Terrorism-Related Inadmissibility Grounds (TRIG)
Immigration Issues In 2016 And What We To Expect In 2017
The elected President proposes to build a wall on the Mexican border; to deport illegal immigrants; and to block the inflow of Muslims and he (the elected President) found favor with many voters in America who were obviously frustrated with the path immigration policy had been taking.
In 2016, the Congress once again failed to address the problem of Comprehensive Immigration Reform. The Congressional deadlocked over a wide range of issues, a significant one being immigration reform and the presence of some 11 million illegal immigrants in the United States, left people frustrated and unhappy.
In 2016, we had the failure of President Obama`s DACA/DAPA Initiative.
The DACA, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, Program protects unauthorized immigrants born after June 15, 1981 who were brought to the United States before their 16th birthday and have been in the country since June 15, 2007 from deportation.
The DAPA, Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents, Program would have protected unauthorized parents of children who are U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents born on or before Nov. 20, 2014 from deportation.
Both Programs, DACA/DAPA, were aimed at helping certain non-violent illegal immigrants who immigrated to the country while under 16 years of age or who had close family members that attained permanent resident or citizenship status. The programs would have granted them temporary three year relief from removal and the right to work. The programs were ultimately blocked by a divided Supreme court.
What can we expect in 2017 with regards to immigration?
As per Forbes, under the Trump`s Administration:
1. large-scale immigration efforts are unlikely to meet with success in the face of practicality and resistance, smaller steps may succeed;
2. helping so-called Dreamers through Congressional action and court challenges to government measures taken in the absence of due process could very well be the only way immigration reform can be achieved;
3. a comprehensive immigration reform effort by a Republican-controlled Congress is conceivable, but an effort would likely be dominated by enforcement at the expense of addressing the key issue of a pathway to citizenship for 11 million illegal immigrants in the United States; and
4. improving the slow processing of family-based spousal sponsorship cases is possible.
El Salvador’s Gang Violence is Forcing Thousands to Flee
By: Walter Ewing
Detention, Arraignment, Bail, and Release
In New York City, defendants are brought before a Judge for arraignment within 24 hours of the arrest. After the case has been docketed by the court and the complaint and accused’s criminal history are ready, the defendant is brought to Criminal Court for arraignment.
In New York City’s five boroughs, criminal court arraignments are held day and night, seven days a week, 365 days a year, from 8:00 AM to 1:00 AM. Our lawyers are on-call and will attend arraignment with your loved one.
At the arraignment, the primary issue will be whether or not the Judge will set bail or release the individual on his or her “own recognizance” (without requiring any bail). If the Judge decides that the accused cannot be trusted to return to court without some encouragement, the Judge may set bail. The decisions to set bail and the amount of bail to set are discretionary, and depend on three factors: 1) prior criminal history, 2) the seriousness of the alleged conduct, and 3) community ties of the accused.
At Law Offices of Norka M. Schell, LLC, we review the case with your loved one before arraignment before presenting the Judge with a thorough case for release.
MARRIAGE AND MARITAL UNION FOR NATURALIZATION
Validity of Marriage for Immigration Purposes
The applicant must establish validity of his or her marriage. In general, the legal validity of a marriage is determined by the law of the place where the marriage was celebrated? (“place-of-celebration rule”). Under this rule, a marriage is valid for immigration purposes in cases where the marriage is valid under the law of the jurisdiction in which it is performed.
In all cases, the burden is on the applicant to establish that he or she has a valid marriage with his or her U.S. citizen spouse for the required period of time. In most cases, a marriage certificate is prima facie evidence that the marriage was properly and legally performed.
USCIS does not recognize the following relationships as marriages?, even if valid in the place of celebration.
•Polygamous marriages;
•Certain marriages that violate the strong public policy of the state of residence of the couple;
•Civil unions, domestic partnerships, or other such relationships not recognized as marriages in the place of celebration;
•Relationships where one party is not present during the marriage ceremony (proxy marriages) unless the marriage has been consummated; or
•Relationships entered into for purposes of evading immigration laws of the United States.
Validity of Marriage Between Two Persons of the Same Sex
In June 2013, the Supreme Court held that section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which had limited the terms “marriage” and “spouse” to opposite-sex marriages for purposes of all federal laws, was unconstitutional.In accordance with the Supreme Court decision, USCIS determines the validity of a same-sex marriage by the place-of-celebration rule, just as USCIS applies this rule to determine the validity of an opposite-sex marriage.
