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What are my G/f’s options for return to the United States after previously being a permanent resident and Green card holder?

What are my G/f’s options for return to the United States after previously being a permanent resident and Green card holder? – Avvo.com http://ping.fm/C6HTY

Lawful permanent resident

Legal permanent resident

Green card

Permanent resident status

There is a very unusual way for someone to become a Lawful Permanent Resident

There is a very unusual way for someone to become a Lawful Permanent Resident. Here is the scenario: 1) A child is born to a Lawful Permanent resident outside of the U.S. ; 2) This child is brought to the U.S. BEFORE the age of 2; and 3) The child is brought into the U.S. by the Lawful Permanent Resident parent on that parent’s FIRST entry to the U.S. When this happens CBP and the point of entry will declare the child to be a Lawful Permanent Resident.

Being a permanent resident

LPR 

Lawful permanent resident granted stand 

Reentry permit for lawful permanent residents 

President Obama’s appeal to Congress on the nation’s broken immigration system

President Obama’s appeal to Congress for a bipartisan overhaul of the nation’s broken immigration system in a speech delivered at American University School of International Service.

Repay hospital fees

Repay hospital fees – Avvo.com http://ping.fm/H01Yk

Immigration Attorney

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Can my landlord lie to other agency?

can my landlord lie to other agency such as immigration or probation dept,in hope to have me arrested and out of the way – Avvo.com http://ping.fm/XHYUm

Immigration Attorney

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American Immigration Attorney

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Enjoy Life

This article will be a bit of a different article than normal. As you know, I am an Immigration Attorney. I am always helping families reunite and stay in the United States. I know how important it is to be with your family and to enjoy the time you have with them. This is one of the  main reasons I chose Immigration Law. I did not like seeing families being torn apart and living in separate countries from their spouses, children and other loved ones. I needed to do something to help the despair that I saw people experiencing. That is why I have been practicing law for nearly 20 years.

Last week my father-in-law passed away. Since I grew up without a dad, my father-in-law was my father for almost the 20 years I have been married. His passing was quite difficult for me. I have never had someone as close as him pass away and I had an emptiness and sadness in me that I had never experienced before.  The last week has emphasized what I do to help the immigration community was the right path for me to take. It has shown me that helping families through use of Immigration Law is the best path I could have taken.

It has taught me that we need to enjoy the time that we have with those whom we love. The reality is that we never know when our loved ones will pass on. My father-in-law had a headache and went to the hospital. At that time, he had brain hemmorages and 3 days later he passed away. While there is always things we can say we wished we had done, I was happy that I did spend a lot of time with him and played tennis and just sat and talked about many things with my father-in-law. Since his passing, I have come to a new realization about life. We really need to enjoy living itself. For example, the joy of seeing the sun rise, smelling a flower, walking the dog, playing a card game with your child. These joys and simple pleasures should not be taken for granted, but rather, relished and experienced. Never get tired of spending time with your loved ones. You will never say at the end that you wish you worked more. Make the time to do what you want to do with your loved ones while they are still living so that you do not have regrets when they pass away.

Don’t let the small stuff bother you. Don’t get mad because someone is driving too slow, or the bus is 5 minutes late. Don’t let the small stuff in life distract you from what is really important. When there is hardship and suffering, learn to work through it. For example, should you be separated because of a deportation, fight to get your loved one back. They are still here with you and if you fight hard enough, they will eventually be able to come back and be with you.

We all only have a limited time here. Let’s make the best of it and let’s make a positive impact on our families and society. Enjoy what you have. Enjoy your families and do not sweat the small stuff.

Appellate court lacked jurisdiction to consider whether an immigration judge has authority to determine whether an alien is a lawful permanent resident

Another Immigration Case re: administrative review: Appellate court lacked jurisdiction to consider whether an immigration judge has authority to determine whether an alien is a lawful permanent resident, since alien did not present this claim at administrative proceedings. Alien convicted of a felony within the United States was inadmissible as a permanent resident; where such alien was erroneously admitted, that alien was ineligible for relief under former Sec. 212(c) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, even if the error was not based on any fraud by alien.
Segura v. Holder, Jr.

Conditional permanent resident

Lawful permanent resident

Legal permanent resident

Family petitions to immigrate family members

I have been making payments to a collections agency and missed a few months and they put a lien on my house

I have been making payments to a collections agency and missed a few months and they put a lien on my house – Avvo.com http://ping.fm/Vkgmv

Immigration Attorney near me

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Another immigration case

Another immigration case re: persons who initially were not eligible to receive Green Cards:
U.S. SUPREME COURT

-Criminal Law and Procedure-
Michigan Supreme Court ruling that state trial judge did not abuse broad discretion by granting mistrial, to which defendant did not object, on the second day of deliberations and after foreperson had answered “no” to judge’s question as to whether jurors would be able to reach a unanimous verdict was not an unreasonable application of U.S. Supreme Court precedent barring retrial under the Double Jeopardy Clause in the absence of “manifest necessity” for mistrial. The more general the ruling of the state court, the greater is the deference owed under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act’s “unreasonable application” standard. U.S. Supreme Court precedent does not require trial judge, before declaring a mistrial based on jury deadlock, to force jury to deliberate for a minimum period of time, to question jurors individually, to consult with (or obtain the consent of) either the prosecutor or defense counsel, to issue a supplemental jury instruction, or to consider any other means of breaking the impasse.
Renico v. Lett – filed May 3, 2010
Cite as 09-338
Full text http://ping.fm/bHxf0

