your immigration, you can add them onto the N-400 application for citizenship and explain the situation to the immigration examiner at your naturalization interview. Dependent upon whether you intended fraud or misrepresentation at the time that you applied for your immigration, you can answer in the affirmative or not on that question in the naturalization application. An affirmative answer could impact your permanent residence.

3. I Am in B-1/B-2 Visa Status, How Can I Change to The Other Visa?

Mr. Lee answers:
You would have to have an alternate status to which you could change in order to ask U.S.C.I.S. for a status change. Such would be requested on form I-539 application to change/extend status in the U. S. 

Article “New Pathway To Permanent Residence Opening Soon” as published in the Immigration Daily on May 23, 2017.

As published in the Immigration Daily on May 23, 2017. 

Despite all the gloomy news about immigration ala Trump, U.S.C.I.S. is preparing to bring into the U. S. ambitious immigrants and their families to begin the road towards permanent residence. They will be given up to 5 years of legal stay to accomplish their purpose. The entrepreneur parole rule will come into effect on July 17, 2017, for individuals hoping to begin the next generation of innovative startups. Is this the new hope for China EB-5 investors stuck under a 6-8 year backlog or another option for all investors? U.S.C.I.S. and experts in the field have many times interchanged the terms “investor” and “entrepreneur” in describing participants in the EB-5 program. It remains a possibility that some investors may qualify, but most would likely not in light of the different requirements of the new program. The conditions are:

  • Within the 18 month period prior to filing the application for parole, the entrepreneur received a qualified $250,000 from one or more qualified investors, or
  • $100,000 through one or more qualified government grants or awards.
  • If an applicant only partially satisfies either one of the 2 above conditions, he or she can provide other reliable and compelling evidence of the startup entity’s substantial potential for rapid growth and job creation.

The amount of money is certainly not intimidating compared to the current amounts required for the EB-5 program and especially the levels being discussed in U.S.C.I.S.’s proposed regulations of January 13, 2017 (raising investments for targeted employment areas (TEAS) from $500,000 to $1.3 million and all other investments from $1 million to $1.8 million). However, the huge hurdle is that the investment must come through a qualified U. S. investor . A “qualified investor” is defined as a U. S. investor who in the past 5 years has made investments in startup entities of no less than $600,000 and at least 2 of the entities created at least 5 qualified jobs or generated at least $500,000 in revenue with average annualized revenue growth of at least 20%. U.S.C.I.S. made clear that it is looking for established U. S. investors such as venture capital firms, angel investors, or start up accelerators. The qualified investor also cannot be closely related such as the entrepreneur himself or herself, parent, spouse, child, or sibling, or any entity where the entrepreneur or relative has an ownership interest. But for those who qualify, they can obtain up to 5 years of entrepreneur parole, and may put themselves in line for permanent immigration through the EB-2 National Interest Waiver (NIW) category.

The national interest waiver category was created with the Immigration Act of 1990 to allow EB-2 immigrant visa classification including waivers of the job offer requirement if in the national interest to members of the professions holding advanced degrees or their equivalent, and to individuals who because of their exceptional ability in the sciences, arts, or business would substantially benefit prospectively the national economy, cultural or educational interests, or welfare of the United States. Section 203(b)(2)(B) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) allows a waiver where it will substantially benefit prospectively the national economy, cultural or education interests, or welfare of the United States. The precedent decision of Matter of New York State Department of Transportation, 22 I & N Dec. 215 (Comm., 1998) (“NYSDOT” ) stated 3 requirements to be met before a waiver could be granted – that the waiver applicant had to seek employment in an area of substantial intrinsic merit; that he or she had to demonstrate that the proposed benefit to be provided would be national in scope; and that he or she had to demonstrate that it would be contrary to the national interest to potentially deprive the prospective employer of the services of the waiver applicant by making available to U. S. workers the position sought by the waiver applicant. Under this reading, many NIW applicants were simply denied on the basis that the applicant could not demonstrate that non-allowance of the waiver for labor certification would damage the national interest. Recently however, the NIW has become more intriguing and accessible with the demise of NYSDOT in Matter of Dhanasar , 26 I & N Dec. 884 (AAO 2016) on December 27, 2016. There is now a new three-part test:

  • Whether the work that the person would be doing has both substantial merit and national importance. 
  • Whether the person is well-positioned to advance the proposed work.
  • Whether the requirement for a labor certification is impractical, e.g. entrepreneur, or if there is availability of U. S. workers, whether on balance it still would be sufficiently beneficial to the country to allow an NIW to be approved.

