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New Immigration case against the foreign national:

Court of Appeals lacked jurisdiction to consider application for relief by petitioners challenging Board of Immigration Appeals’ decision affirming immigration judge’s decision pretermitting their applications for special rule cancellation of removal under Sec. 203 of the Nicaraguan and Central American Relief Act of 1997 because the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 expressly precluded review of BIA’s determination of eligibility for relief under NACARA. Petitioner was not deprived of a full and fair hearing and a reasonable opportunity to present evidence on her behalf, and thereby not denied due process, where immigration judge reviewed all the record evidence, heard counsel’s arguments and petitioner’s testimony, allowed cross-examination, and directly questioned petitioner over the course of four hearings before making the ineligibility determination.
Samayoa Lanuza v. Holder – filed March 5, 2010

New Immigration Case: Basically saying the USCIS has to follow the rules!

NINTH CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEAL

-Antitrust and Trade Regulation-
Telecommunications Act authorizes state public utilities commissions to order incumbent local exchange carriers to lease entrance facilities to competitive local exchange carriers at regulated rates for the purpose of interconnection. Plain language of 47 C.F.R. Sec. 51.319(e)(2)(ii)(B) limits a competitive local exchange carrier to a maximum of ten DS1 circuits along any route where DS1 circuits are available on an unbundled basis regardless of whether the competitive LEC is “impaired” as to DS3 lines.
Pacific Bell Telephone Company v. California Public Utilities Commission – filed March 4, 2010
Cite as 08-15568
Full text http://ping.fm/MfvZQ

-Environmental Law-
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator’s interpretation of plaintiff’s burden to “demonstrate” permit’s non-compliance with the Clean Air Act, as used in 42 U.S.C Sec. 7661d(b)(2), as requiring plaintiff to support his allegations that aggregation of pollutant-emitting sources with legal reasoning, evidence, and references was not arbitrary or capricious.
MacClarence v. United States Environmental Protection Agency – filed March 4, 2010
Cite as 07-72756
Full text http://ping.fm/UO6Ei

-Immigration Law-
Nothing in 8 C.F.R. Sec. 204.5(h)(3)(vi) requires an alien petitioning for an extraordinary visa to demonstrate research community’s reaction to his published articles before those articles can be considered as evidence, and nothing in 8 C.F.R. Sec. 204.5(h)(3)(iv) suggests that judging university dissertations is only persuasive evidence of acclaim if alien served as an external dissertation reviewer for a university with which he was not otherwise affiliated; although Administrative Appeals Office misapplied these two statutes and should have found that alien presented two types of evidence, such error was harmless since alien was required to show three types of evidence in order to be granted relief.
Kazarian v. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services

Save Years regarding Waiting around time with a National Interest Waiver

Question: I’ve a number of many years regarding experience doing the work in which I truly do and I’m incredibly good at it. However, I do not want to wait many years for a PERM visa number to be able to be available. Are generally there any different options for getting a green card employment based visa?

Answer: Actionally there is going to be another option for getting a green card employment based visa. It is called a National Interest Waiver. In these types of cases often called EB-2 cases, the employer offering the foreign national employment have to file the preference petition about Form I-140, except once the alien is without a doubt seeking an exemption coming from the job offer requirement, in which in turn case the the foreign national or perhaps any particular person on his or her behalf may file the petition. In order to possibly be exempt via the job offer requirement, the USCIS should determine that will an exemption would end up being in the national interest. Hence the name ‘national interest waiver’ being a way associated with getting a green card employment based visa. A labor certification or maybe PERM is without a doubt not required should the job offer requirement is waived. In 1998, the federal government designated its firstly precedent decision discussing the benchmarks governing national interest waiver requests. The case which in turn was decided NYSDOT did make it quite problematic in order to get a National Interest Waiver for getting a green card employment based visa approved. The decision established stricter criteria for obtaining national interest waivers than individuals applicable in the past. Getting a green card employment based visa meant for numerous having to be able to hang on several years for the visa number in order to get current. For many years, the government had declined in order to issue a comprehensive and controlling definition associated with national interest and instead had advised the Service Centers to treat petitions involving national interest waiver requests upon a case-by-case basis. This made it hard for attorneys in order to prepare the national interest waiver. It made it necessary to look at all options for getting a green card employment based visa. The Administrative Appeals Office (AAO) had issued several non-binding decisions following enactment associated with the national interest program of which elaborated on the applicable standard. The AAO took the position in which the entering alien’s admission must provide a benefit to the usa beyond a “prospective national benefit” which in turn all exceptional ability and advanced-degree aliens should establish prior to their admission. In the several years immediately after the enactment regarding the national interest waiver provision, the legacy INS had granted such waivers with some frequency relying in part upon these early AAO decisions. In more recent years, however, the Service Centers began applying a more exacting standard to be able to such requests requiring petitioners to be able to establish, for example, in which the alien possesses unique knowledge, abilities, or maybe experience in which set him as well as her apart via others in the field. The 1998 precedent decision continued this trend. Under the benchmarks, it is going to be very important in which the National Interest Waiver be prepared with an abundance of evidence and exacting arguments in order to try to get the case approved. If successful, several years regarding waiting time may end up being avoided.