-Individual Rights-
42 U.S.C. Sec. 233(a), which provides that the remedy provided by the Federal Tort Claims Act is “exclusive of any other civil action or proceeding” for any personal injury caused by a Public Health Service officer or employee performing a medical or related function “while acting within the scope of his office or employment,” precludes an action under Bivens v. Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics Agents, 403 U.S. 388 (1971) against PHS personnel for constitutional violations arising out of their official duties.
Hui v. Castaneda – filed May 3, 2010
Cite as 08-1529
Full text http://ping.fm/Ar2Xf

NINTH U.S. CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS

-Civil Procedure-
A prevailing defendant in a Fair Debt Collection Practices Act case cannot be awarded costs without a finding that plaintiff brought the action in bad faith and for the purpose of harassment.
Rouse v. Law Offices of Rory Clark – filed May 3, 2010
Cite as 09-55146
Full text http://ping.fm/1xbcb

-Criminal Law and Procedure-
A conviction under a statute proscribing grossly negligent conduct, even though it involves an intentional and potentially dangerous act, is not a crime of violence within the meaning of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines. Violation of California Penal Code Sec. 246.3 for discharging a firearm in a grossly negligent manner is not a crime of violence.
United States v. Coronado – filed May 3, 2010
Cite as 09-50154
Full text http://ping.fm/CsAYr

-Criminal Law and Procedure-
Preconviction order providing for appointment of a receiver to take from defendant property he fraudulently obtained from investors and restore that property to them was not affected on abatement of defendant’s conviction due to his death since repayment was not conditioned on defendant’s conviction. However, defendant’s estate could not be held liable for satisfying terms of postconviction restitution order.
United States v. Rich – filed May 3, 2010
Cite as 08-30153
Full text http://ping.fm/yIpqz

-Criminal Law and Procedure-
Where district court did not lead defendant to believe that he would receive substantial assistance with his case from standby counsel, and defendant rejected court’s opportunities to withdraw waiver after defendant complained that assistance was not substantial, defendant’s waiver of right to counsel was knowing and intelligent. Defendant’s argument of ineffective assistance of counsel was not sufficiently developed to allow determination whether prejudice resulted where attorney was not given chance to explain conduct, and government was not allowed opportunity to counter defendant’s purported mental health defense. District court did not abuse its discretion in granting two-week continuance after defendant requested representation by counsel where need for continuance was defendant’s fault and defendant had objected to any continuance. Prosecution committed misconduct where it questioned defendant about veracity of two government witnesses during cross-examination, but questioning was not plain error because credibility of witnesses was not paramount in trial, and questioning did not prejudice defendant’s substantial rights or diminish integrity of judicial proceedings. Prosecution’s references to defendant as a “liar” during closing arguments was not misconduct where statements were reasonably based on demonstrated inconsistencies in evidence, statements did not affect defendant’s substantial rights where government presented strong independent evidence that defendant knowingly engaged in massive fraud, and court instructed jury that argument was not evidence. Prosecution did not misstate law by telling jury that “case is over” if it found defendant not credible where prosecutor spent substantial time reviewing legal elements of charges and discussing facts jury needed to find to convict. Where defendant was charged with promotion of money laundering under 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1956(a)(2)(B), district court’s failure to instruct the jury that “proceeds” must be profits constituted plain error affecting defendant’s substantial rights. Failure to so instruct on charges under Sec. 1956(a)(2)(A) was not error because statute requires only a showing of proceeds. Where defendant was charged under Sec. 1956(h) for conspiracy to commit money laundering, jury instructions stating that they could find defendant guilty if “there was an agreement between two or more persons to commit money laundering” were error because they did not define money laundering, but error was harmless where defendant would have been convicted had correct instructions been given. Defendant’s convictions of concealment of money laundering involving foreign transfers and conspiracy to commit money laundering were supported by sufficient evidence where defendant created and controlled company that made one of underlying transfers, and where government demonstrated overwhelmingly that defendant was part of conspiracy that made other underlying transfers, that the offenses were committed in furtherance of the conspiracy, and that the actions providing the basis for substantive charges were reasonably foreseeable to defendant. District court’s imposition of $36 million restitution order on remand for resentencing after passage of 90-day limit in Sec. 3664(d)(5) of Mandatory Victims Restitution Act, after having deferred issue pending a determination of identities of victims and amounts of losses, did not prejudice defendant because act’s limits are procedural, not jurisdictional; act provides for revision in light of later discoveries of losses; and act was intended to protect victims, not victimizers.
United States v. Moreland – filed May 3, 2010
Cite as 05-30541
Full text http://ping.fm/Wm94g

-Immigration Law-
Immigration judge denied petitioner a full and fair hearing where judge unreasonably limited testimony on whether removal “would result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship” to petitioner’s 4-year-old U.S.-citizen child and denied request for a continuance, prejudicing petitioner’s ability to present evidence in support of her application for cancellation of removal.
Rendon v. Holder – filed December 2, 2009, amended May 3, 2010
Cite as 06-70301
Full text http://ping.fm/zlDRI

-Immigration Law-
Government proved aliens’ removability by clear and convincing evidence by linking aliens to criminal conspiracy by a former Immigration and Naturalization Service agent through circumstantial evidence. Because aliens were improperly granted green cards, their legal permanent resident status was void ab initio and conferred no rights. Aliens lacked standing to pursue equal protection claim since they did not belong to class of returning LPRs who were allegedly similarly situated to applicants for admission.
Kim v. Holder – filed May 3, 2010
Cite as 06-73415

Crimes and Immigration

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How to make a better declaration

How to make a better declaration – Avvo.com http://ping.fm/acXve

Emergency declaration

Immigration Attorney

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