This new interpretation does not require either harm to the national interest or a comparison against U. S. workers in the field. An unpublished decision of the AAO on the same date that Dhanasar was issued is instructive on how the new standards would apply to entrepreneurs.

Matter of E-C-H- (AAO 12/27/16) featured an entrepreneur wanting to serve the U. S. veterans’ community by forming his own small consulting firm through which he would undertake projects aimed at improving veterans’ services and wounded warrior care. In approving the petition, the AAO found that substantial merit was proven by letters from prospective clients, a business plan for the company, and submitted news articles and research reports describing the plight of returning veterans and the necessity of ensuring adequate services for their physical and emotional well-being. National importance was proven by probative expert letters describing the importance of effective programs for U. S. troops upon returning home and transitioning to civilian life along with submitted news articles and other evidence documenting gaps in veterans’ health services and discussing the federal government’s initiatives. The AAO found that the petitioner was well-positioned to advance the proposed endeavor through his numerous support letters describing his expertise and record of success in his past work relating to Veterans Affairs, a detailed business plan, and communications from several prospective clients expressing their eagerness to use his services. Finally in balancing the factors to determine the waiver’s benefit to the United States, the AAO cited the petitioner’s experience in the field, the immense value of improving programs and assisting organizations that provide support and advocacy for U. S. veterans and wounded warriors, and that, based on the petitioner’s intention to start a consultancy firm through which he would be self-employed, it would be impractical for him to obtain a labor certification.

Dhanasar is new and E-C-H- is only illustrative of how the Dhanasar factors can apply in an entrepreneur case for NIW immigration. Entrepreneurs under parole may certainly have vastly different situations that U.S.C.I.S. will approve as long as they meet the 3 requirements of Dhanasar. Lending credence to the belief that many deserving cases will be approved is that most if not all of the petitioners will have been prescreened by the “Shark Tank” environment through which entrepreneurs must pass to gain funding for their projects under the parole rule – that experienced outside investors sufficiently believe in the innovative vision of the individual, which is certainly encouraging not only for entrepreneurs seeking parole but also NIW classification.

Insofar as mainland China and India born are concerned, the new pathway likely requires a legislative fix before it becomes truly useful. The impediment is the EB-2 category itself which is backlogged at present to cases filed by March 1, 2013 for China and July 1, 2008 for India (Although the time indicated for China EB-2 is 4 years plus, visa chart time does not correlate to calendar time, and it may take longer than 5 years for the category to advance 4 years in chart time). U.S.C.I.S.’s suggestion that paroled individuals may apply for any nonimmigrant classification for which they may be eligible is not a good solution in light of the lottery aspect of H-1B’s and the high requirements of O-1 extraordinary aliens in the sciences and business. Either the NIW must have a separate quota of its own, or the time under parole must be extended under a device such as in the American Competitiveness in the 21st Century (AC-21) which allows H-1B holders to stay past the maximum time allowed as long as they either have a labor certification application filed 365 days or an I-140 approval. Under NIW, no labor certification is involved as petitioners directly apply for I-140 approvals. The second solution appears more doable as it mostly involves adding words such as “entrepreneurs under parole” alongside H-1B holders. Either action would allow more utility of the new pathway to nationals of two countries known for the scientific and entrepreneurial acumen of their nationals.

Q&A’s published on Lawyers.com and the Epoch Times – 3/23/2018 1. What Forms Do I Need to File to Bring My Wife to America? 2. Family Based Green Card 3. I Want to Bring a Young Man From Overseas to America for My Business

1. What Forms Do I Need to File to Bring My Wife to America?

I met my girlfriend in American while attending the same University. She was an international student from Mexico. I am an American citizen. We plan to marry in Mexico and bring her to America to eventually apply for a green card.

