Green card and diversity lottery
Diversitty Lottery Visa program
Filed under: Diversity Lottery (DV) | Tagged: Brian D. Lerner, brian lerner, diversity lottery, diversity lottery visa, Immigration Attorney, Immigration Lawyer | 2 Comments »
I don’t need $1,000,000 for the Green Card?
Question: I heard that there is a type of visa whereby I don’t need to invest $1,000,000 to get the Green Card, but rather can use my business knowledge and business. Is this true?
Answer: Yes, it is the much less known Multinational Manager Visa. This is where you have 2 companies in 2 different countries and will then be the manager or executive of both in order to apply for the Multinational Manager Visa for Residency for you, your spouse and unmarried children under 21.
Question: What are some of the specifics?
Answer: It is basically when you are the manager or executive of a company in your home country and then a subsidiary or branch office here in the U.S.
Question: How is manager defined?
Answer: Managerial capacity means an assignment with the organization in which the employee personally:(1) Manages the organization, department, subdivision, function or component; (2) Supervises and controls the work of other supervisory, professional or managerial employees, or manages an essential function within the organization or department or subdivision of the organization;
(3) Has authority to hire and fire or recommend personnel actions (if another directly supervises employees), or if no direct supervision, functions at a senior level; and (4) Exercises discretion over day-to-day operations of the activity or function.
(4)
Question: How is executive defined?
Answer: Executive capacity means an assignment in an organization in which the employee primarily:
(1) Directs the management of the organization or a component or function;
(2) Establishes goals and policies;
(3) Exercises wide latitude in discretionary decision making; and
(4) Receives only general supervision or direction from higher level executives, board of directors or stockholders.
Question: Is a Labor Certification or PERM required?
Answer: No labor certification, but a job offer by the U.S. organization, is required
Question: Must you be employed at the foreign company?
Answer: You must be employed abroad for one year (in last 3 years) by “firm or corporation or other legal entity or an affiliate or subsidiary thereof.”
Question: What is an affiliate?
Answer: Affiliates include entities owned and controlled by the same group of individuals, in approximately the same share or proportion of each entity. Includes accounting firms that have “internationally recognized name(s)” as affiliates, notwithstanding the fact that they are actually separate partnerships. Firms will be considered affiliates if they market accounting services under the same internationally recognized name and the same agreement. Under PL affiliate also includes management consulting firms that work with accounting firms as long as they market under an internationally recognized name or work with a successor worldwide coordinating organization even if it is not collectively owned or controlled. International management consulting firms that separate from an international accounting firm, yet continue to maintain the qualifying worldwide organizational structure may continue to use the EB-1 category even if it is no longer connected to an accounting firm.
Question: What must the petitioner establish for the ‘subsidiary’ requirement and working for the company?
Answer: Petitioner must establish: (i) it maintains a qualifying relationship (parent, affiliate, subsidiary) with the beneficiary’s foreign employer; and (ii) the foreign corporation or other legal entity that employed the beneficiary must continue to exist and have a qualifying relationship with the petitioner at the time the immigrant petition is filed. The wording of the section is confusing where the foreign entity continues to exist but the specific branch, affiliate, or subsidiary that the beneficiary worked for is out of business.
Basically, if you own a business or the owners want to open a branch office in the U.S., this might be the very way for you to come to the United States for you and your family.
Filed under: EB-5 Investment Visa | Tagged: Brian D. Lerner, brian lerner, eb-1c, Immigration Attorney, Immigration Lawyer, multinational manager visa | Leave a comment »
https://travel.state.gov/content/visas/en/visit.html
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Filed under: Immigration Attorney | Tagged: Brian D. Lerner, H-1B, h1b, Immigration Lawyer, los angeles immigration attorney, O-1, o1 | Leave a comment »
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.
Filed under: Immigration Attorney | Tagged: best deportation attorney, best immigration attorney, best immigration lawyer, Brian D. Lerner, brian lerner, california immigration, california immigration attorney, california immigration lawyer, deportation attorney, deportation lawyer, Immigration Lawyer, inland empire deportation attorney, inland empire immigration attorney, inland empire immigration lawyer, Law Offices of Brian D. Lerner, long beach immigration attorney, long beach immigration lawyer, los angeles county immigration attorney, los angeles deportation attorney, los angeles deportation lawyer, los angeles immigration, los angeles immigration lawyer, Orphan, orphan petition, san bernardino county immigration attorney, san bernardino immigration lawyer, spanish deportation attorney, spanish deportation lawyer, spanish immigration attorney, spanish immigration lawyer | Leave a comment »
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.