Question: Exactly what have to be proved to acquire a National Interest Waiver so that some other options for getting a green card employment based visa need not end up being considered?

Answer: The AAO held which the three factors should be considered if evaluating a request to get a national interest waiver. Firstly, the petitioner must establish that the entering alien’s proposed job is going to be in an area of substantial intrinsic merit. The importance of the occupation or perhaps the field associated with endeavor should possibly be established being a threshold requirement. If a unique field regarding endeavor is going to be related to a very critical goal of the nation, this requirement will need to not possibly be challenging to be able to meet. If the is met one could not need to be able to see what additional options exist for getting a green card employment based visa. Eligibility for a national interest waiver is actually not proved, however, solely by a showing in which the foreign national’s field of endeavor has intrinsic merit. Waivers in general for a particular area for national interest waivers don’t exist. Each ought to possibly be approved seperately.

Second, the national interest waiver need to end up being shown that will the proposed benefit will probably end up being national in scope. If this type of could end up being shown, then getting theis type regarding green car employment based visa becomes much easier. The emphasis of this element is actually upon the existence of a national goal in which the alien’s proposed undertaking will promote. Merely serving a regional, local, as well as private interest is not sufficient. The correlation between the national goal plus the entering alien’s activity need not end up being direct, however. As an example, in the actual 1998 case, the alien’s occupation-the proper maintenance and operation associated with New York’s bridges and driveways connecting the state to the national transportation succeeded in meeting this element. While the entering alien’s job was limited in order to a special geographic area, the AAO noted in which New York’s bridges and highways connect the state in order to the national transportation system. The proper maintenance and operation associated with these bridges and driveways for this reason serve the interests associated with different regions of the country.

Finally, it ought to be proved which the “significant” benefit derived coming from this specific beneficiary’s participation in the “national interest” field regarding endeavor “considerably” outweighs the “inherent” national interest in guarding U.S. workers by means of the labor certification procedure. This would likely end up being the particular key in getting the national interest waiver for this type associated with green card employment based visa. This standard sets up a balancing associated with interests, with the national interest in the labor certification procedure weighing in upon one side being a powerful adverse factor in granting the national interest waiver.

Hence, to get the national interest waiver is without a doubt not easy. However, if you weigh putting together a good petition with a chance of succes verses waiting years for different forms of green card employment based visas, it is going to be a good alternative in order to try to get residency.

BIA Rules on Step-Child

The BIA found that a stepchild who meets the definition of a “child” under INA § 101(b)(1)(B), 8 U.S.C. § 1101(b)(1)(B) (2006), is a qualifying relative for purposes of establishing exceptional and extremely unusual hardship for cancellation of removal under the Act. Matter of Portillo-Gutierrez, 25 I&N Dec. 148 (BIA 2009).