Mr. Lee answers:
If you marry in Mexico, you could take steps to bring her to the U. S. by filing form I-130 petition for alien relative with U.S.C.I.S. If you are holding legal status in Mexico, you may have the choice of whether to file with U.S.C.I.S. in Mexico instead of the Chicago lockbox of U.S.C.I.S. The agency has offices in Mexico City, Ciudad Juarez, and Monterrey. The reason for which individuals may wish to file at U.S.C.I.S. offices overseas is the usually shorter period of waiting for the spouse to immigrate. 

2. Family Based Green Card

I’m a green card holder since 2015 and would like to know what is the process to bring my parents and brother to live in USA with me. My parents turn 65 yrs this year and my brother will turn 36. I’m single and they live in Mexico.

Mr. Lee answers:
You would have to be a U. S. citizen to assist your parents and your brother to permanently immigrate to the U. S.  You would file I-130 petitions for alien relative for all of them at the Chicago lockbox of U.S.C.I.S. when you become a citizen. Based upon today’s situation, processing for your parents would take approximately one year and your brother 11-12 years. If your brother has alternate ways of immigration, he may wish to explore those in light of the long period of time that it will take him to immigrate. 

3. I Want to Bring a Young Man From Overseas to America for My Business.

I need to know the process and how to fill out the paper work correctly. Can you help?

Mr. Lee answers:
The process would depend upon the qualifications of the young man, your business, and your aims. He may be eligible for a nonimmigrant visa or permanent green card depending upon the above. You should seek a consultation with an immigration lawyer to go over the options. 

Q&A’s published on Lawyers.com and the Epoch Times – 3/16/2018 1. What Can Be Done to Reverse a Deportation? 2. How Do You Start Employment Base Immigration Process? 3. L-2 Extension

1. What Can Be Done to Reverse a Deportation?

My brother was refuse entry today and is being processed for deportation for no apparent reason what can be done?

Mr. Lee answers:
If your brother believes that his summary removal at the port of entry was wrong, he could write to the port director asking that the removal order be rescinded. Otherwise he would have to file a waiver of the removal and have it approved (form I-212) before coming back to this country.

2. How Do You Start Employment Base Immigration Process?

I need a lawyer close to me to start legal work and help me with the paper work. He is very intelligent young man and wants to come over and work for my small business.

Mr. Lee answers:
Starting with a lawyer who is conversant with immigration law is a good place to start. The proximity of a lawyer to you in an employment based case is usually not very relevant. Most applications are remotely processed and not handled by the local field offices of U.S.C.I.S. except for green card interview, which usually occurs after the I-140 immigrant petition is approved at a USCIS regional Service Center. Nonimmigrant work cases are taken care of by one of the regional service centers of Immigration and permanent labor certification cases are for the most part e-filed and adjudicated by the Department of Labor in Atlanta. So pick a lawyer in whom you have some confidence regardless of the physical distance in miles between you. 

3. L-2 Extension

Both my L2 Visa & I-94 is valid till 1/2019 And L2-EAD is valid till 3/2018 Spouse’s L1 Visa validity is till 5/2018 And I-94 till 6/2018 (L1 & L2 are yet to apply for extension soon) Please do advise on applying for L2-EAD extension, Can I apply for L2-EAD extension now or should I wait for extended L1 & L2 Visas to come. is there Premium/expedite process available? Please guide me with available options, how to do.

Mr. Lee answers:
Your EAD is dependent upon your husband’s status. If his date is limited to June 2018, and a trip outside the U. S. and reentry would not further extend his date to January 2019, any EAD extension that you would do at this time would be limited to June 2018. Your husband and you can apply for L-1/L-2 extensions if the ending date of the I-797 approval is within 6 months of being reached. Premium processing on L-1 extensions is allowed although not on the I-539/EAD applications. If such are filed together, however, there is a possibility that the L-2/EAD may also be expedited under premium processing. 

