• Hours & Info

    (562) 495-0554
    M-F: 8:00am - 6:00 p.m.
    Sat: 9:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
  • Past Blog Posts

  • https://api.whatsapp.com/send?phone=13104885414

How can I bring in an Orphan to the U.S.?

Question: I want to petition an orphan. What must I do?

 

Answer: A USC can petition for an orphan under age 16. In order to be an orphan, both parents must have died, disappeared, or abandoned the child. If there is a sole or surviving parent, he or she must be incapable of providing for the child and irrevocably release the child for emigration or adoption. The child must be under 16 and unmarried at the time the petition is filed on his or her behalf to classify as an immediate relative. The petitioner must be a USC. Natural siblings of the orphan are also eligible to immigrate if adopted abroad while under 18 by the same adoptive parent.

 

Question: Where must I adopt the child and can I adopt the child in the U.S.?

 

Answer: That will depend on what country you want to bring in the child as to whether it is a part of the Hague Convention. It would be necessary to understand some parts of the Hague Convention to answer this. Here are some basic rules:

 

Only USCs—not LPRs—may adopt and immigrate children subject to the Hague rules; The Department of State coordinates with the equivalent “Central Authority” or designee in the child’s home country and this foreign entity is heavily involved in the process; Adoption cannot serve as the basis for the child’s immigration unless they follow certain prescribed steps and sequences; The USC parents are prohibited from contacting the birth parents unless they fall within narrow exceptions; The adopted child must be under 16 when the decree is finalized or the I-800 is filed; there is no exception for children between ages 16 and 18 whose siblings have been adopted while under 16; and the definition of “adoptable” child is broader than orphan and includes those children whose: (1) single birth parent has relinquished control; (2) two living birth parents are incapable of providing care and have released the child for adoption; or (3) unmarried birth father, who can qualify as a “sole parent,” releases the child for adoption after the birth mother has abandoned the child.

 

Question: What countries are Hague Convention Countries?

Answer: Hague Convention rules apply to children who are “habitual residents” of one of the approximately 80 countries that have signed on to the international treaty. Some of the countries that have not ratified the convention include Kazakhstan, Russia, Guatemala, Ethiopia, and South Korea. Some of the ones that have ratified it include China, India, Mexico, and the Philippines.

 

Question: What are the procedures for applying, assuming that the child comes from a Hague Country.

 

Answer: Assuming the Hague rules apply, the following steps must be adhered to in this precise order. First, the prospective adoptive parent(s) obtain(s) an approved home study from an accredited provider, licensed in the state of the adoptive parent(s), and authorized to conduct such studies. The adoptive parent(s) then file(s) Form I-800A, Application for Determination of Suitability to Adopt a Child from a Convention Country, with USCIS, along with the home study. USCIS may need to communicate with the designated adoption service provider.

 

After approval of the I-800A and home study, USCIS forwards these to the adoption service provider and the NVC, which in turn forwards to the Central Authority of the designated foreign country. That Central Authority then identifies a child and refers him or her to the prospective parent(s) along with a report on his or her medical and social background. If the family accepts the referral, they file Form I-800, Petition to Classify Convention Adoptee as an Immediate Relative, with USCIS. USCIS then provisionally approves the petition and forwards it to the appropriate U.S. Consulate.

 

The consular officer screens the child for admissibility and annotates the visa application with the child’s ability to immigrate following adoption. The officer also transmits the “Article Five Letter” to the Central Authority, which basically affirms that the adoptive parents may proceed with the adoption. The family then completes the adoption or guardianship process and submits the official decree to the consulate, which approves the I-800 and issues the immigrant visa (IH-3 or IH-4).

 

Beginning on September 25, 2008, USCIS expanded its direct mail program to include the forms I-800A and I-800. Applicants must now submit them to the USCIS Chicago Lockbox facility for initial processing using the following address: USCIS, P.O. Box 805695, Chicago, IL 60680-4118. These forms will then be forwarded to the National Benefits Center in Lee’s Summit, MO, which has assumed processing of these petitions.

Orphan

Paroled haitan orphans

Orphan petition

Orphan into the U.S?

Orphan Petition

American Immigration Attorney

California Immigration Attorney

Orphan petition

Orphan process

Centralization of Orphan Processing

On 7/1/10, phase two of the centralization of orphan processing to the National Benefits Center will become effective. NBC will host two webinars on 6/28/10 for service providers.