Therefore, in cases of marriage between persons of the same sex, officers will review the laws of the jurisdiction in which the marriage took place to determine if the jurisdiction recognizes same-sex marriages and the marriage otherwise is legally valid.
Since the place-of-celebration rule governs same-sex marriages in exactly the same way that it governs opposite-sex marriages, unless the marriage is polygamous or otherwise falls within an exception to the place-of-celebration rule as discussed above, the legal validity of a same-sex marriage is determined exclusively by the law of the jurisdiction where the marriage was celebrated.
If the same-sex couple now resides in a jurisdiction different from the one in which they celebrated their marriage, and that jurisdiction does not recognize same-sex marriages, the officer will look to the law of the state where the marriage was celebrated in order to determine the validity of the marriage. The domicile state’s laws and policies on same-sex marriages will not affect whether USCIS will recognize a marriage as valid.
Finding Protection Under US Immigration Law
Undocumented immigrant victims of violence historically have been extremely reluctant to seek justice for the crimes perpetrated against them because to do so inevitably requires the involvement of law enforcement. Those who have no status in the United States understand full well that if they contact the police, immigration authorities may follow behind, and deportation back to their native countries might be the ultimate consequence of coming forward. In the past, this meant that battered spouses remained in abusive marriages, victims of human trafficking did not attempt to flee from their tormentors, and those who were victimized by criminal acts did not report the offense to police, making communities less safe for all of us.
THE IMMIGRANT’S MY FIGHT – THE AMERICAN DREAM!
U.S. TAX GUIDE FOR ALIENS
There are two classifications of people that the United States uses in regards to taxes tax residents and non-tax residents. If you have immigrated into the United States, you may be wondering how to figure out how immigration and taxes apply to you.
LIMITED RELIEF – DEFERRED ACTION
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) – U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (‘USCIS”) does bring removal proceedings against every alien whom it suspects of being deportable. For one thin, it recognizes that there are certain cases in which extraordinary sympathetic factors would make removal unconscionable. For another, the DHS could not remove all deportable alien even if it wanted to. Removal proceedings require apprehension, investigation, proceedings, possible detentions, prosecution, adjudication, removal, and recording-keeping. Like any other government agency, the DHS has limited resources. It has to decide how it can most efficiently allocate those resources (a) between law enforcement functions and other functions, and (b) within law enforcement.
For some time the DHS policy has been to refrain from initiating removal proceedings in certain unusually compassionate cases.That policy has been given different names over the years: “prosecutorial discretion”, “nonpriority status”, and most commonly today, “deferred action”. Whatever the name, the theory has been that the case is simply put on the back burner. Technically the DHS remains free to proceed against the alien in the future if its workload or its priority change, realistically, since the actual reason for holding back is the presence of exceptionally sympathetic factor, relief will typically be permanent unless those individual factors change.
H-2B Returning Workers Exempted from the H-2B Cap for Fiscal Year 2016
H-2B Employers Urged to Identify Returning Workers when Filing Petitions
Effective December 18, 2015, H-2B workers identified as “returning workers” are exempted from the fiscal year (FY) 2016 annual H-2B cap of 66,000 visas. See Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) §214(g)(9)(a), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(9)(a), as revised by Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2016 (Public Law 114-113).
A returning worker is defined as an H-2B worker who was previously counted against the annual H-2B cap of 66,000 visas during FYs 2013, 2014, or 2015. This means:
- In general, if you (the employer) submit a petition requesting an employment start date in FY 2016 (from October 1, 2015 – September 30, 2016) for an H-2B worker, the H-2B worker can only be considered a returning worker if he or she had been previously issued an H-2B visa or provided H-2B status between October 1, 2012, and September 30, 2015.
- If the prospective worker is in the United States in H-2B status, and is seeking to extend his or her stay, change employers, or change the terms and conditions of employment, then the worker would not be counted toward the H-2B cap and you would not need to request that the person be classified as a returning worker.
- Any prospective H-2B worker who does not qualify as a returning worker will be subject to the FY 2016 H-2B cap unless he or she has previously been counted toward the H-2B cap or is cap-exempt.
Under this legislation, the returning worker program only applies to petitions pending or approved on or after December 18, 2015, requesting named H-2B workers with an employment start date beginning in FY 2016.