Q&A’s published on Lawyers.com and the Epoch Times – 3/9/2018 1. How Long Will It Take to Fix My Boyfriend Papers After We Get Married? 2. What Do I Need to Do to Become a Permanent Residence of This Country? 3. Adopt a Foreign National

1. How Long Will It Take to Fix My Boyfriend Papers After We Get Married?

My boyfriend currently has a social security unity issued by the dream act, he entered the United States when he was younger, doesn’t remember how he entered. We plan on getting married and was wondering how long the process would take for him to become a resident. I am a U.S citizen and get has a clean record.

Mr. Lee answers:
In order to adjust status to permanent residence in the US without leaving based upon marriage to a US citizen, he would have the burden of proof to show that he entered the country legally. If he is able to do so, he would likely have an interview with U.S.C.I.S. within 10-11 months after filing. Without legal entry, your boyfriend/future husband would have a more difficult route involving consular processing and the filing of a provisional I-601A waiver application after the approval of an I-130 petition for alien relative. The waiver application is based upon establishing extreme hardship to you if he could not return. Your husband would stay in the US during the time of the filing and adjudication of the waiver, and if approved, complete his consular processing in his homeland. Such processing would take between one and a half year to two years.

2. What Do I Need to Do to Become a Permanent Residence of This Country?

My wife who is a US citizen abandoned me before our interview on USCIS for my adjustment of status (to become a lawful permanent residence). It’s been 5 years that I haven’t heard anything from her. Does filing a divorce will help me reapply or appeal for my case. What do I need to do so I can be a permanent residence of this country?

Mr. Lee answers:
In your situation, it does not appear that you will be able to gain permanent residence through any relationship with your wife. I suggest that you look for other options. A good beginning point is to seek a formal consultation with a knowledgeable immigration lawyer. 

3. Adopt a Foreign National

I am a United States citizen by birth. If I adopt a foreign national, does that automatically give the adoptee citizenship in the United States?

Mr. Lee answers:
In adopting a foreign national, you would have to go through a process with U.S.C.I.S. and usually US consulate overseas if the child is located in another country. Orphans from most countries would have to be adopted in accordance with the Hague convention. Otherwise they must be adopted by the age of 16, and you would have to be able to establish both legal and physical custody for two years prior to submitting a petition to U.S.C.I.S.

Q&A’s published on the World Journal Weekly – 3/4/2018 1. What To Do If I Leave My Present H-1B Employer and Two Other Companies Want My Services? 2. H-4 Employment Card 3. Can I Get an H-1B With Bachelors In Accounting? 4. How Can My Wife Come Back To The U.S. After Being Sent Back On Entry Two Years Ago?

1. What To Do If I Leave My Present H-1B Employer and Two Other Companies Want My Services?

I am with company A, but plan to leave it soon for different reasons. Company B IS ALREADY GIVING ME A JOB OFFER AND PRESSURING ME TO JOIN AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. I BELIEVE THAT I WOULD BE MORE COMFORTABLE WITH COMPANY C WHICH HAS NOT YET COMMITTED. IF I HAVE COMPANY B PUT IN THE H-1B TRANSFER FOR ME, WHAT HAPPENS IF I ACCEPT THE FUTURE OFFER OF COMPANY C AND IT ALSO PUTS IN H-1B TRANSFER PAPERS FOR ME WHILE COMPANY B’S PETITION IS STILL PENDING? 