Orphan and immigration

Orphan petition 

Orphaned children from Haiti 

Family petitions to immigrate family members

Haitian Orphans can be adopted through legal immigration adoption means

There are many orphans in Haiti at this time. The U.S. has the procedures under Immigration Law in place to legally adopt the orphans and bring them to the U.S. without undercutting the procedure or making it so things are not on the “up and up”. Immigration Adoptions of Haitians make certain that the parents in the U.S. can properly take care of the children and that the child will have a good home after being petitioned and after an Immigration Attorney processes all the paperwork.

Why can’t I get my adopted orphan into the U.S.?

Question: My husband and I have tried for years to have a baby. Unfortunately, we have been unable. However, we have found a beautiful baby girl from the Far East. She is an orphan and we thought we could just adopt her and bring her back to the U.S. It appears that this is not the case. Please let me know what we have to do to bring our future daughter home.

Answer: First, the child has to qualify as an orphan. First she must be under 16 at the time the visa petition is filed. Next, the child’s parents must have been either killed or abandoned or deserted her. If one parent is still alive, that parent must commit in writing a document that he or she is completely unable to care for the child and is giving the child up for adoption. Next, you have to qualify to adopt the child. For an orphan petition, you must be a U.S. Citizen and adopting the child jointly with your spouse. Alternatively, one can be an unmarried U.S. Citizen who is at least 25 years old.

Question: How do we go about adopting the orphan?

Answer: There are two ways to adopt an orphan. First, the child may be adopted abroad by a couple or an unmarried U.S. citizen if they personally saw or observed the child before or during the adoption proceedings. Second, the child may come to the United States for adoption by the couple or unmarried person if they have complied with the preadoption requirements, if any, of the child’s proposed U.S. residence. In addition, the Immigration must be satisfied that proper care will be provided for the child.

Question: How do we petition to get the orphan here into the U.S.?

Answer: Petitioning for an orphan involves two distinct determinations. The first determination focuses on the ability of the prospective adoptive parent(s) to provide a proper home environment and on their suitability as parents. This determination is based primarily on a home study and fingerprint checks submitted with the advanced processing application. The second determination, based on the orphan visa petition, concerns whether the child is an orphan under the INA. The prospective adoptive parent(s) may submit documentation for each of these determinations separately or at one time, depending on when the orphan is identified. An orphan visa petition cannot be approved unless there is a favorable determination on the advanced processing application. A favorable determination on the advanced processing application, however, does not guarantee that the orphan visa petition will be approved.

If the State which you are living has preadoption requirements, they must be complied with.

Question: After both petitions are filed, how can I bring our child into the United States?

Answer: First, an orphan petition can be denied for a variety of reasons, including: (1) failing to establish financial ability to care for the child; (2) failing to establish that the child is an orphan; (3) failing to establish an ability to care for the child properly; (4) filing the orphan petition more than 18 months after the I-600A advanced processing application has been approved; or (5) evidence of child-buying. The regulations define child-buying as any money or other consideration given directly or indirectly to the child’s parents, agents, or other individuals as payment for the child or as an inducement to release the child.

Assuming it has been approved, the Immigration will notify the parents and the U.S. embassy or consular post that will issue the visa on approval of the application. The State Department must then complete what is known as an I-604 investigation. If the I-604 investigation reveals negative information, the information is forwarded to the INS for appropriate action.

If the I-604 investigation reveals nothing adverse and the case is otherwise clearly approvable, the State Department consular officer will issue the visa to allow the orphan to enter the United States. If the petition is not clearly approvable, however, the consular officer will refer the case back to Immigration.

As of February 27, 2001, an orphan becomes a U.S. citizen automatically upon admission to the United States, as long as the child is entering on an immigrant visa.

============================================================

Brian D. Lerner is an Immigration Attorney Specialist. This firm does every aspect of immigration law including family and employment based petitions, deportation defense and criminal related immigration issues, asylum, naturalization, appeals, nonimmigrant visas, immigrant visas, and all other areas of immigration law. An appointment can be made by calling (866) 495-0554 or (562) 495-0554. The Firm website is www.californiaimmigration.us.