Board of immigration appeals

Stepchild and immigration

Step parent petition

BIA finds stepchild who…

IJ gets case remanded

NINTH U.S. CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS

-Antitrust and Trade Regulation-
Summary judgment in state court action, concluding that there was insufficient evidence presented by plaintiffs to allow a reasonable juror to find a conspiracy to limit supply and raise prices among several gasoline companies, precluded plaintiff’s antitrust claims under the Sherman Act, and district court did not err in granting defendants’ motion to dismiss.
William O. Gilley Enterprises, Inc. v. Atlantic Richfield Company – filed December 2, 2009
Cite as 06-56059
Full text http://www.metnews.com/sos.cgi?1209%2F06-56059

-Criminal Law and Procedure-
In determining whether extradition to a foreign country was barred by the statute of limitations, district court properly gave credence to the proceedings of that country and considered only the elapsed time between the date on which the crime occurred and the date foreign authority issued warrant for defendant’s arrest, even if that warrant was not akin to an indictment or information under U.S. law. Magistrate’s finding of probable cause to extradite defendant on murder charge was not clearly erroneous where sworn statements of eyewitnesses provided ample competent evidence that defendant likely shot and killed victim. Appellate court will not reweigh evidence on review of magistrate’s factual findings in an extradition case.
Crotte Sainez v. Venables – filed December 2, 2009
Cite as 08-56398
Full text http://www.metnews.com/sos.cgi?1209%2F08-56398

-Criminal Law and Procedure-
District court erred in rejecting defendant’s guilty plea to firearm charge–which defendant made in exchange for dropping charges relating to his involvement in smuggling undocumented aliens into the United States and holding them for ransom in a stash house–where court failed to state a reason for rejection. District court correctly denied defendant’s motion to suppress evidence obtained during search of stash house because exigent circumstances supported a warrantless search where smugglers threatened physical harm to hostages if ransom was not paid, and ransom deadline was running out.
United States v. Mancinas-Flores – filed December 2, 2009
Cite as 08-10094
Full text http://www.metnews.com/sos.cgi?1209%2F08-10094

-Criminal Law and Procedure-
District court’s adoption of a procedure for the taking of pleas en masse to accommodate the enormous number of prosecutions for illegal entry into the United States violated Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, which requires that the court, before accepting a guilty plea, “address the defendant personally” and determine that defendant understood certain specified rights, risks, and consequences, and determine whether plea was voluntary. Defendants failed to show plain error necessary to reverse their convictions where they failed to show a reasonable probability that, but for the error, they would not have entered the plea.
United States v. Roblero-Solis – filed December 2, 2009
Cite as 08-10396
Full text http://www.metnews.com/sos.cgi?1209%2F08-10396

-Environmental Law-
Plaintiffs–who alleged that they had viewed polar bears and walrus in a specific region, enjoyed doing so, and had plans to return, and that certain regulations of the Fish and Wildlife Service threatened imminent, concrete harm to these interests by destroying polar bears and walrus in that specific region, and that those regulations continued to be implemented–had standing to challenge the legality of the regulations. Where the United States Fish and Wildlife Service promulgated five-year regulations under Marine Mammal Protection Act Sec. 101(a)(5) that permit non-lethal “take” of polar bears and Pacific walrus by oil and gas activities in and along the Beaufort Sea on the Northern Coast of Alaska, conditioned upon service’s issuance of a “letter of authorization” to an individual oil and gas operator, facial challenge to the regulations was ripe, and plaintiffs were not required to challenge individual LOAs. Term “gas and oil exploration, exploration, and production activities” was not too broad to qualify as a specified activity as to which service may allow incidental take of wildlife under MMPA. Service’s finding that the taking of wildlife pursuant to regulations would have a negligible environmental impact was not arbitrary and capricious where service relied on scientific opinions that the combined effects of oil and gas operations on the weakened physical fitness of polar bears due to climate change was speculative. Evidence that global warming poses a generalized threat to polar bear populations did not demonstrate that non-lethal takes within a particular industry and during a particular period of time are likely to have significant impact, so service’s “no significant impact” finding under National Environmental Policy Act was not arbitrary and capricious. NEPA did not require service to prepare environmental impact statement, which regulations require when effects are “highly uncertain or involve unique or unknown risks,” where service relied on reasonable predictions based on prior data.
Center for Biological Diversity v. Kempthorne – filed December 2, 2009
Cite as 08-35402
Full text http://www.metnews.com/sos.cgi?1209%2F08-35402

-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 four-year-old child, who was a U.S. citizen, 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

Cancellation of Removal is an option for people who have committed a crime and who have the Green Card.