DEAR READER,

I BELIEVE THAT THE SITUATION THAT YOU DO NOT WANT TO BE IN IS ONE WHERE COMPANY C’S H-1B PETITION IS APPROVED FIRST, AND THEN COMPANY B’S. UNDER THE LAST ACTION RULE, YOU WOULD BE BEHOLDEN TO WORK FOR COMPANY B unless you are working for both employers. TECHNICALLY YOU COULD WORK FOR BOTH, BUT WOULD HAVE TO WORK FOR COMPANY B. TO AVOID THE SITUATION, YOU COULD REQUEST COMPANY C TO PROCESS YOUR CASE UNDER PREMIUM PROCESSING ASSUMING THAT THE SERVICE IS AVAILABLE WITH U.S.C.I.S. (DURING THE H-1B cap SEASON, THE AGENCY TRADITIONALLY STOPS PREMIUM PROCESSING H-1B CASES). ONCE APPROVED, YOU COULD INFORM COMPANY B THAT YOU ARE NO LONGER INTERESTED IN WORKING FOR THE COMPANY AND REQUEST IT TO WITH DRAW ITS H-1B PETITION. THAT IS UNFORTUNATELY NOT FOOLPROOF AS THAT DEPENDS UPON THE COMPANY CARRYING OUT YOUR WISHES. ANOTHER WAY WOULD BE FOR COMPANY B TO PREMIUM PROCESS YOUR CASE, AND COMPANY C COULD THEREAFTER PUT IN A REGULAR CASE WHICH WOULD NORMALLY RECEIVE AN ADJUDICATION AFTER THE PREMIUM PROCESSED CASE. THAT IS ALSO, HOWEVER, NOT FOOLPROOF AS COMPANY B’S PREMIUM PROCESSED CASE MAY RECEIVE A REQUEST FOR FURTHER EVIDENCE, AND THE TIME TO ANSWER COULD BE LATER THAN THE NON-PREMIUM PROCESSED CASE. THE USE OF PREMIUM PROCESSING GIVES MORE CONTROL IN THESE SITUATIONS, NOT CERTAIN CONTROL. YOU COULD CONCEIVABLY WIND UP IN A SITUATION IN WHICH COMPANY C’S H-1B TRANSFER IS APPROVED AND SHORTLY THEREAFTER COMPANY B’S WITHOUT YOUR HAVING AN OPPORTUNITY OF ASKING COMPANY B’S WITHDRAWAL. ALL DOES NOT APPEAR TO BE LOST, HOWEVER, IN THESE SITUATIONS AS THE LAST ACTION RULE ONLY AFFECTS PRESENT STATUS IN THE US. CAUGHT IN THE SITUATION, YOU COULD GO OUTSIDE THE US AND REENTER UNDER THE CORRECT I-797 APPROVAL WITH OR WITHOUT (IF CANADIAN) HAVING THE NEED TO INTERVIEW FOR THE VISA WITH AN AMERICAN CONSULATE ABROAD.

2. H-4 Employment Card

I AM BEING APPLIED FOR BY A UNIVERSITY TO TEACH UNDER H-1B VISA STATUS. MY WIFE WANTS TO WORK AND HEARD THAT SHE IS ELIGIBLE TO DO SO UNDER AN H-4 EMPLOYMENT RULE. CAN YOU TELL ME MORE ABOUT IT AND HOW IT CAN BE DONE?

DEAR READER,

PRESENTLY H-4 DEPENDENTS ARE ELIGIBLE FOR EMPLOYMENT AUTHORIZATION APPROVALS WHERE THE H-1B PRINCIPALS EITHER HAVE I-140 PETITION APPROVAL OR WILL BE EXCEEDING THE SIX YEAR H-1B LIMIT AND 365 DAYS HAVE PASSED SINCE THE FILING OF A LABOR CERTIFICATION APPLICATION OR THE DATE THAT AN I-140 PETITION WAS FILED. IF YOU HAVE THESE CIRCUMSTANCES, YOUR WIFE CAN FILE CONCURRENTLY WITH YOUR H-1B PETITION OR THEREAFTER FORM I-539 APPLICATION TO CHANGE OR EXTEND STATUS AND AN I-765 APPLICATION FOR EMPLOYMENT AUTHORIZATION. U.S.C.I.S. WILL FIRST ADJUDICATE YOUR H-1B FOR APPROVABILITY, AND UPON A POSITIVE ADJUDICATION, BEGIN THE DETERMINATION ON YOUR WIFE’S I-539 AND I-765 APPLICATIONS. I NOTE THAT THE H-4 RULE IS PRESENTLY UNDER ATTACK BY THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION, AND THERE ARE STRONG INDICATIONS THAT THE ADMINISTRATION WILL ATTEMPT TO NEGATE THE RULE BEGINNING early this year. IN SUCH CASE, THE CONTINUATION OF EMPLOYMENT AUTHORIZATION FOR THOSE WHO ALREADY HAVE IT OR HAVE APPLICATIONS PENDING WILL DEPEND ON THE LANGUAGE IN THE RULE AND ANY LITIGATION IN THE COURTS TO PRESERVE THE RULE.