Filed under: Orphan | Tagged: best deportation attorney, best immigration attorney, best immigration lawyer, Brian D. Lerner, brian lerner, california immigration, california immigration attorney, california immigration lawyer, deportation attorney, deportation lawyer, Immigration Lawyer, inland empire deportation attorney, inland empire immigration attorney, inland empire immigration lawyer, Law Offices of Brian D. Lerner, long beach immigration attorney, long beach immigration lawyer, los angeles county immigration attorney, los angeles deportation attorney, los angeles deportation lawyer, los angeles immigration, los angeles immigration lawyer, Orphan, orphan petition, san bernardino county immigration attorney, san bernardino immigration lawyer, spanish deportation attorney, spanish deportation lawyer, spanish immigration attorney, spanish immigration lawyer | Leave a comment »
http://www.californiaimmigration.us
Coffee talk with Immigration Attorney Brian D. Lerner, A Professional Corporation on Immigration and Naturalization Law and specifics on how you can find solutions to immigration problems, visas, work-permits, deportation and other areas of immigration law. Find out about why you should hire an immigration attorney and/or deportation attorney who knows what they are doing
Filed under: Immigration Attorney | Tagged: best deportation attorney, best immigration attorney, best immigration lawyer, Brian D. Lerner, california immigration, california immigration attorney, california immigration lawyer, deportation attorney, deportation lawyer, Immigration Lawyer, inland empire deportation attorney, inland empire immigration attorney, inland empire immigration lawyer, Law Offices of Brian D. Lerner, long beach immigration attorney, long beach immigration lawyer, los angeles county deportation attorney, los angeles county immigration attorney, los angeles county immigration lawyer, los angeles deportation attorney, los angeles deportation lawyer, los angeles immigration, los angeles immigration attorney, los angeles immigration lawyer, san bernardino county immigration attorney, san bernardino deportation attorney, san bernardino deportation lawyer, san bernardino immigration attorney, san bernardino immigration lawyer, south bay immigration attorney, south bay immigration lawyer, spanish deportation attorney, spanish deportation lawyer, spanish immigration attorney, spanish immigration lawyer, why hire an immigration attorney | Leave a comment »
Coffee talk with Immigration Attorney Brian D. Lerner, A Professional Corporation on Immigration and Naturalization Law and specifics on how you can find solutions to immigration problems, visas, work-permits, deportation and other areas of immigration law. Find out about why you should hire an immigration attorney and/or deportation attorney who knows what they are doing
Find a good immigration attorney
. Immigration Lawyer Brian D. Lerner explains this area of immigration law so that it is clear and in normal and plain English. The Law Offices of Brian D. Lerner is happy to give you a free 10 minute consultation at http://www.blerner.checkappointments.com/. Additionally, call us at 562-495-0554 or send a Skype to ‘briandlerner’.
Filed under: Immigration Attorney | Tagged: best deportation attorney, best immigration attorney, best immigration lawyer, Brian D. Lerner, california immigration, california immigration attorney, california immigration lawyer, deportation attorney, deportation lawyer, Immigration Lawyer, inland empire deportation attorney, inland empire immigration attorney, inland empire immigration lawyer, Law Offices of Brian D. Lerner, long beach immigration attorney, long beach immigration lawyer, los angeles county deportation attorney, los angeles county immigration attorney, los angeles county immigration lawyer, los angeles deportation attorney, los angeles deportation lawyer, los angeles immigration, los angeles immigration attorney, los angeles immigration lawyer, san bernardino county immigration attorney, san bernardino deportation attorney, san bernardino deportation lawyer, san bernardino immigration attorney, san bernardino immigration lawyer, south bay immigration attorney, south bay immigration lawyer, spanish deportation attorney, spanish deportation lawyer, spanish immigration attorney, spanish immigration lawyer, why hire an immigration attorney | Leave a comment »
Filed under: DACA | Tagged: Brian D. Lerner, brian lerner, california immigration attorney, california immigration lawyer, DACA, daca attorney, daca immigration attorney, daca immigration lawyer, daca lawyer, deferred action for childhood arrivals, deportation attorney, deportation lawyer, DREAM Act, dream act lawyer, Dreamers, Immigration Lawyer, Law Offices of Brian D. Lerner, los angeles immigration attorney, los angeles immigration lawyer | Leave a comment »
Filed under: DREAM Act | Tagged: amnesty, best deportation attorney, best immigration attorney, best immigration lawyer, Brian D. Lerner, brian lerner, california immigration, california immigration attorney, california immigration lawyer, californiaimmigration.us, deferred action, deportation attorney, deportation lawyer, DREAM Act, Dreamers, eimmigration.org, Immigration Lawyer, inland empire deportation attorney, inland empire immigration attorney, inland empire immigration lawyer, Law Offices of Brian D. Lerner, long beach immigration attorney, long beach immigration lawyer, los angeles county deportation attorney, los angeles county immigration attorney, los angeles county immigration lawyer, los angeles deportation attorney, los angeles deportation lawyer, los angeles immigration, los angeles immigration attorney, los angeles immigration lawyer, obama dream act, out of status student, president obama dreamer, san bernardino county immigration attorney, san bernardino deportation attorney, san bernardino deportation lawyer, san bernardino immigration attorney, san bernardino immigration lawyer, south bay immigration attorney, south bay immigration lawyer, spanish deportation attorney, spanish deportation lawyer, spanish immigration attorney, spanish immigration lawyer | Leave a comment »