Illegal entry

Battery conviction

Aliens conviction

Case remanded

What options does an illegal teenager have when both parents are immigrants?

There are various issues as to what they might qualify for. However, if they are under 21, they can climb on the petitions of their parents. Thus, we would have to see what the parents might qualify for. If the child is under 18 years and 6 months, they should consider leaving the U.S. because they would not be subject to the 3/10 year bar.

Family petition

Child citizenship act

Child deportation

Once I file a family based immigration petition, can I add additional family members to it?

Difference between LPR and Conditional LPR

To deter the confusion generated from the differences in Resident Visa application the U.S. Army issued an instruction sheet to be provided to green card holders, Lawful Permanent Resident (LPR) or Conditional Lawful Permanent Resident (CPR), enlistees when they contract.

Lawful permanent resident

Lawful permanent resident petitioning spouse

Extension of green card

LPR to prepare for citizenship

U.S. Military Naturalization Just Got Faster

Question: I have been serving in the military for some time. I know that I have to serve 3 years to apply for Naturalization. Is there a way I can apply faster?

Answer: Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Janet Napolitano today announced the publication of a rule formalizing DHS’ longstanding policy to expedite and streamline the citizenship process for men and women bravely serving in America’s armed forces.  She stated: “The foundation of our national security is the patriotic service and extraordinary sacrifices made by the men and women of
our armed forces,” said Secretary Napolitano. “Expediting the citizenship process for service members reflects our commitment to honoring those who come from all over the world to serve our country and become its newest citizens.”

Question: What then is the new rule for U.S. Military Naturalization?

Answer: The rule amends DHS regulations to conform to the National Defense Authorization Act of 2004, reducing the time requirements for naturalization through military service from three years to one year for applicants who served during peacetime, and extending benefits to members of the Selected Reserve of the Ready Reserve of the U.S. Armed Forces. Service members who have served honorably in an active-duty status or in the Selected Reserve of the Ready Reserve for any time since Sept. 11, 2001, can file immediately for citizenship.  The rule also eliminates the requirement for members of the military to file biographic information forms (Form G-325B) with their naturalization applications – removing administrative redundancy and increasing efficiency for those who risk their lives
for the nation’s security.

Question: What about the spouses of military personal?

Answer: Spouses of U.S. citizen service members who are (or will be) deployed may be eligible for expedited naturalization in the United States under Section 319(b) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). In general, an applicant for naturalization under section 319(b) of the INA must: Be age 18 or older; Establish that his or her U.S. citizen spouse is deployed abroad as a service member; Be present in the U.S. pursuant to a lawful admission for permanent residence (green card holder) at the time of examination on the naturalization application; Be present in the U.S. at the time of naturalization; Declare in good faith upon naturalization an intent to reside abroad with the U.S. citizen spouse and to reside in the U.S. immediately upon the citizen spouse’s termination of service abroad; Be able to read, write, and speak basic English;Have a basic knowledge of U.S. history and government (civics); and have been, and continue to be, a person of good moral character, attached to the principles of the U.S. Constitution and well disposed to the good order and happiness of the U.S. during all relevant periods under the law.

Thus, both the military personal and their families can have expedited applications.

Military naturalization 

Military naturalization attorney

Military members and spouses

US military naturalization just got faster

Adjustment of Status

Adjustment of Status is the procedure whereby you can obtain your Green Card without having to leave the United States, or to go to a United States Consulate for an interview. There are numerous ways to adjust your status.

Our law firm can find the correct path for you to take to get your status adjusted. Not only will we prepare all of the necessary applications, but we can also attend the interview with the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services. Normally, this results in the entire process going smoothly and without any problems. Of course, if any problems arise, we know how to properly handle and take care of them.

Adjustment of status

Conditional parolee not eligible for adjustment of status

Form I-485

AOS meaning

Case Terminated

Removal proceedings terminated w/o prejudice. Now, Client can apply for adjustment of status before CIS to obtain Lawful Permanent Residency.

Removal proceedings

Best deportation Attorney

Find a good deportation Lawyer to help you

Judge and removal