3. Can I Get an H-1B With Bachelors In Accounting?

I graduated in December with a bachelor’s degree in accounting, and I expect my OPT to begin sometime in February 2018 and end one year later. How can I best ensure that I can have an H-1B approved if I am selected under the April cap? What do I do if I am not selected? Can I apply again in April 2019?

Dear reader,

This past H-1B season, U.S.C.I.S. appeared to be focusing on two issues – whether the job itself is a specialized occupation requiring a specialized degree, and whether a job can be truly professional where employers pay a level I wage. We assume that those 2 issues will continue to predominate in this coming season. Joining an accounting firm or a large company that requires an accountant is probably the best way to demonstrate that the occupation is specialized. Obtaining level II wages would overcome the stigma that U.S.C.I.S. has placed on occupations offering level I pay. That being said, your petitioner’s attorney should be prepared to argue if U.S.C.I.S. sends a request for further evidence under the above circumstances or even less favorable ones. If you are not selected or are denied, you will still have the OPT until sometime next February. With the 60 day grace period, you will be allowed to stay as long as the 2019 H-1B petition is filed before the grace period runs out. Unfortunately U.S.C.I.S. will not allow you to legally work until at least October 1 assuming that the 2019 H-1B petition is approved.

4. How Can My Wife Come Back To The U.S. After Being Sent Back On Entry Two Years Ago?

MY WIFE, A TAIWAN NATIONAL, USED THE VISA WAIVER PROGRAM TO ENTER THE US AND OVERSTAYED HER VISIT BY A WEEK (97 DAYS) IN 2013. SHE CAME BACK TO THE US IN 2015, AND WAS CHALLENGED BY AN IMMIGRATION OFFICIAL AT THE AIRPORT BECAUSE OF HER OVERSTAY. DURING HER QUESTIONING, SHE CONFESSED THAT SHE HAD WORKED SOME OF THE TIME WHEN SHE WAS HERE IN 2013. SHE WAS NOT BARRED, BUT SENT BACK ON THE NEXT PLANE. SHE THEN TRIED TO GET A VISA FROM THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE IN TAIWAN (AIT), BUT THEY SAID THAT THEY COULD NOT DO ANYTHING. I AM A US CITIZEN AND MARRIED HER IN 2015. WE HAVE A ONE-YEAR-OLD CHILD, BUT TO SEE HER, I HAVE TO TRAVEL TO TAIWAN. HOW CAN I GET HER BACK TO THE US?

DEAR READER,

ASSUMING THAT SHE WAS NOT BARRED, YOU CAN APPLY FOR HER IMMIGRATION ON FORM I-130 PETITION FOR ALIEN RELATIVE, AND ONCE THAT IS APPROVED BY U.S.C.I.S., SHE CAN BEGIN CONSULAR PROCESSING THROUGH THE NATIONAL VISA CENTER AND THEN THROUGH THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE IN TAIWAN. IF EVERYTHING GOES WELL, SHE WOULD RECEIVE AN IMMIGRANT VISA AND COME TO THE US IN APPROXIMATELY ONE YEAR. A CONCERN IS THAT THE AIT MAY FIND THAT SHE IS INADMISSIBLE FOR MISREPRESENTATION FOR HER WORKING IN THE US IN 2013 WHEN SHE WAS ONLY SUPPOSED TO BE VISITING. THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE RECENTLY BROUGHT OUT NEW GUIDELINES UNDER WHICH ANY CONTRARY ACTIONS TO THE SUPPOSED INTENT OF THE VISIT WITHIN 90 DAYS OF ENTERING THE US BRINGS ON A PRESUMPTION OF MISREPRESENTATION. IF there is a finding of misrepresentation, SHE WOULD BE ASKED TO FILE AN I-601 APPLICATION FOR WAIVER OF INADMISSIBILITY IN WHICH THE STANDARD FOR ADJUDICATIO

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.